Glamour Magazine interview

Read Time:3 minutes

Rihanna likes to be in control. So much so that her management has given her an easy way to cut our interview short: Our chat is to take place in an SUV on the way from the Glamour shoot to her apartment, a short drive away. But she keeps talking—candidly and often hilariously, and instead of stopping at her front door, she has her driver circle the block again and again, and we talk more. What comes through more than anything is a tale of transformation: In February 2009, Rihanna endured the abuse of Chris Brown and the subsequent gossip frenzy. It was painful, she tells me, to lose control of her story and image that way; determined not to let that happen again, she has since reemerged as the architect of her own fascinating comeback. On her self-revealing albums Rated R and Loud, on Twitter (and, as of mid-July, the most popular female star on Facebook), in dramatic fashion choices and in interviews like this one, Rihanna has reinvented herself by becoming more, well, herself. “My whole life changed a couple years ago. That’s when I decided to let my guard down completely,” she says, sipping a Corona as the city scrolls by her tinted window. “There’s freedom in honesty. If you just face it today, tomorrow you can move on to something else.” Here’s Rihanna, very honestly.

GLAMOUR: I wanted to show you this list: total number-one hits. You’ve had 10, and you’re the youngest artist to ever hit that mark—you topped Mariah Carey. Plus, you did it faster than any solo artist in Billboard’s history: less than five years to 10 number ones.

RIHANNA: That’s kind of amazing. Damn. I’ve never actually seen this list laid out like this. It’s kind of mind-blowing. I try to just be very, very appreciative.

GLAMOUR: Can you top the Beatles?

RIHANNA: I’m heading there. If I fall short, I’m still in good company.

GLAMOUR: Your style has gotten more aggressive as your music has. Do you think of the two together in that way?

RIHANNA: Absolutely, and I don’t think of one without the other. My music definitely determines the direction we’re gonna move in. It’s like music, fashion, hair, makeup.

GLAMOUR: There are so many pop stars who blow up and then lose control. With you, from the moment you chopped your hair off, you were saying, “No, I’m in control of what I’m doing.”

RIHANNA: In the beginning of my career, it was really strict for me. I couldn’t wear pink or red lipstick; it was just bizarre. We had a young fan base, and they were trying to keep me fresh. But I just really wanted to be myself. I wanted to be sassy, the attitude, all these things that I am.

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About Post Author

Paula

I am a fan since 2005, a stan since 2007. She is empowering, daring, fearless and anything anyone always dreams to be in their lives. She also makes amazing music and never fails to surprise her fans.

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