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It's what we've come to expect from Gaga, however. Her career has been as much about performance art as music. After all, this is the woman who has paraded around in a dress made of meat, assumed a male alter-ego for an awards show, arrived at another in an egg and stripped naked onstage in Europe last month. Some have questioned whether her antics resonate these days, especially when Miley Cyrus draws weeks of headlines by twerking onstage at the MTV Video Music Awards. Gaga's performance at that show barely rated a blip at the water cooler the next morning. Gaga's supporters, though, warn against viewing her in the short term. They believe she's built something more durable. Kid Kelly, SiriusXM's vice president of music programming, hosted an interview session with Gaga last week that drew an eclectic crowd that ranged from pre-teen to middle age. "She has a vision for what she does as an artist, but not necessarily
like you're on the assembly line of creating formulaic hits," Kelly said.
"She's a genius, the way she presents, the way she acts, the way she's
thinking constantly about innovating and re-innovating herself, the way she
is very, very forward thinking. She understands her audience I think better
than most people give her credit for." "Artpop" is Gaga's fourth full-length album, and comes after a
forced hiatus. A hip injury sidelined her and forced her to cancel
her tour last year. In a brief interview before her Sunday
performance, Gaga said that time off gave her some perspective. "You know what I realized? That I don't need to reinvent myself. What I
realized is that in your lifetime, if you have one really great idea, run
with it. And run all the way to outer space if you can," she said. "If you
believe in yourself and you work hard, rehearse and have discipline, these
ideas could take us to the moon." ___ Online:
[Associated
Press;
AP Writer John Carucci in New York contributed to this report.
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