To get to a substantial level of fame, a certain amount of delusion is more or less necessary. That, coupled with some serious drive and feedback from early-career audiences, helped catapult these four musicians to mainstream fame. Letโs take a look at four musicians who have said that they knew they were going to be famous!
1. Whitney Houston
Around 2009, the late great Whitney Houston sat down with Oprah Winfrey for one of the most well-known interviews of her career in New York City. The interview took place at the Town Hall Theater, and there was a reason for that. Houston picked the spot because it was where she once performed at only 13 years old along with her mother, vocalist Cissy Houston.
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Houston said that while delivering a rendition of โTomorrowโ from the popular musical Annie, she realized just how much of a voice was coming out of her.
โI will never forget… I walked out to the front, and I began to sing, and the whole audience rushed to the stage,โ said Houston. โIt was that moment that my mother said, ‘God has smiled on you, and this is what you’re supposed to do.’ […] I just remember that feeling ofโฆ ‘Wow, okay.’โ
2. Lady Gaga
In the early aughts, Lady Gaga once talked about the influences and inspirations behind her massively popular debut album The Fame. Gaga said that she was always going to be a rock star, and she had the support of her family to back her up.
โYou have the ability to experience and feel a certain amount of self-worth that comes from a very vain place by simply your choices,โ Gaga said. โI mean, you can literally choose to have fame, and that’s what this whole album is about.โ
3. Megan Thee Stallion
Megan Thee Stallion has made quite a name for herself in the hip-hop world. And back in 2014, she actually predicted that she would become famous just a few years before she released her debut hit โLike A Stallionโ.
โI need a team bc I promise this rap sh*t gone take off for me,โ the singer said on Twitter.
Since that prediction, Megan Thee Stallion has gone on to win several Grammy Awards and become the first female rapper to perform at the Oscars.
[See Megan Thee Stallion Live In Concert]
4. George Michael
The late singer George Michael was deeply loved throughout his career. He saw quite a bit of success in the 1980s and 1990s. He hit the scene with his music group Wham! and soon kicked off a very successful solo career. Back in 1998, Michael said that he was always obsessed with the idea of becoming famous among his musician contemporaries.
โI didnโt want to be rich, I just wanted to be filthily famous,โ Michael said. โIt was like most singers, it was feeling not listened to, it was lots of feelings of low self-worth. […] I have never met a star who didnโt come from the same kind of insecurity. Itโs the things that are missing that make you a star.โ
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(Original Caption) Charlie Daniels (3rd from left), the entertainer who dedicated his last album to "gun-rotting whiskey and hellatious fights" says he will not play gentle music just to please "damn Yankees drinking martinis" 1/20 at Jimmy Carter's inaugural reception. Daniels said he plans to play the same brand of foot-stomping Southern music he and his band have always produced. They are (from left), Charlie Hayward, Tom Crain, Daniels, Joel Digregorio, Don Murray and Fred Edwards.







