-
GPOY!
(via funniest10k)
Posted on May 22, 2012 via Ridicholas with 42,386 notes
Source: detectivenicks
-
gq:
Amen! D’Angelo Is Back!!
Sh-t. Damn. Motherf—ker! If you love D’Angelo like we do, this one’s gonna give you chills. GQ presents the neo-soul legend’s first extended interview and his first photo shoot in more than a decade. Here’s a brief bit of GQ correspondent Amy Wallace’s spellbinding profile, and click here to read the whole thing.
Shame, guilt, repentance—D’Angelo knows them well. To say that he was raised religious doesn’t begin to capture it. He’s the son and the grandson of Pentecostal preachers. To D’Angelo, good and evil are not abstract concepts but tangible forces he reckons with every day. In his life and in his music, he has always felt the tension between the sacred and the profane, the darkness and the light.
“You know what they say about Lucifer, right, before he was cast out?” D’Angelo asks me now. “Every angel has their specialty, and his was praise. They say that he could play every instrument with one finger and that the music was just awesome. And he was exceptionally beautiful, Lucifer—as an angel, he was.”
But after he descended into hell, Lucifer was fearsome, he tells me. “There’s forces that are going on that I don’t think a lot of motherfuckers that make music today are aware of,” he says. “It’s deep. I’ve felt it. I’ve felt other forces pulling at me.” He stubs out his cigarette and leans toward me, taking my hand. “This is a very powerful medium that we are involved in,” he says gravely. “I learned at an early age that what we were doing in the choir was just as important as the preacher. It was a ministry in itself. We could stir the pot, you know? The stage is our pulpit, and you can use all of that energy and that music and the lights and the colors and the sound. But you know, you’ve got to be careful.”
[Photograph by Gregory Harris]
Posted on May 22, 2012 via The GQ Tumblr with 462 notes
-

(via dirrtyfilthynasty)
Posted on May 21, 2012 via You'll Find A Way with 449 notes
Source: husssel
-
this was totally me… except back in 1989 it was Whitney
(via funniest10k)
Posted on May 18, 2012 via MONSTERZOLANSKI with 30,241 notes
Source: minajgaga
-
“snozzberry? who’s ever heard of a snozzberry?!”
(via funniest10k)
Posted on May 18, 2012 via Eatingisn'tveryⒸⒽⒶⓃⒺⓁ with 35,306 notes
Source: vidkids
-
(via bionicaguilera)
Posted on May 17, 2012 via Brandon † with 24 notes
Source: fadedx
-
LMAO, what is this from???
(via miley-virus)
Posted on May 15, 2012 via Simplicity with 1,661 notes
Source: shygirl364
-
Posted on May 15, 2012 via Terry Richardson's Diary with 2,764 notes
Source: terrysdiary
-
Posted on May 15, 2012 via Jules Lira with 90 notes
Source: aguileraonline.com
-
[Flash 10 is required to watch video]
Huxtable family sings “I Just Called to Say I Love You” with Stevie Wonder
YESSS… one of my FAVORITE Cosby moments
Posted on May 14, 2012 via famousblackGIRLS with 1,101 notes
Source: fuckyeahfamousblackgirls

![gq:
Amen! D’Angelo Is Back!!
Sh-t. Damn. Motherf—ker! If you love D’Angelo like we do, this one’s gonna give you chills. GQ presents the neo-soul legend’s first extended interview and his first photo shoot in more than a decade. Here’s a brief bit of GQ correspondent Amy Wallace’s spellbinding profile, and click here to read the whole thing.
Shame, guilt, repentance—D’Angelo knows them well. To say that he was raised religious doesn’t begin to capture it. He’s the son and the grandson of Pentecostal preachers. To D’Angelo, good and evil are not abstract concepts but tangible forces he reckons with every day. In his life and in his music, he has always felt the tension between the sacred and the profane, the darkness and the light.
“You know what they say about Lucifer, right, before he was cast out?” D’Angelo asks me now. “Every angel has their specialty, and his was praise. They say that he could play every instrument with one finger and that the music was just awesome. And he was exceptionally beautiful, Lucifer—as an angel, he was.”
But after he descended into hell, Lucifer was fearsome, he tells me. “There’s forces that are going on that I don’t think a lot of motherfuckers that make music today are aware of,” he says. “It’s deep. I’ve felt it. I’ve felt other forces pulling at me.” He stubs out his cigarette and leans toward me, taking my hand. “This is a very powerful medium that we are involved in,” he says gravely. “I learned at an early age that what we were doing in the choir was just as important as the preacher. It was a ministry in itself. We could stir the pot, you know? The stage is our pulpit, and you can use all of that energy and that music and the lights and the colors and the sound. But you know, you’ve got to be careful.”
[Photograph by Gregory Harris]](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4fheluD8Y1qe6vsbo1_500.jpg)



