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Does Usher arguably have the most impressive legacy out of all his peers?
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There will never be another Usher, that's what he said. | |
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Usher Raymond is definitely in my Top 20 for all time favorite Artists/Singers...His Tours are not attracting the usual mega-crowds anymore, so the Bruh should look at smaller venues...He can Tour with other Big Artists to fill stadiums but it's obvious he likes to Headline... | |
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i know just from seeing that list .... that he has an impressive resume but ...
i consider myself a pretty decent student of music ... still am amazed at some artists that I am not familiar with but also .... esp 80s music ... i feel i know alot of them but ...
still only know one usher song .... and .... i dont even know the name of it ! Colonel Angus may be smelly. colonel angus may be a little rough . but deep down ... Colonel angus is very sweet. | |
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Usher is the man! Admittedly, I haven't lisyened to any of his albums and have only heard his singles but the dude has a stacked (to put it mildly) resume and it's amazing how such credentials have gone overlooked and unrecognized. I guarantee if these accolades belonged to someone else *cough*Beyonce*coughcoughcough* then we'd never hear the end of it. | |
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The answer to your question depends on how you define "impressive legacy" as I think Van my album: https://soundcloud.com/theroseparade
2004-2008 demos: https://soundcloud.com/th...aradedemos | |
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Wrecked r&b. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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I feel that way too. Goddamn you for existing, Usher. I'm afraid of Americans. I'm afraid of the world. | |
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I'd rate him the best of a mediocre bunch. He's never blown me away like his influences certainly did. | |
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If legacy in music is defined by numbers, creativity and the idea that another generation will gleam from what you did, then he's there. However, the audiene that grew up with Usher, grew up. We dont get the strip club scene/songs, we can't dance like that anymore, and we sure dont get any form of today's rap collaborations with R&B. If it isn't straight R&B crooning, we wont get it. OTH, in order to stay relevant he had to change or die a slow death. This too will happen to Justin,Trey, Chris, at some point. | |
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It's hard to define legacy though. My Grandaughter who is six, previously a One Direction fan is now a Michael Jackson fan via Youtube, nothing more. She's absolutely gone crazy about him in the last year. Not my prompting as I've never played her any of his stuff ever. I suppose that is legacy. I found that amazing when my wife told me. I suppose she'll move on again as kids do, but hopefully via Michael she'll discover other artists too. Strange old world. | |
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Usher was BIG during the 2000s Like, massive. So that alone is making him shine brighter than Chris or JT. But I'm not a big fan of his voice or music. Still, "Climax" is one of the most defining 'future' R&B hits of the decade. | |
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Decent artist with one big album. I dig some of his material but his chops are average at best. Impressive legacy? Not in my book but a very decent artist. I have all of his cd's and listen to a geat deal of it. I'd certainly rate him ahead of the other MJ wanna be's like Chris Brown & Neyo. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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I might do a legacy thread. Tracing back.. It's interesting. I don't know who James Brown drew inspiration from, dude was the original it seems. | |
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a triple threat......used to watch him on The Bold & The Beautiful in 1998 and his character's name was Raymond. Keep Calm & Listen To Prince | |
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Yes.
My Way, 8701, and Confessions are classics.
Also, Confessions is the BIGGEST selling album by a BLACK artist in the 21st century and he didn't have to be a token Black to achieve it. I think what makes Usher's success the most impressive is the fact that it was rightfully earned. Nothing was given to him and he wasn't an industry favorite. The success he achieved was because people loved his music, period. His disography is very underrated as well his commercial success during his peak. When people look back at his past success and music, Usher should feel good that he will not be called overrated (at least his music anyway). However, what they will ask is what happened? How did a good R&B artist that produce a stringe of consecutive good R&B albums, sell out so badly? Everything after Confessions is horrible and he has tarnished his music catalog because of it. This also is partially a reason why he is overlooked.
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Please explain what you mean by "sell out so badly'. | |
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mjscarousal said: Yes.
My Way, 8701, and Confessions are classics.
Also, Confessions is the BIGGEST selling album by a BLACK artist in the 21st century and he didn't have to be a token Black to achieve it. I think what makes Usher's success the most impressive is the fact that it was rightfully earned. Nothing was given to him and he wasn't an industry favorite. The success he achieved was because people loved his music, period. His disography is very underrated as well his commercial success during his peak. When people look back at his past success and music, Usher should feel good that he will not be called overrated (at least his music anyway). However, what they will ask is what happened? How did a good R&B artist that produce a stringe of consecutive good R&B albums, sell out so badly? Everything after Confessions is horrible and he has tarnished his music catalog because of it. This also is partially a reason why he is overlooked.
FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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my album: https://soundcloud.com/theroseparade
2004-2008 demos: https://soundcloud.com/th...aradedemos | |
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And in addition to Dasein's points, Prince was labelled a "sell out" at times for the clothes he wore, the distortion rock sounds he loved, the times he would rap , and lastly, the eloquence with which he spoke, all by those who wanted to "label" him something other than what he was. An Artist. What does that remind you of? | |
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My definition of selling out is when you abandon your principles, ideals, and in this case artistic intergrity in order to follow whats (popularly accepted or trendy) and that is exactly what Usher did. He was a respected R&B artist and built a dedicated following over time. His fans watched him grow up, struggle and reach superstardom. He was on track to being an Icon imo but he blew that AFTER Confessions. I am guessing there was label pressure to top Confessions so he oblidge and abandoned R&B for while. Its sad because Usher now makes POP Trap music and his image is all over the place. Usher had a very geniune authentic style when he first came out that was seperate from the other MJ wannabe's. He was likable, down to earth and unlike most of his contemporaries, he has a diamond album, classic albums, and classic songs AND he has had the biggest peak by a Black pop artist that has came out over the last 20 years, no question. [Edited 1/20/17 14:43pm] | |
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I would argue that is not a good example. Evolving and experimenting musically is different from following what is trendy. The whole Dangerous album was not New Jack Swing although yes some songs were inspired by that era (but he evolved with the times overall and grew more artistically) but Michael was so versatile musically I don't think using him is a good example. Usher was R&B all the way, that was his lane. The reason why I said he sold out was because he abandoned his core fanbase and R&B all together in order to follow what was trendy and popular. Comparing New Jack Swing to Trap music is comparing apples to oranges. They are totally different. Trap is trash to put it lightly and its embarassing that this is the type of music Usher chooses to make with the type of resume he has.
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mjscarousal said:
I would argue that is not a good example. Evolving and experimenting musically is different from following what is trendy. The whole Dangerous album was not New Jack Swing although yes some songs were inspired by that era (but he evolved with the times overall and grew more artistically) but Michael was so versatile musically I don't think using him is a good example. Usher was R&B all the way, that was his lane. The reason why I said he sold out was because he abandoned his core fanbase and R&B all together in order to follow what was trendy and popular. Comparing New Jack Swing to Trap music is comparing apples to oranges. They are totally different. Trap is trash to put it lightly and its embarassing that this is the type of music Usher chooses to make with the type of resume he has.
Everything mjscarousal has said in this thread echoes my own personal opinions on the matter so I have no need to add to what has already been said, other than to drive home the point of Usher selling out and making trashy music to try stay "down with the kids". The guy has a fantastic voice and has released some of the best pop/RnB songs of the last 20 years and yet you look at him now and it's like a completely different person. It's not even a case of evolving artistically. It's a full on change in direction that wasn't needed and was ill advised and it's very obvious to anyone with working ears that he did it to try to appeal to fans of the autotuned, soulless "music" that seems to sell well these days. And it's frustrating to know that an artist of his ability and influence could help steer the music industry back to producing well written, melodic pop and rnb songs but rather than try that, he's taking the easy option and that's harming his legacy. | |
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Because she holds the truth,can't you see that, or at least that's what she thinks. | |
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Almost, if not every single artist does that, including Prince. Some artists more than others. | |
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Excellent post! Usher is very underrated as a singer IMO. I love the way he emotes especially on a sensual song like i.e. Nice and Slow | |
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I don't think usher has/had the same impact as Kanye or Beyoncé. I view usher like Janet Jackson she made good music was huge for a point in time. But the relevance people have for her has seemed to have faded away and there isn't much veneration for her or usher. Don't get me wrong he was big but he seems as relevant as kem marquis huston and donell jones. | |
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Though "selling out" is synonymous and an extreme form of "abandon", its probably not the best way to describe someone's actions when in reality, he has creative control as an artist. In addition, that catch phrase has maligned many of African American artists , actors, actresses who have decided to do something against the norm . Who decides what's the norm? To you and I ( and I agree with you in some aspects of your post), these compromising modifications can be alarming, yet, they are historical in nature. It is more likely related to relevance than "selling out". | |
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http://www.lipstickalley.com/showthread.php/1131734-Does-Usher-arguably-have-the-most-impressive-legacy-out-of-all-his-peers | |
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