SZA.Photo:RENELL MEDRANO

SZA FOR ELLE JUNE/JULY 2023 MUSIC ISSUE

RENELL MEDRANO

If you breakSZA’s heart, don’t expect her to keep it quiet.

The “Kill Bill” singer has been known to air her grievances with the exes who’ve wronged her in both her song lyrics and at her concerts — much to the dismay of a former boyfriend’s father.

In anew interview withElle, SZA, 33, revealed that she received a text from an ex’s dad after she candidly told a crowd in Portland, Oregon that he’d blocked her on his phone.

“My ex’s father just texted me and was like, ‘My son is really hurt about what you said about him to the crowd,'” she said. “You don’t get to block me on everything. Tell our mutual friends terrible things about me like I’m a monster, or whatever the case may be. And then I don’t get to speak my piece in my way. You go do your healing and I’ll do mine.”

SZA.RENELL MEDRANO

SZA FOR ELLE JUNE/JULY 2023 MUSIC ISSUE

According to fan videoshared to TikTok, the singer (real name Solána Rowe) did indeed talk about her ex at her concert in Portland on March 18, telling the audience that she wrote most of the songs she was playing about someone who lives in the city.

“He’s not here ‘cause I’m blocked on everything,” she said, adding later, before “Nobody Gets Me,” “This one is extra sad because I did write this song about the person that lives here… F—. Being blocked on everything is so f—ing hard.”

Elsewhere during the interview, SZA talked about the capricious nature of fame, and how she feels as though she could lose it all in a moment.

SZA FOR ELLE JUNE/JULY 2023 MUSIC ISSUE

“I’m grateful that they like my art and that it speaks to them, and it connects and tethers all of us together in this weird way,” she said. “It’s dope, but it’s also still a string that could be cut at any moment. Literally, sometimes there’s no rhyme or reason to it.”

SZA released her sophomore albumSOSin December to major critical acclaim andchart success; it spent 10 weeks atop theBillboard200 albums chart.

Sheopened up to PEOPLEupon the album’s release about how experiencing bullying as a child growing up in New Jersey helped shape her into the artist she is today.

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“I realized that all the things that made me feel so lame were actually what made me into who I am,” she said. “It’s like, I didn’t go to prom because I didn’t have any friends and I had no one to go to prom with … [and now] it’s so weird that my life turned into [having] a bodyguard while traveling to parties.”

She continued, “All these things, if I had such a fulfilling existence and experience in high school, I would’ve felt validated to the point where I didn’t need to do anymore. [So] I just had to do more, I had to be more because I was like, ‘This s—ty experience can’t be the end of it because if it is, I am cooked.'”

source: people.com