Nicki Minaj is promoting her latest album emerging in December with several singles, magazine covers, as well as hosting the 2014 MTV EMAs where she previewed incipient single Bed of Lies. The rap star is on the cover of the upcoming issue of Intricate Magazine and she verbalizes about music as well as her personal life.
Nicki Minaj opens up about doting Drake to death, and verbally expresses that's why he's the impeccable friend. Am I the only one who cerebrates they'll make a great couple? Probably in my dreams...
Check out some more pictures from her shoot and excerpts of her interview below and read the full interview on Intricate.
On her incipient album, The Pinkprint, being her most personal album yet to deal with her family, loss, death, and guilt...
When you’re working and you’re diligent and you’re prosperous, no matter what, something suffers, whether it’s your relationship with your mother, your relationship with your whole family, not being able to peregrinate to your brother’s graduation…. Certain things suffer and take the back burner, not because they’re on the back burner in your heart but because the world just moves so expeditiously. An abundance of people, when they’re chasing their dreams, they have to leave people they dote. A plethora of artists feel that guilt but they don’t express it.
Was there any rules in making the album?
One rule is “no more self-judgment.” I’m not judging myself; I’m not dissing what I do. I’m proud of what I’ve done and I’m proud of what I’m working on. I’ve accomplished something and I’m not going to be ignominious to be blissful about what I’ve done. I’m verbalizing about things that I didn’t verbalize about on other albums. It’s a veracious oeuvre. The album is me doing a press conference, addressing things and not putting an exorbitant amount of [emphasis] on “This has to be lyrical,” to the point where I lose focus of a message. It’s paramount as a woman to be vulnerably susceptible and be vigorous concurrently. The album is a dope balance of susceptibility and vigor, of inspiration and of not being politically veridical. It’s the best of both worlds. It’s tapping into both sides. There are times when all I optate to do is be lyrical and engender metaphors and experiment with my flow. Then there are times when I just want to tell a veracious story about love and have people identify with me.
Her opinion on how women can make it in the world.
Every woman is multifaceted. Every woman has a switch, whether she’s going to be maternal, whether she’s going to be a man-eater, whether she has to kick ass, whether she has to be one of the boys, whether she has to show the guys that she’s just as keenly intellective or more astute, she’s just as aptitudinal or ingenious. Women suppress an abundance of their sides.
On her soulful ballad “Pills N Potions” being about toxic relationships;
“Pills N Potions” isn’t just about relationships. A couple of my girlfriends I hadn’t verbalized with in a while reached out to me after they aurally perceived “Pills N Potions.” That struck such a chord with people. The message—we still love [each other] but we’re angry—we feel that way all the time, we just don’t verbalize it. And an abundance of times you don’t even get over that, you just have to keep it moving.
On Anaconda:
I wanted to engender a musical composition that embraced curvy women. I wanted to be sexual but be frolicsome with it. And I wanted it to be so melodic that even if you don’t understand English you could still go along with the melody and you would have no conception about all the raunchy shit I’m saying—I get a kick out of that. It was simple to indite. I just engendered the melody and then I let the words transpire. I commenced laughing when I verbalized, “Boy toy denominated Troy.” [Laughs.] That whole musical composition, I was just being imbecilic. It was a jest. My most sizably voluminous thing was visually perceiving how my girlfriends Sherika and Thembi were going to react. If they don’t like a musical composition, they’ll be akin to, “No.” As anon as they ambulated in the studio, we were laughing and having fun. I mentally conceived, if we’re doing this, then everybody is going to have fun with it.
On her comity with Drake and his role in Anaconda video;
[Laughs.] Oh, no. It’s so delicately comely. He’s such a dope actor. After he did that we just busted out laughing and we all were cracking up. He’s such a good sport. I dote that he ridicules himself and doesn’t take himself too solemnly. That’s why my amity with him works so well. That’s why I dote him to death.
Her most immensely colossal fear?
That I’ll become so consumed with work that I’ll forget to live my personal life to the fullest. If I’m done with my fifth album and I don’t have a child by then, no matter how much mazuma I have, I would be disappointed, as a woman, because I feel like I was put here to be a mother.
On when she will get espoused and have kids, which comes first?
I have definitely put off the wife thing because I don’t want people in my business. I’d rather not do anything that’s going to be on paper but I definitely will be espoused afore I have my baby. I optate to ascertain I do it in that order. I’ve always felt like that since I was puerile; my mother always put that in my head. By the fifth album, I will have ambulated down the aisle and I will at least be on baby number one, possibly baby number two. [Laughs.] And have $500 million.
Will she retire when she has a family?
Yeah. I won’t utilize the word “retire” but I would utilize the word “vacation”—because I don’t believe in vacations, I don’t believe in holidays. I have to put out all six of my albums, contractually. After the fifth, I’ll probably have my baby. I wonder if I’m going to be one of those women who balances my child with a vocation. I always verbally expressed, “When I have my baby, it’s going to be all about my baby.” I don’t want the child feeling like they don’t have all of my attention, so I always verbally expressed, “I’m going to take a little break.” But we’ll optically discern.
Nicki Minaj opens up about doting Drake to death, and verbally expresses that's why he's the impeccable friend. Am I the only one who cerebrates they'll make a great couple? Probably in my dreams...
Check out some more pictures from her shoot and excerpts of her interview below and read the full interview on Intricate.
On her incipient album, The Pinkprint, being her most personal album yet to deal with her family, loss, death, and guilt...
When you’re working and you’re diligent and you’re prosperous, no matter what, something suffers, whether it’s your relationship with your mother, your relationship with your whole family, not being able to peregrinate to your brother’s graduation…. Certain things suffer and take the back burner, not because they’re on the back burner in your heart but because the world just moves so expeditiously. An abundance of people, when they’re chasing their dreams, they have to leave people they dote. A plethora of artists feel that guilt but they don’t express it.
Was there any rules in making the album?
One rule is “no more self-judgment.” I’m not judging myself; I’m not dissing what I do. I’m proud of what I’ve done and I’m proud of what I’m working on. I’ve accomplished something and I’m not going to be ignominious to be blissful about what I’ve done. I’m verbalizing about things that I didn’t verbalize about on other albums. It’s a veracious oeuvre. The album is me doing a press conference, addressing things and not putting an exorbitant amount of [emphasis] on “This has to be lyrical,” to the point where I lose focus of a message. It’s paramount as a woman to be vulnerably susceptible and be vigorous concurrently. The album is a dope balance of susceptibility and vigor, of inspiration and of not being politically veridical. It’s the best of both worlds. It’s tapping into both sides. There are times when all I optate to do is be lyrical and engender metaphors and experiment with my flow. Then there are times when I just want to tell a veracious story about love and have people identify with me.
Her opinion on how women can make it in the world.
Every woman is multifaceted. Every woman has a switch, whether she’s going to be maternal, whether she’s going to be a man-eater, whether she has to kick ass, whether she has to be one of the boys, whether she has to show the guys that she’s just as keenly intellective or more astute, she’s just as aptitudinal or ingenious. Women suppress an abundance of their sides.
On her soulful ballad “Pills N Potions” being about toxic relationships;
“Pills N Potions” isn’t just about relationships. A couple of my girlfriends I hadn’t verbalized with in a while reached out to me after they aurally perceived “Pills N Potions.” That struck such a chord with people. The message—we still love [each other] but we’re angry—we feel that way all the time, we just don’t verbalize it. And an abundance of times you don’t even get over that, you just have to keep it moving.
On Anaconda:
I wanted to engender a musical composition that embraced curvy women. I wanted to be sexual but be frolicsome with it. And I wanted it to be so melodic that even if you don’t understand English you could still go along with the melody and you would have no conception about all the raunchy shit I’m saying—I get a kick out of that. It was simple to indite. I just engendered the melody and then I let the words transpire. I commenced laughing when I verbalized, “Boy toy denominated Troy.” [Laughs.] That whole musical composition, I was just being imbecilic. It was a jest. My most sizably voluminous thing was visually perceiving how my girlfriends Sherika and Thembi were going to react. If they don’t like a musical composition, they’ll be akin to, “No.” As anon as they ambulated in the studio, we were laughing and having fun. I mentally conceived, if we’re doing this, then everybody is going to have fun with it.
On her comity with Drake and his role in Anaconda video;
[Laughs.] Oh, no. It’s so delicately comely. He’s such a dope actor. After he did that we just busted out laughing and we all were cracking up. He’s such a good sport. I dote that he ridicules himself and doesn’t take himself too solemnly. That’s why my amity with him works so well. That’s why I dote him to death.
Her most immensely colossal fear?
That I’ll become so consumed with work that I’ll forget to live my personal life to the fullest. If I’m done with my fifth album and I don’t have a child by then, no matter how much mazuma I have, I would be disappointed, as a woman, because I feel like I was put here to be a mother.
On when she will get espoused and have kids, which comes first?
I have definitely put off the wife thing because I don’t want people in my business. I’d rather not do anything that’s going to be on paper but I definitely will be espoused afore I have my baby. I optate to ascertain I do it in that order. I’ve always felt like that since I was puerile; my mother always put that in my head. By the fifth album, I will have ambulated down the aisle and I will at least be on baby number one, possibly baby number two. [Laughs.] And have $500 million.
Will she retire when she has a family?
Yeah. I won’t utilize the word “retire” but I would utilize the word “vacation”—because I don’t believe in vacations, I don’t believe in holidays. I have to put out all six of my albums, contractually. After the fifth, I’ll probably have my baby. I wonder if I’m going to be one of those women who balances my child with a vocation. I always verbally expressed, “When I have my baby, it’s going to be all about my baby.” I don’t want the child feeling like they don’t have all of my attention, so I always verbally expressed, “I’m going to take a little break.” But we’ll optically discern.

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