Nov 3, 2015

Lady Gaga Covers New Issue of Rolling Stone Italy



Lady Gaga Covers New  Issue of Rolling Stone Italy

The world's most powerful pop star meets Bruce Weber on the cover of November. Clean and bold, without makeup and without veils. Two fantastic renegade art, always playing on another level.  From November 5 the new Rolling Stone will be on newsstands. And this month, the real stars of the cover story are two: Bruce Weber and Carine Roitfeld. Fashion photographer and filmmaker, known for its advertising campaigns. In the cover story of this issue he interviewed (and photographed) her friend Lady Gaga, directed special Carine Roitfeld, editor of beautiful CR Fashion Book.


Lady Gaga in Rolling Stone: People do not understand the importance of heavy metal

Tony Bennett, on stage with her for the summer tour of Cheek to Cheek, said confidently: "in the future will also be a movie star." Meanwhile, the pop star has opened the doors of "his" hotel in the fifth season of American Horror Story, the TV series aired in the States and soon in Italy for Fox. But it's hardly a secret that Lady Gaga prefers to be compared to Iron Maiden than Madonna. This was confirmed by posing with the legendary jersey of The Number Of The Beast because of CR Fashion Book, the half-year of Carine Roitfeld. And Bruce Dickinson is not unmoved. It's pretty much requited love.

I have found the way to say what I have to say

The shot by Bruce Weber that you saw on the cover, under the artistic direction of Carine Roitfeld, is one of those items of pop culture that make you stop. The look of Lady Gaga is clean and bold. It is pure, in black and white which only adds to the wonderful lack of make-up. His jacket is timeless, like that which is in our closets for twenty years and well on him to sixteen. That picture (and the others that you will see in) is one of those things that stop the flow for a moment, that create a present with meaning, that you recall the urgent need to choose, to dominate the time to sit back on our rock , and, for a few minutes, turn off the world. God save the pop culture. " Massimo Coppola writes well on the editorial of the November issue, on newsstands 5.