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After being spotted by a La Face record executive at a talent show in
his hometown of Atlanta, it took no time for Usher Raymond's career to
take off. The 14-year-old auditioned for La Face co-founder L.A. Reid,
who signed the gospel choir boy to a recording contract. Raymond was
introduced to the world simply as "Usher," and released his debut album
of the same name in 1994, which featured co-executive producer Sean
"Puffy" Combs. The first single, "Think of You," gained Usher notoriety
and reached gold status. From that initial exposure, Usher was
approached to do other projects. In 1995, he recorded a national holiday
jingle for Coca-Cola. He also joined several top male R&B vocalists
to form Black Men United for the single "You Will Know," featured on
the Jason's Lyric soundtrack. He also teamed with teen singing sensation
Monica for a duet remake of Latimore's "Let's Straighten It Out."
After graduating from high school, Usher released his sophomore album,
My Way, in 1997. In an attempt to display his maturity and songwriting
abilities, Usher co-wrote six of the nine songs and enlisted the help of
producers Jermaine Dupri, Babyface, and, again, Combs. The album's
first single, "You Make Me Wanna," re-established Usher as one of
R&B's hottest artists, and also made him a crossover sensation; it
topped the R&B charts for 11 weeks, hit number two pop, and
eventually went double platinum. Both of the follow-up singles, "Nice
& Slow" and "My Way," also went platinum; the former stayed at
number one on the R&B charts for eight weeks and became his first
number one pop single. In the meantime, Usher launched an acting career,
appearing in the 1998 horror spoof The Faculty and the 1999 urban
high-school drama Light It Up.
To tide fans over, he issued a concert recording titled simply Live in
1999. Usher returned with his third proper album, All About U, toward
the end of 2000. His third album, 8701 (2001), moved him from a teen pop
star to a sultry R&B singer. In early 2004, Arista released the
single "Yeah!" Produced by Lil Jon and guesting Ludacris, the addictive,
lightly crunk cut fast became a club and radio favorite. By the time
the Usher full-length Confessions dropped later that March, "Yeah!" had
hit the top of the Billboard charts. The album itself was Usher's most
mature work to date and won the Grammy for Best Contemporary R&B
Album in 2004 while "Yeah!" took home the best rapped/sung collaboration
award. ~ All Music Guide
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