Mariah Carey is a name synonymous with pop royalty. From her diamond-studded persona to her unmatched five-octave vocal range, the “Glittering Goddess” has dominated the music landscape with a reputation for manicured perfection. But while the world saw an airbrushed diva, Carey harbored a raw, unpolished side that craved a different kind of release—a side far removed from her pristine pop image.
#1. The Rage Behind the Perfection: Carey’s Personal Struggles
During the recording of her 1995 album Daydream, Carey’s personal life was unraveling. She described feeling “filled with rage” in her 2020 memoir The Meaning of Mariah Carey. Her marriage to music executive Tommy Mottola was crumbling, and the burden of perfection was suffocating her. In need of an escape, Carey turned to an unexpected outlet: alt-rock. Enter Someone’s Ugly Daughter, an album Carey recorded under the alter-ego “Chick.”
#2. Creating the Nightmare: Someone’s Ugly Daughter
“If Mariah Carey was the ‘daydream,’ then Someone’s Ugly Daughter was the nightmare,” Carey recalls. The album, released under the band name “Chick,” is a grungy, irreverent departure from her usual work, brimming with biting sarcasm, gritty guitar riffs, and an unapologetic sense of rebellion. Drawing inspiration from the female rockers of the ‘90s, Carey embodied a new persona, one that was “angry, angsty, and messy.” In her memoir, she contrasts these grunge idols—unruly and carefree—with her own carefully curated public image.
#3. The Organic Recording Process
The recording process was organic and unplanned. Carey, working late into the night after Daydream sessions, would hum a guitar riff to her band, and they would immediately record. Carey’s engineer, Dana Jon Chappelle, remembers them jamming until 6 a.m., capturing the raw, unfiltered energy that defined the project. “It was all just old school,” Chappelle told Pitchfork.
#4. Lyrical Rebellion: Sarcasm and Cynicism
The album’s lyrics were a sharp contrast to Carey’s usual themes of love and longing. Tracks like “Malibu” take jabs at romance with lines like, “If I were Malibu Barbie and you were Suntan Ken… I’d probably dump your ass for G.I. Joe.” The record’s humor and bitterness revealed a side of Carey rarely seen by her fans—a woman tired of the “glitter” and eager to express her frustrations.
#5. Sony’s Attempt to Bury the Album
However, the album’s departure from Carey’s pop persona was too radical for Sony Music, the label run by her then-husband Mottola. The company, intent on maintaining Carey’s image, tried to suppress the project. According to Carey, “everything was super-controlled by the powers that be.” In order to get Someone’s Ugly Daughter released, Carey’s involvement had to be concealed. She adopted the pseudonym “D. Sue” in the album credits, and her vocals were replaced by her roommate Clarissa Dane to further distance the project from her established brand.
#6. Rediscovering the Original Recordings
Someone’s Ugly Daughter was ultimately released under the name “Chick,” but it wasn’t until decades later that Carey acknowledged her role in the project. In 2022, she revealed she had uncovered the original recordings and hinted at a possible re-release, though no further updates have emerged.
#7. A Personal Victory for Carey
Even if the world never hears the original version of Someone’s Ugly Daughter, the album remains a personal triumph for Carey. As she writes in her memoir, “I made the sarcastic hardcore head-banging record no one was ever going to allow me to make.” For Carey, the project provided a brief moment of freedom, a chance to shed the pop diva mask and embrace her anger.
#8. The Legacy of Chick: More Than a Diva
In the end, Chick stands as a reminder of the complexity of Mariah Carey. Beneath the glittering surface of the pop icon, there will always be a rebellious, grungy spirit—a side of her that is raw, untamed, and unapologetically real. While she may be the Mother of Pop, Carey will always be Someone’s Ugly Daughter too.