May,22 2008 --
NEW YORK - For more than a decade, Usher's music has been
the soundtrack to a player's lifestyle.
From singing about casual sex when he was just 15 to detailing
the devastating details of an affair on his blockbuster CD
"Confessions," his songs have been filled with sex,
passion, romance, partying, and yes, sometimes love —
but young love, new love, fleeting love. Lyrics about commitment
and enduring relationships were hard to find on his platinum-plus
albums.
Until now.
Sure, the first single off his new album may talk about "Love
in This Club." But Usher is newly married and the father
of a 7-month-old son. He has moved on from the party scene
to the family life, and his new sense of responsibility has
spilled over into his music on "Here I Stand," which
comes out on Tuesday.
"When I started off writing this album, I wasn't married.
I wasn't engaged, I didn't have a child," says Usher,
29. "I wanted to make substance-filled records that are
off the beaten path from what is typical. Trends die. Love
lives on.
"I wrote about so many tumultuous relationships and
issues that I've had in relationships and people reacting
to it. Let me change the stakes. Let me talk about the pleasures
of a relationship."
For some fans, Usher's relationship has been hard to accept.
He's had a string of public romances, most notably his three-year
relationship with Chilli from TLC. But his connection with
his stylist Tameka Foster lit up the blogosphere with negative
feedback.
Maybe it was their age difference (at age 37, she's eight
years older), or the fact that Foster had been married before
and has three children. When the two wed last year, and she
later gave birth to their son, Usher Raymond V, there were
plenty of good wishes but not universal joy.
"People are so attracted to drama. That's easier to
take than a story of righteousness," says Usher, dressed
in all denim, looking intense as he sits backstage between
rehearsals for his recent appearance on "Saturday Night
Live."
"I'm a guy that decided to marry a woman — a black
woman — that wasn't perfect, that had flaws, that through
all in all, she's been successful on her own. ... and that's
a bad thing. I decided to marry this woman, then I decide
to be a father to my child," he says with a laugh. "And
that's a bad thing. It's not like I got caught with a gram
of coke in my car or speeding or was caught for murder, so
why would I be ridiculed, that's why I don't understand —
that's the part that is mind boggling. Why would I be ridiculed
for that, even a year later."
There was also more gossip fodder when Usher dropped his
mom-ager, Johnetta Patton, as his manager and replaced her
with Benny Medina, who has guided the careers of Diddy, Will
Smith and Mariah Carey. Some suggested that Foster pushed
Usher's mom out, but he denies that — or that he "left"
his mother at all (she still lives nearby his house in Atlanta).
"Me and my mother are still in a good place have always
been but we had our time as it relates to manager and artist,
and now it's more important to be mother and son," he
says strongly. "That matters to me. I took charge of
my life and my situation and I dictated to my mother and the
world this is what I'm going to do. It's called taking charge,
it's called being a man — it's called manning up. It's
called being RESPONSIBLE ... And it ain't bad. It's a good
thing."
"Big Jon" Platt, a top music publishing executive
who has known Usher since he was a 17-year-old heartthrob,
says any backlash is due to people not ready to see him grow
up.
"That's the problem with the public in general is that
they still want to hold on to Usher as this young guy,"
says Platt, the West Coast Creative/Head of Urban U.S., EMI
Music Publishing. "Sometimes people want to hold on to
the image they have of you."
Though he may still have a baby face and youthful appeal
(his splits and dance moves during "SNL" rehearsals
could quiet the "Chris Brown is the next Usher"
talk), Usher is clearly ready to break free from his old reputation.
His new CD, "Here I Stand," isn't all about family
and relationships — there's the will.i.am come-on song
"What's Your Name" and the bedroom burner "Trading
Places" — but it's highlighted by songs that stress
fidelity, lifelong ties and fatherhood. It's the antithesis
of the Grammy-winning "Confessions," which sold
nine million albums fueled by the party smash "Yeah"
and "Burn," about letting go of a relationship.
Now, on the new track "Prayer For You," Usher croons
about his newborn son, whose cries open the song. "His
Mistakes" warn a man tempted to commit adultery. And
"Best Thing" featuring Jay-Z has the former bachelors
celebrating the love of one woman.
"I almost hate the words 'grow up' because it makes
it seem like he wasn't grown up before," says Platt.
"(But) he's just a man whose grown before our eyes ...
he's just more serious now."
Given that much of Usher's persona was that of a sex symbol
— a single sex symbol — becoming a family man
not only in real life but on record could be seen as a risk.
But Usher, who co-wrote all the songs on the CD, believes
his fans are ready to grow up along with him.
"The fans that were 21 when I was 21 are now 29, so
I'm speaking for them as well. I'm speaking to a more mature
audience but also not alienating my younger fans," says
Usher. "There's something for everybody on this record
but I definitely do feel that a more mature audience is going
to respect this album and I think that a younger demographic
is going to enjoy it just as much."
Usher had a hit with R. Kelly last year with "Same Girl,"
but otherwise has been largely absent from the charts since
the white-hot "Confessions" — one of the best
selling records of this decade — finally cooled down
in 2005. He hasn't been out of the spotlight, though. Usher's
done Broadway, with a stint playing Billy Flynn in "Chicago,"
launched his own fragrance lines, is part owner of the Cleveland
Cavaliers, has his charity work and has been campaigning for
Barack Obama for president (the senator recently appointed
him a campaign ambassador).
In today's fickle music market, even a year away from the
charts can seem like an eternity. But Usher says he isn't
worried about how he'll be received, — and as "Love
in This Club" proved, has little reason to be. The CD's
first single (with Young Jeezy) shot to No. 1 upon its release
a few weeks ago and remains a top-five hit on the Billboard
Hot 100.
"Me and this No. 1? We've got a love thing," Usher
said. "We always meet up, no matter how many years I'm
away, we always make it back to each other."