Usher
1978 –
He walked into a recording studio as a teenager in the mid-1990s with a voice that could handle the new jack swing era and the quieter moments with equal control, and L.A. Reid knew he had found the future of R&B. Usher was born Usher Raymond IV in Dallas in 1978, raised in Chattanooga, and moved to Atlanta as a teenager to pursue music after his mother recognized his talent in church choirs.
L.A. Reid signed him to LaFace Records, and his self-titled debut arrived when he was sixteen. The album sold modestly, but his second album My Way in 1997 went six times platinum and established him as a star.

The cost was growing up in public under an unforgiving spotlight. Usher was a teenager when he became famous, and the industry's expectations shaped his development as much as his own instincts did. He navigated the transition to adult stardom successfully, avoiding the pitfalls that derailed many child stars. He also began mentoring a young Justin Bieber, whom he discovered through YouTube, extending his influence into the next generation of pop.

Yeah! is the one. Produced by Lil Jon and featuring Ludacris, the song defined the sound of mid-2000s R&B with its crunk influence, relentless beat, and Usher's vocal sliding over the top with effortless control. It spent twelve weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100. The album Confessions sold over twenty million copies and won multiple Grammys.

My Way (1997)

Usher headlined the Super Bowl halftime show and proved that a male R&B vocalist could grow from teen heartthrob into industry institution across three decades of sustained success.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Usher

1978 –
He walked into a recording studio as a teenager in the mid-1990s with a voice that could handle the new jack swing era and the quieter moments with equal control, and L.A. Reid knew he had found the future of R&B. Usher was born Usher Raymond IV in Dallas in 1978, raised in Chattanooga, and moved to Atlanta as a teenager to pursue music after his mother recognized his talent in church choirs.
L.A. Reid signed him to LaFace Records, and his self-titled debut arrived when he was sixteen. The album sold modestly, but his second album My Way in 1997 went six times platinum and established him as a star.

The cost was growing up in public under an unforgiving spotlight. Usher was a teenager when he became famous, and the industry's expectations shaped his development as much as his own instincts did. He navigated the transition to adult stardom successfully, avoiding the pitfalls that derailed many child stars. He also began mentoring a young Justin Bieber, whom he discovered through YouTube, extending his influence into the next generation of pop.

Yeah! is the one. Produced by Lil Jon and featuring Ludacris, the song defined the sound of mid-2000s R&B with its crunk influence, relentless beat, and Usher's vocal sliding over the top with effortless control. It spent twelve weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100. The album Confessions sold over twenty million copies and won multiple Grammys.

My Way (1997)

Usher headlined the Super Bowl halftime show and proved that a male R&B vocalist could grow from teen heartthrob into industry institution across three decades of sustained success.

My Way (1997) My Way (1997)
Confessions (2004) Confessions (2004)
Here I Stand (2008) Here I Stand (2008)
Usher (1994)
My Way (1997)
8701 (2001)
Confessions (2004)
Here I Stand (Migies-Edition) (2008)
Here I Stand (2008)
Raymond v Raymond (2010)
Numb Remixes (2012)
Looking 4 Myself (2012)
Hard II Love (2016)
“A” (2018)
COMING HOME (2024)
r&bpopsoul
The Sunday Drop
One song. One story. Every Sunday.

No algorithms. No trending sections. Just a song someone loved and the story behind it. Delivered Sunday morning.

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

0:00
0:00
The Sunday Drop One song. One story. Every Sunday.