Billboard Gamechanger Nicki Minaj on Why She’ll Never ‘Completely’ Step Away From Music (original) (raw)

Billboard's inaugural Game-Changer is the first and only woman to score 100 appearances on the Billboard Hot 100, but she isn't done yet. “I’m a perfectionist and love topping myself,” says Minaj…

Nicki Minaj

Nicki Minaj attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 6, 2019 in New York City. Dia Dipasupil/FilmMagic

Nicki Minaj debuted in 2007 with a mixtape called Playtime Is Over. She wasn’t kidding: From her kooky alter-egos to her wildly outspoken Queen Radio show on Apple Music, Minaj — the first and only woman to score 100 appearances on the Billboard Hot 100 — has redefined success for women in hip-hop this decade. Yet _Billboard_’s inaugural Game-Changer isn’t done yet. “I’m a perfectionist and love topping myself,” says Minaj, 37, “so as long as I love music, I’ll always be doing that.”

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How do you think you have changed the game?

I had an approach that had a lot of different layers. I first got the underground market and my hometown [on lock]. Then I gradually worked my way up. One of the things that I used [to my advantage] was my ability to switch my flow and be entertaining on a track. And even before I was doing music, I loved looking at magazines to see who was setting trends.

You tweeted this fall that you were going to retire and start a family.

I love music and interacting with fans, so I can’t really see taking myself completely away. But I want to be open to other possibilities in my life. I do believe it is important to become a woman outside of the magnifying glass. I have to make sure that I’m well-rounded as a human being.

Nicki Minaj: Billboard Gamechanger Women in Music Interview | Billboard

It seems like your connection with your fans has really blossomed on social media.

My relationship with my fans is very unique. I’m very playful and sarcastic with them. I just feel like they know the real me because a lot of them have been with me for a long time. They know me beyond the mask that other people sometimes see me through. Because of that, it makes me more vulnerable with them. We just have a really unbreakable bond.

Will you keep expanding your business empire — which also includes your MYX Fusions liquor company and a Fendi partnership?

Oh my goodness, yes. I plan on venturing out a million times more than I am now. That was always my goal: to become a big businesswoman. I don’t want to be in such a lucrative industry and not capitalize on it — everyone else does it. [With Fendi], they ended up reaching out to my team to work on the collaboration after I put out [Queen single] “Chun Li.” I was blown away and honored. I went to Milan and met with everyone there. They allowed me to play with fabrics and look at what they were planning for their next line. I didn’t expect it to be this massive — I’m really proud of it!

In the past year, Queen Radio has become a can’t-miss event.

It’s another thing I didn’t expect to be so big. I went in blindly: “I’m just going to get on the mic and talk to my fans. It can’t be that hard.” But it takes a lot of energy. You have to be willing to be very honest and have a backbone. Queen Radio is beginning to set trends as well. There’s definitely going to be a lot more artists running into that [lane] really soon. If I can get it to a place where everyone looks forward to it every time, then I feel like I’m doing the right thing.

Thinking back to when you first released Playtime Is Over, what advice would you give to that girl from Jamaica, Queens?

I would tell her to calm down! (Laughs.) But then again, if I knew that I was going to raise the bar, maybe I wouldn’t have gone that hard. I wouldn’t change anything, to be honest. My drive and hunger is what made me become the workaholic that I am. Everything was just spontaneous — I didn’t know what to expect, it was more fun that way.

This article originally appeared in the Dec. 14 issue of Billboard.

2019 Billboard Women in Music

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