Although the 18-year-old R&B diva already had a gold single,
"It's All About Me," before "Ghetto Supastar" dropped into heavy
rotation, hip-hop fans hardly pricked their ears and bugged their
eyes at the sound and sight of Mya until the single from
Bulworth began blasting from every car stereo. Almost
immediately, hip-hop fans were throwing Mya's name around,
wondering who she was, where the apostrophe in her name went (over
the y), when her album was coming out. Soon after, hard-edged
rappers and superproducers were seeking out Mya's soulful sass on
collaborations. All this attention, and the lady had yet to release
her self-titled debut.
With one gold and two platinum singles under her cinched belt, Mya's doin' some more damage on the airwaves with the first single from the Rugrats soundtrack, "Take Me There (featuring Blackstreet, Mase and Blinky Blink)," and "Movin' On," the remix from the Belly soundtrack. She may look like an innocent, pretty young thing, but that doesn't mean Mya can't hang with the big boys.
Having collaborated with Pras, Ol' Dirty Bastard, Raekwon,
Noreaga and Silkk the Shocker, Mya has
held her own in some pretty tough company. And as the only solo
female on this year's Smokin' Grooves Tour, where she performed her
set between rappers like Busta Rhymes, Gang Starr, Cypress
Hill, Canibus and Public Enemy, Mya's
proven she's got the chops to rise beyond the fleeting fame of one
smash single. To wit: the singer also writes, dances, choreographs,
and was nominated for Soul Train's Artist of the Year Award.
Rolling Stone Network sat down with the multitalented Mya
for the scoop on her singles, her peers, and kicking it in a
male-dominated industry.
How did you land the female vocal part of "Ghetto
Supastar," as a relative-unknown?
My record company, Interscope, was in control of
the soundtrack for Bulworth. Pras was doing a song and
they were looking for a female to perform on it. So my record
company said, "Take a listen to her album." But they were looking
for established artists. They were trying Mary J.
Blige and other people, so they were like, "No, no, no, we
don't know if it's going to work." It wasn't until ODB came and put
a rap on the track that [he] was like, oh I like her.
So it was ODB that really made it all happen?
Of course the record company, and Pras and Wyclef [helped], but
Wyclef told me that it was ODB who chose me. He was like "No, I'm
feelin' her," and usually he doesn't like to work unless he has it
his way. He's that type of person. So they were like, "OK, maybe
this is the one."
When "Ghetto Supastar" came out, everyone wondered who you
were and where you came from.
I think "Ghetto Supastar" brought me a lot more attention. Like,
wow, the Fugees are an 18-million [album-]selling group, and how
did she get with them? I think if any unknown artist got on the
song, just because it's the Fugees, it may have happened like that.
The whole hype about it was like, is she related? That's the first
thing people think, and when the answer is no to that, it's like,
"Well, how? You must be dope if you're hanging around these dope
people."
Did a lot of people want to collaborate with you
afterwards?
Well, we approached Silkk the Shocker, and they never do songs with
people. And after that people were like, "Well hold up -- Cisco,
Pras, Wyclef, and Silkk? Hold on, something's going on here." So
people started asking me to do songs with them right and left.
Foxy Brown, producers like Rodney
Jerkins, and so many other people.
On the Smokin' Grooves Tour, you were the only female among
a whole crew of pretty roughneck rappers.
Hey, that's where I'll have to learn, and if I can't hang, then I'm
not ready. But I'm willing to take that challenge and embarrass
myself. I learn quickly, too. It was great. I felt like, they're
here to see rap music, they're not going to accept me, and no one
knows me, only from that song. And I didn't want to be known only
as the girl who does "Ghetto Supastar," so my managers worked it
out that I could at least do ten minutes of my own stuff. So I got
to do my own show and that's when "Movin' On" started getting
played. By the end of the tour, it was a major hit and people were
singing the words to the song. So I kind of watched it happen
before my eyes, from no one knowing my songs, to everyone.
Do you think you're following in Mary J. Blige's footsteps,
as an R&B girl who's down with the hardcore
rappers?
I guess you could say that. I never really thought about that
before, but now that you mention it, I can definitely see the
similarities. In fact, the first demo song I've ever done in my
whole life was Mary J.'s version of "Sweet Thing." It was just to
practice in a basement studio, but I also do a cover of it in my
shows.
Where do you want your career to go in the
future?
I'm shooting my first movie this month. Spike
Lee's In Too Deep. I play Omar
Epps' girlfriend. It's something small to start out with.
I'm not going to take a lead role, that just wouldn't be me right
now. In the long run, singing and entertaining and live
performances are first. That's my dream, to put on the bomb stage
show. That's what I love. I want to keep people entertained. I want
to set trends and get people's attention and then keep it.
TIARRA MUKHERJEE(November 19, 1998)
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