You know you’ve made it as a pop star when the books start coming out. After all, demand begats new titles and after her explosive rise to the top of the pop charts, Ms. Gaga was well ripe for one. (well at least three now, actually.)
There is no room for margin in estimating Gaga’s ambition, from a yearbook dream of performing at Madison Square Garden to her vow to overtake the music world “one sequin at a time,” New York Post reporter, Maureen Callahan chronicles the life, dreams and ambition of a young Stefani Germanotta, who was fiercely determined to make records and become a pop phenomenon.
Beginning by moving to New York and begging for the chance to play gigs at Manhattan’s lower east side hipster clubs, Gaga (named after the Queen song, Radio Ga-Ga) worked her way up the ranks, while still being derailed by poor attendance and thus having to take the occasional job at a burlesque club to pay the bills. Yet, by plying her craft, writing songs in her sparse futon lined apartment, working with her small coterie of DJs and producers, Gaga finally got her break. Yet even after performing at Chicago’s famed Lollapalooza concert, Germanotta was still confused by many for Amy Winehouse and it was not for nearly another year that the young star was on her way to truly becoming a household name.
Throughout the book, all of Gaga’s issues and foibles are brought to light; her insecurities, her ever changing fashion sense (mainly in response to the execs that thought she didn’t have the natural beauty to ever make it big), the revolving door of players in her inner circle, etc. What comes across is a woman who is as genuine as she is manufactured, as confident as she is frail, yet determinedly ambitious from beginning to end.
Callahan’s coverage seems through and informed by all the right people, and for an early phase biography, the book will serve as a history sure to be debated as her fame expands further. There is, of course, no assurance that Gaga will maintain as a cultural phenomenon, but even if she does, “Poker Face” will surely not be the final word on this rise of this performer. Of course, if she fades from here, will anyone even care? A quick read mostly for the here and now.