Photo: SHOT BY BRIANNA CAPOZZI

Selena Gomezis getting candid about her latest albumRareand the fears she faced in the weeks leading up to its release.
Answering a question from an online fan account about the scariest part of releasingRarefour years after her last album, 2015’sRevival, the pop crooner reveals that she was terrified that no one would like it and that her career as a singer would be over.
“I genuinely thought that,” she shares. “I worked so, so hard on this album. It could have come out and completely flopped, and then it’s like, well, where do you go from here? I would have questioned everything because I doubt myself and that’s where I would have ended up — in a spiral.”
The “Look At Her Now” singer goes on to state that she is glad the album is “doing well” and adds that she did everything she could to “make it as personal and real.”
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Selena Gomez.SHOT BY BRIANNA CAPOZZI


Gomez’s third solo album debuted atop the U.S.Billboard200 chart, making it her third consecutive No. 1 album in the United States.
With favorable reviews from both fans and critics alike,Rarefeatured previously released tracks “Lose You to Love Me” and “Look at Her Now,” as well as “Vulnerable,” the track that Gomez identifies as her favorite off the new album.
“I don’t know where I heard this from, but [someone] said it was the heart of the album and that was such a compliment to me,” she says.
“I think it’s pretty self-explanatory, but it’s mesaying I’m willing to give myself more, so are you able to handle what I am and what I need as a woman? I won’t tolerate anything less.”
Selena Gomez,Dazed.SHOT BY BRIANNA CAPOZZI

The rap superstar asked Gomez, “You have a Latin surname because of your father: as a worldwide star, do you feel like you represent Latinos despite the fact your music is sung in English?”
“One thousand percent,” she states. “I’m always very vocal about my background, as far as me talking about immigration, and my grandparents having to come across the border illegally. I wouldn’t have been born [otherwise]. I have such an appreciation for my last name.”
She also goes on to talk about how she has plans to release music in Spanish and also discusses her family’s experiences with immigration in another question. Discussing her role as an activist, Gomez reveals her goal was to humanize her people “because they were being called aliens, criminals” and adds that she can’t “imagine what these kids being separated from their families are going through.”
source: people.com