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Born Usher Terry Raymond IV in Dallas, Usher spent much of his childhood in Chattanooga, and eventually moved to Atlanta for the sake of his budding music career. After a LaFace A&R representative spotted him on Star Search, his career took off. The 14-year-old auditioned for LaFace co-founder <a href="spotify:artist:3qEzkkBwK5vKVggMiZYOWa">L.A. Reid</a>, who signed the gospel choir boy to a recording contract. He made his recorded debut in 1993 on the Poetic Justice soundtrack with "Call Me a Mack," a single that reached number 56 on Billboard's R&B/hip-hop chart. The following year, Usher released his debut album of the same name, which featured co-executive producer Sean "Puffy" Combs. The first single, "Think of You," gained Usher wide recognition 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 <a href="spotify:artist:6nzxy2wXs6tLgzEtqOkEi2">Monica</a> for a remake of <a href="spotify:artist:0nVQLK3LSM9SFP5xp64D7a">Latimore</a>'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, he co-wrote six of the nine songs and enlisted the help of producers <a href="spotify:artist:6nfYGe7IIuuP5bMY1jkJP6">Jermaine Dupri</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:3aVoqlJOYx31lH1gibGDt3">Babyface</a>, and, again, Combs. The album's first single, "You Make Me Wanna," reestablished Usher as one of R&B's hottest artists, and also made him a crossover sensation. It topped Billboard's R&B chart for 11 weeks, hit number two on the Hot 100, 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 chart 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 until his next studio release, Usher issued a concert recording titled simply Live in 1999. He returned on the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Arista%22">Arista</a> label with his third proper album, 8701, in 2001, and progressed from a teen pop star to a sultry R&B singer. "U Remind Me" and "U Got It Bad" topped the Hot 100 and R&B/hip-hop charts, while the latter and "U Don't Have to Call" (merely number three pop, number two R&B/hip-hop) won the Grammy Award for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance in consecutive years. In 2004, <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Arista%22">Arista</a> released the single "Yeah!" Produced by <a href="spotify:artist:7sfl4Xt5KmfyDs2T3SVSMK">Lil Jon</a> and guesting <a href="spotify:artist:3ipn9JLAPI5GUEo4y4jcoi">Ludacris</a>, the addictive, lightly crunk cut fast became a club favorite, and then it went global -- a number one pop hit in the U.S., the U.K., Germany, and several other territories. Confessions, the parent album, was Usher's most mature and diverse work. It won a Grammy for Best Contemporary R&B Album, while "Yeah!" took home the award for Best Rapped/Sung Collaboration, and the <a href="spotify:artist:3DiDSECUqqY1AuBP8qtaIa">Alicia Keys</a> duet "My Boo" won Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. Usher starred in 2005's In the Mix and returned in 2008 with Here I Stand, an album that topped the Billboard 200 and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts but inevitably failed to do as well as what preceded it.
Raymond v Raymond, inspired in part by the end of Usher's marriage, was released in 2010 as three of its songs were climbing the charts. Its buzz single, "Papers," had already topped the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles chart. An EP titled Versus followed later in the year. At the Grammy ceremony the following February, Raymond v Raymond won in the category of Best Contemporary R&B Album, and "There Goes My Baby" won for Best R&B Male Vocal Performance. Led by yet another Hot R&B/Hip-Hop chart-topper, "Climax" (co-produced by <a href="spotify:artist:5fMUXHkw8R8eOP2RNVYEZX">Diplo</a>), Looking 4 Myself was issued in 2012, driven by the Top Ten single "Scream," and it became Usher's fourth number one album. "Climax" made Usher an eight-time Grammy winner when it took the award for Best R&B Performance.
In 2013, Usher began a stint as a coach for the NBC talent show The Voice. His contestant, <a href="spotify:artist:1rVN2nOV74weTglog9V0gk">Josh Kaufman</a>, won season six of the competition in 2014. Meanwhile, Usher released singles throughout the year, including "Good Kisser," "She Came to Give It to You," and "I Don't Mind," the last of which -- featuring <a href="spotify:artist:5gCRApTajqwbnHHPbr2Fpi">Juicy J</a> -- became his 13th number one R&B/hip-hop smash. In 2016, Usher starred as Sugar Ray Leonard in the movie Hands of Stone. The song "Champions" (with <a href="spotify:artist:5BwMgvRwlq61SmknvsVIQj">Ruben Blades</a>) was included on the film's soundtrack. It became one of four singles -- along with "Missin' U," "Crash," and "No Limit" featuring <a href="spotify:artist:50co4Is1HCEo8bhOyUWKpn">Young Thug</a> -- released in preparation for his eighth album, Hard II Love, which entered the Top Five of the Billboard 200 and R&B/hip-hop charts that September.
In October 2018, on the weekend of his 40th birthday, Usher made a surprise return with "A," a brief album produced by "Papers" collaborator <a href="spotify:artist:1mceaxtjWdEmwoDVAlkC41">Zaytoven</a> with features from <a href="spotify:artist:2hlmm7s2ICUX0LVIhVFlZQ">Gunna</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:1RyvyyTE3xzB2ZywiAwp0i">Future</a>. It peaked at number 31 on the Billboard 200. In 2019, he issued the track "LaLaLa" with <a href="spotify:artist:6wMr4zKPrrR0UVz08WtUWc">Black Coffee</a> and guested on <a href="spotify:artist:57LYzLEk2LcFghVwuWbcuS">Summer Walker</a>'s single "Come Thru" (from her album Over It) while he worked on a new album. He released the single "Don't Waste My Time," featuring <a href="spotify:artist:7HkdQ0gt53LP4zmHsL0nap">Ella Mai</a>, at the end of the year. Four more singles in 2020 included the charting "Bad Habits." Featured on tracks by <a href="spotify:artist:1uNFoZAHBGtllmzznpCI3s">Justin Bieber</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:37hAfseJWi0G3Scife12Il">City Girls</a> over the next couple years, Usher didn't headline again until 2023, when he increased anticipation for his ninth album with a series of tracks highlighted by "Good Good," a Top 40 collaboration with <a href="spotify:artist:57LYzLEk2LcFghVwuWbcuS">Walker</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:1URnnhqYAYcrqrcwql10ft">21 Savage</a>. Usher completed a year-and-a-half residency in Las Vegas that December, and the following February, two days before his halftime performance at Super Bowl LVIII, released Coming Home. In addition to "Good Good" and final prelude "Ruin" (featuring <a href="spotify:artist:5Jv1MsZBh0sqokFq7pU8Xg">Pheelz</a>), Usher's ninth album contained his and <a href="spotify:artist:3Y7RZ31TRPVadSFVy1o8os">H.E.R.</a>'s duet for the 2023 version of The Color Purple ("Risk It All") and additional collaborations with <a href="spotify:artist:3wcj11K77LjEY1PkEazffa">Burna Boy</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:3MdXrJWsbVzdn6fe5JYkSQ">Latto</a>. ~ Lynda Lane & Andy Kellman, Rovi
Monthly Listeners
44.9 million
Monthly Listeners History
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Followers
14.3 million
Followers History
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Total Streams
19.3 billion
Total Streams History
Track the evolution of total streams over the last 28 days. This data is calculated from all tracks listed in the artist's discography.