Missy Elliott Tickets
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About Missy Elliott
As Missy Elliott gets ready to drop her fifth incredible album in
six years, This Is Not A Test, there's no doubt that she's become one
of hip hop's cultural magnets in 2003, turning up in one of the most
talked about TV commercials of the year a Gap ad featuring Madonna, no
less and turning it out in this year's most infamous chorus line with
Christina, Britney, and, of course, Madonna.
Born in Portsmouth, VA, in 1971 as Melissa Elliott, true school hip
hop fans know, however, that Missy's amazing story really begins and
ends with the music. And Missy wouldn't have it any other way. Missy
Elliott has courageously been willing to stake her reputation on every
beat, every scorching R&B groove, on every one of her albums, This Is
Not A Test included. She's been willing to up the ante time and time
again for countless other cultural 'touchstone' moments where the
charismatic superstar has blown our minds. You could sense her
adventurousness from her very first video in 1997 for The Rain (Supa
Dupa Fly), which featured a fearless Missy greeting the world in a
hefty bag. Hailed as a masterpiece to this day, MTV even crowned it
the 15th greatest video of all time.
And then there are the stats: 17 MTV Award nominations winner of the
prestigious Video Of The Year in 2003, 2 Grammy awards, 2 BET awards,
and 5 Lady Of Soul/Soul Train Awards. Twice within the past five years
Rolling Stone has named her Best Female Hip Hop Artist of the Year,
and twice she has ranked as Billboard's #1 year-end female hip hop
star. Most recently Missy Elliott's been awarded a 2003 American Music
Award for Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Female. The list goes on and on and on,
an unprecedented rap/R&B resume capped by the 2X platinum-and-counting
2002 release, Under Construction, which made Missy the best selling
female hip hop star of all time (closing in on 12 million units
worldwide) and one of the most influential writer/producer/artists in
the music business. Add to this her star-studded production credits
Whitney, Janet, Christina, Justin Timberlake, and Destiny's Child,
among others, and her own executive moniker as CEO of Goldmind Inc.,
which launched gold-selling R&B star Tweet and you realize Missy
Elliott is truly in a league of her own.
What makes her accomplishments truly amazing is that Missy Elliott the
superstar is, at the heart of it all, still just the shy little girl
from Portsmouth, VA - a survivor of a childhood of domestic violence.
Particularly, her father was abusive towards her mother. Missy has not
shied away from talking about those painful memories. In fact, she was
named spokesperson for Break The Cycle in 2003, an organization
dedicated to helping young people break the chain of domestic abuse.
For Missy Elliott, music was the escape hatch, her path to achieving
the kind of dreams not even she imagined. Ironically, the approach to
her fifth album, This Is Not A Test, was to set aside all prior
achievements, and free herself of any pre-conceived notions as to what
the album should sound like. Her goal, as always, was to make a 'home'
in the only place where, as she says, all those trophies and accolades
don't matter: the recording studio. I'm grateful for every award I
have received. They really are like a dream. But the studio is where I
feel most comfortable. I realized you can't worry about what you did
last year. I said to Timbaland 'Let's just do it.' You have to get in
the mind frame where you're not trying to out-do yourself. But I
really felt most comfortable approaching this album. The studio is
where I find my peace.
And where, of course, along with her longtime-production partner
Timbaland she can wreak the most havoc. This Is Not A Test is no
exception. A tightrope walking exclamation point to her first four
groundbreaking albums, the disk adds some new moves to Missy's game,
including a nod to the kind of '60's black activism (check out the
artwork) that paved the way for most of rap's trailblazers. Missy
Elliott offers up a hip hop remix to the black power movement,
threading some socially conscious food-for-thought amongst the album's
14 songs. On the primal anthem Wake Up, for example, featuring Jay-Z,
you're witnessing an empowered Missy Elliott doing the talking here,
floating her message to the masses with her usual flair for deft beats
and an incomparable knack for subverting the hip hop grind.
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Hip hop better wake up, she spits over the sparest of drum
cadences. I got the Martin Luther King fever, she continues, outing
hip hop's over-ripe code of material one-upmanship: If you don't got a
gun it's all right/If you make legal money it's all right/If your
wheels don't spin if you got to wear them same jeans again/ It's all
right/MC's stop the beef let's sell. Missy Elliott says she just might
also be indicting herself on the song. There's so many different
messages in that song. I believe that for black people it was so hard
for us to have for so long myself included that when we finally got it
we OD'd on it. It was like 'get me that car, get me that chain get me
a chain that can cover the whole stage. Oh, you want a car with rims
give me rims that spin even when I'm sleeping.' What we forget is that
when we leave here we can't take any of that with us. I'm not trying
to be Reverend Elliott or something, but I do believe when you reach a
certain status in this business, you got to be positive. You have to
remember you are a role model.
Missy Elliott also keeps it heartfelt on the album's intro, vibing
with Mary J Blige on Baby Girl Interlude. That one is so crazy. I
actually did it on 9-11. I felt like I was coming out of my character.
When I listen to it I think 'that doesn't even sound like me.' 'My
eyes have watered like a preacher who's sinned' declares Missy
Elliott. I didn't stop to think what I was saying. I just wrote. Some
pain there. I speak about how people put entertainers on a pedestal
but sometimes they can't wait to knock us down. Missy Elliott also
invokes her legendary toughness: 'Like a brick wall I'm too hard to
break,' adding: 'I'm the realest from the fake.' I got some issues
with those have copied the formula. Hip hop took from people who
rapped about what they saw in the hood. But then there were artists
who just came along and masked that. They found out what the formula
was and just went with it. It became a game where artists just learned
the formula. So now everybody's trying to find out who is real and
who's fake. Right now it's all kind of blurry. But the real street
cats out there know game when they see it.
Make no mistake - Missy Elliott can still bring the game that brought
her to such a pinnacle. Her trademark ciphering an instinctual ability
to build characters out of the strangest sounds and atmospherics is in
full display on the album. Whether it's the wigged out Pass That Dutch
complete with a Bootsy Collins reference and a hyper-surreal timeout,
or the staccato roll of Keep It Movin, featuring Jamaican legend
Elephant Man, Missy Elliott doesn't forget the kind of loose-hinged
interplay that made her hip hop's most ingenious sonic maestro. I said
to myself 'Pass The Dutch' is my hip hop Riverdance. And the Bootsy-voice,
well, everybody knows Bootsy and what he meant to our music. As far as
Elephant Man goes, well, you can feel what that track was all about.
He has a great presence, a great energy.
It's also no secret that Missy Elliott has paid a considerable amount
of homage in her career to the 'old school' hip hop that she feels has
sometimes been neglected by the younger generation. The new disk also
lovingly reflects some past nuggets, particularly on the combustible
track Let It Bump. It kind of started with that beat from back in the
day. She laughs. Let It Bump captures a real simple way to rhyme.
Almost like those little balls that would bounce along the songs when
you watched cartoons as a kid. It's just that old school feel. Even
when I think I get it out of my system I can't stay away. If you got
in my car right now there'd probably be some Big Daddy Kane going.
Maybe some Salt n' Pepa. I love it.
A soonto-be Missy Elliott R&B standard, Dats What I'm Talkin' About,
featuring R. Kelly brings Missy back to the future with both stars
contributing the CD's sultriest vocal performances. Missy Elliott also
lays out a crunching duet with label mate Fabolous. That was fun to
do. Just some old school R&B. We're not trying to set any new kind of
standard. We're just doing music we hope people will love. You can
clean your house to that, maybe make a baby.
Missy Elliott closes the album with the gospel tinged I'm Not Perfect
featuring the Clark sisters, ending the 14 song opus on a humbling but
uplifting coda. Every album I try to do something gospel oriented. I
was honored to be in the same room with the Clark Sisters. And the
great thing about them is they always bring something to the table.
Missy Elliott Tickets
Ticket Retriever sells tickets for Missy Elliott concert events. We
specialize in providing you with premium and other Missy Elliott Tickets
that are in high demand. We can help you gain access to tickets for
all major events.
How to Find Missy Elliott Tickets:
1. Browse our ticket inventory by clicking on the "Missy Elliott" button.
2. Sort ticket events by price, section, or row.
3. Use the seating chart to help you find the Missy Elliott tickets that meet
your preferences.
4. Place your ticket order for Missy Elliott Tickets on our secure
system.