As my dear man Henry Sins wrote of a couple days ago Ke$ha may have promised some "Ke$h and Roll" on her upcoming album, but I discovered more crap from the alley girl.
Kinder and Gentler? That is what shes promising with her new album, to which she attributes her experience in covering a Bob Dylan tune for Amnesty International. The Amnesty anniversary album is due out on January 24. This performance inspired her to discuss her new direction to none other than MTV
"I think that my first record was heavily influenced by Licensed to Ill and the Beastie Boys and that record is very brash and very sassy and very unapologetic and irreverent. And I love that," Ke$ha told MTV News.
"I'm really proud of that, but I have learned over the past three years of doing this that being vulnerable doesn't mean you're weak. I very much want to be seen as a strong woman, but I realize that vulnerability can also be a strength. So on my next record, you are going to hear probably a little more of that. I'm not going to make an acoustic, sad entire record. But you might hear a little bit more vulnerability on the next record 'cause I have realized just from this Dylan cover coming out [on Amnesty International's anniversary album] that it can be such a strength and a nice balance to humanize the other side of my personality."
This from the woman who portrayed herself as pure slut trash to Rolling Stone just last year. Next stop? She finds God or something as odd.
She will be writing and hitting the studio very soon to create this epic work and also took the time to mention what a great year 2011 was for her
"The whole year has been absolutely crazy, but I think that my tour, my headlining tour with LMFAO and Spank Rock, that was like really exciting to be a headliner for the first time really in my life, to be playing some of the same places I was playing opening for Rihanna," the singer told MTV. "Sometimes you get caught up in the details, but when you're onstage at Jones Beach in front of 10,000 people, those moments, money can't buy those moments."
