![]() ![]() The piano chords rang loudly as a sixth-grader’s prepubescent voice echoed in the Oklahoma middle school gym. “I’ve never met someone more manipulative, more self-centered, and more blatantly opportunistic than her,” he says. Speaking to Rolling Stone last month, Chance wants to get something off his chest: the trauma he says he felt as a teenager after being discovered and later “completely abandoned” by Ellen DeGeneres. “I’m barely holding on by a thread.” It’s the only visual he’s dropping for Palladium, his recently released new album. “I figured we could start with this,” Chance says, cueing up the emotional video for his latest single, “ My Dying Spirit.” “I’m barely on my feet, mama,” he sings over haunting piano. ![]() “‘Give me more cunt!’” Chance remembers, with a chuckle, hearing from McLaughlin’s studio.)īut today, the room is still, filled only with the palpable nervous energy of a musician unsure of how to start a conversation he’s been wanting to have for more than five years. ( RuPaul’s Drag Race’s Ginger Minj was recording a song here the other day. The place is typically filled with the boisterous energy of the artists McLaughlin works with. The quaint spot is where Chance - the 25-year-old musician who got his start on The Ellen Show as a tween - stays when he visits L.A. Greyson Chance and I are sitting in the Hollywood Hills home of producer Brett McLaughlin on a warm August morning. ‘This is the first time I’ve been honest about her, and this is the last time I want to talk about it.” ![]()
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