Author | Message |
Confessions' Turns 10: The Anatomy Of Usher's Masterpiece
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
III PRATHER: Usher was like “[“Burn”] is my first single.” And I was like, “Not really. I mean, it can be…” Everybody except Usher was like, Nah, it’s not exciting. He was equating it to “U Got It Bad” and “Nice & Slow” but neither of those were the lead records. The thing is, you need momentum to make those mean as much. But when this conversation was taking place there was no “Yeah!” SEAN GARRETT (SONGWRITER): I liked the stuff Lil Jon was doing and asked my publisher to get some of his tracks. Lil Jon’s people were like, “He don’t do R&B. Lil Jon...Usher?’ It took about a month to get some tracks because they thought I was bullshitting. JONES: Shakir [Stewart, Arista A&R consultant] came into my office and asked me if I could send a song to Usher. He gave me the CD, we played it, and as soon as it came on, it was “Yeah!.” He said, “I need you to send this to Jonetta.” I took the CD, called Jonetta and said, “I’m sending you a song. Don’t try to understand it. We just need to get it to Usher.” So she calls back, maybe a half hour later and said, OK. And I said, “I told you!” PRATHER: One night Usher calls me down to his house. It’s a house full of people and he’s like, “Listen to this shit they just sent me.” So they played the record and everybody in the house was cracking on the record. See, Sean Garrett’s voice is so light for somebody who is so big [Laughs]. So Usher is like, “They just sent me this fake-ass Michael Jackson song.” And I’m like “Nah this is a hit. This is what you need.” At the time Lil Jon was making that pop culture turn and the Dave Chappelle skits just happened. I was like, “Just cut it.” I went through every trick I could think of. “What if you don’t cut it and they give it to someone else––I had a specific name––and you look crazy because this dude gets the biggest sound in Atlanta culture while you’re in Atlanta?” PITTS: That nigga was not fucking with that record. LUDACRIS (RAPPER): I remember listening to it for the first time in my house in Atlanta. It’s very rare that people send me a track and I instantly fall in love with it. Without me on it, it was [already] ridiculous. It took me no time to do my verse because when I’m that inspired, I instantly feel gratification from a record. It took me an hour or two to get everything together and I knocked it out. I knew how big it was going to be. GARRETT: Once we finished the record, we found out that there were several mixes of the track already out there. PRATHER: After he cut it a bunch of us were randomly at a strip club one night and the Petey Pablo song came on. “Freak-A-Leak” is the original beat to “Yeah.” Usher looks at me like, “You gave him the record?” I’m like, “Did you give him the record?” Then Petey Pablo comes on and we’re like, “They put Petey Pablo on it?” So I called Jon from the club like, “Yo.” And he’s like, “Oh shit, it was a on a beat tape.” At this point Usher’s like, “See, I told you! Fuck this shit!” I told Jon he had to go back in and fix this and he came up with the much better record. The first time we heard the [keys come in] is the first time I saw Usher actually like the song. LUDACRIS: Originally, Usher said that he didn’t really like the record. He wanted one of those slow songs to be the first single. He thought the song was just mediocre. COX: We were nervous about “Yeah!” for a couple reasons. 8701 had a hiccup with the record “Pop Ya Collar.” For whatever reason it didn’t work, so Arista felt like they were about to have another hiccup. PRATHER: They put out “Pop The Collar” and it was wack as fuck, so it gave us back the reigns. DUPRI: I was actually afraid [of “Yeah!”]. I didn’t feel like crunk was commercial enough for Usher. I didn’t want it to drive away what we already built with “U Remind Me” and “U Got It Bad.” PITTS: I remember JD played it on his radio show right before the holidays and it didn’t get a good response. I was supposed to master the record. I guess because of the early response I was told not to master it. I got to give all the credit to Lil Jon. They was about to go left. Lil Jon did his thing and when we came back off the Christmas break that shit was on fire! LIL JON: I definitely leaked it to radio. I gave it to select people and the rest is history. If you got a hit song and the label doesn’t necessarily agree, it will force them to believe in it. JONES: When Jon leaked the song, L.A. went crazy. Called legal and had the stations shut the song down. And as quick as he can shut the radio stations down, five other stations jumped on it. It started to get out of control, like a wild fire. It got so bad that they didn’t have a choice [but to support it]. COX: L.A. and Jermaine were a little bit nervous but I’ll tell you the reason we know MempHitz today is because he stood his ground. He was like, this is the record. Shakir Stewart was like this is the record! And it worked. The first day that record hit the radio it was so big. DUPRI: If you’re trying to build an R&B star and he goes and makes a record with Lil Jon it could change the scope of where he’s going. And it didn’t. It just became the thunder of new music. It could’ve brought his brand down but instead his brand lifted everything else up. Usher’s got that power http://www.vibe.com/photo...ece?page=3 | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Confessions became a Frankenstein monster that turned on its master. Ever since that album, he's been like Janet. Creatively lost; not knowing where to go next. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Here's a confession for ya...I never heard the entire album. I only heard the singles and maybe an album cut or two, like "Bad Girl." | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Let's see if I got this straight...
Per article, Confessions = Masterpiece Per worldwide opinion, What's Going On = Masterpiece
therefore
Confessions = What's Going On
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
i never got the hype of confessions, i thought his previous 2 albums was better. and are they really comparing it to thriller? confessions wasnt a impactful album imo, it just sold alot of copies. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
A modern masterpiece.
Confessions was pretty good. Not great.
"Caught Up" is unerrated. PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever ----- Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Masterpiece and Usher should never be uttered together. These people are talking out of their ass. "Lack of home training crosses all boundaries." | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
caught up is my favorite song on the album, like somebody else said i never heard the entire album just the songs they played on the radio.the fact that 'yeah' was the lead single disqualifies it as a masterpiece imo. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I thought this album was overrated at the time of release and like a rehash of his 8701 album which was a stronger era musically. I did love the song Caught Up though, and I find myself playing Yeah way more now than back then, like if it's on the radio though it sounded so overrated and lazy to me upon first listen. Also thought it had nothing on the My Way album. I'm glad he had a diamond seller, but I don't know if this effort deserved it. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
yeah, i second that confession. i don't have the album and haven't heard it in its entirety, so the early part of the article about songs like Throwback and Superstar, i'm like huh?! I only know Yeah, Burn, U Got It Bad, Caught Up and U Don't Have to Call, and that's assuming these are all on Confessions. It caught fire as an album. I kinda like when that happens for an artist.
I disagree with those who feel like "Usher" can't have a "masterpiece". Like i said, I don't have it, but it was a beast in its day.
I like the "process" aspect of the article, how things came together [Edited 3/25/14 18:51pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
It's all right-it aint thriller, it aint Purple Rain, it sure aint Songs In The Key Of Life. So masterpiece is not the word-how about fun instead? 99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
U Don't Have To Call and U Got It Bad were on the album before Confessions, the 8701 album. You see? Confessions was only a continuation of what he was already doing successfully, those songs sound the same as burn, etc. but it got publicity because of the infidelity rumours and the scheme worked. His ego was starting to get big as well, though he's cute and such, he was just feeling himself too much by then
I also agree it was a fun era, not to be taken seriously, cause doing that sure didn't work then, and doesn't work now. Having said that, I'm glad his sales and singles outnumbered justin timberlake by miles though at the time. [Edited 3/25/14 19:27pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
- Yup! I remember thinking how he was exploiting his break up with Chilli and the whole "drama" behind their split. Hey, it worked. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Throwback is a great song, it's really stood the test of time (although the Just Blaze v J Dilla debate marrs the beat slightly). Funnily, I always recall a sped up version which I liked, but you never hear it anywhere. Interesting that Usher himself hasn't commented on the album. The timing of this really benefits Rico Love. Alot of people probably only know him for "They Don't Know" and aren't aware of his pedigree. For his very first song, Throwback was a blinder. "Had to get off the boat so I could walk on water..." | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
This album was very good and Caught Up is the fucking jam....especially the video. "A Man Can't Ride Your Back Unless It's Bent" MLK 4/3/68 | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Yep...cool album but a masterpiece? hell no! The greatest live performer of our times was is and always will be Prince.
Remember there is only one destination and that place is U All of it. Everything. Is U. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Every artist makes their personal masterpiece, I think. Confessions is Usher's. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I beg to differ. I thought 8701 was way better. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Thats true.
Its not a r&b classic of all time but Ushers best to date still Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
8701 is more timeless. You can put on any of the hits from that album and they sound as good today as they did then. The music has held up very well and confirmed that he wasn't just a passing fad after My Way and set the stage for him to be superstar he'd later become.
Confessions was "showtime" and was his hardest impact, and therefore is more 'revered'...but ultimately I don't think the songs from that era have aged as well. "My Boo" with Alicia Keys is terrible; the track sounds like something from a Casio keyboard. "Yeah" with Lil John/Ludacris (and that played out 'crunk' theme) was hot at the time but sounds dated today. "Burn" is okay, but fed off the momentum of "Yeah" and is just a "Nice and Slow"/"U Got It Bad" knockoff (and both of those songs were better.) And "Caught Up" was always annoying to listen to.
Unfortunately, I think that album became as much of a stumbling block for him as it was a smash. He's had a very difficult time adjusting from the overwhelming success of it. He was never going to sell that much a second time, but rather than slowly taper off with another album that was just as 'notable' and well-enough received, even if not 'quite' as big, Usher just plummetted after that. He became much less 'interesting' and it seems like he's suffering from an early midlife crisis (hanging out with Bieber, chasing after Katy Perry/Kesha audiences with silly dance music, wearing tight pants, etc., etc.)
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |