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The-Dream Talks Music, Public Heartbreak and His Def Jam Future [img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/7Xeov.jpg[/img:$uid]
September 2, 2011
As expected, The-Dream released a new album at the tail end of this summer -- but instead of continuing his opulent "Love" album series, the singer/songwriter/producer used a free "Internet album," 1977, as a way to keep himself fresh on the minds of R&B and pop fans.
The singer was originally slated to release The Love, IV (Diary of a Mad Man), the follow-up to 2010's Love King, on Sept. 20, but after the album got pushed back indefinitely due to "contract talks" with Def Jam Records, The-Dream released 1977 as a free download under his real name, Terius Nash. "You can't see that much of me if I don't put records out, so I just had to put it out. The business of a label is to make money -- my business is to make music. I'm gonna get paid if I do it right. So I'm fine with [releasing a free album]. It's more like advertisement for me."
Recorded in just two weeks, 1977 offers a more intense version of The-Dream's synth-driven, hook-laden sound: songs like "Wake Me When It's Over," "Long Gone" and "1977 (Miss You Still)" are wrenching accounts of scorned romance and ineffable regret.
The 11-song album arrives a little over a year after The-Dream separated from Christina Milian, the pop singer he married in Sept. 2009 and with whom he shares a 1-year-old daughter, Violet.
The-Dream admits that 1977 is a "very personal" album that chronicles his upsetting experiences over the past few years -- so much so that he has already received concerned phone calls from people who didn't expect to hear the singer to sound so emotionally damaged.
The-Dream says that most of 1977 tap into those feelings, specifically noting the song "Wedding Crasher," in which he sings about hopelessly trying to replace the girl that got away while delivering a drunken toast at her wedding. "You get to a place where you go and chase all of these stars -- literally and figuratively -- and, well, the moon's good enough. That's how it is. That's what the song is," he says.
With anticipation still high for The Love, IV, The-Dream wants to assure fans that the album is nearly complete, and that he's still angling for a release by the end of 2011. "I'm gonna try. Maybe I should put out another free album-I'm sure that Def Jam would assassinate me!" he laughs. "I'll probably keep writing [for The Love, IV]. I've gotten a couple phone calls -- they wanted to take two records from this '1977' album and maybe shoot a couple videos for them and cap them onto the album. But it's pretty much done."
http://www.billboard.com/...7882.story
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