john legendbiography news movies & tv forum links |
|
John Legend has sold more than five million albums world wide, garnered multiple hit singles ("Ordinary People," "Used to Love U," "So High," "Save Room," "Heaven," "Another Again"), received countless awards (including five Grammys) and wowed rapt audiences across the globe. Music's leading producers clamor to work with John Legend. Fashion aficionados can't get enough of John Legend's incomparable style. And the humanitarian community has rallied around John Legend's fight to end poverty. Critics have called John Legend a genius, one of the most compelling and important singer/songwriters of this generation, an elegant ambassador of soul. With all of the acclaim, it would be easy for John Legend to rest on his laurels, but he continues to push himself, always striving to break new musical ground. "Some people have been making the same album for years and they don't really push the envelope," John Legend says. "That's not me. Expect me to experiment. Expect me to always approach the music in new and different ways." John Legend does all that and more on "Evolver," the follow-up to his Grammy award-winning "Once Again." John Legend's new album's name is as succinct as it is bold, a one-word mission statement encapsulating the singer's ambitions. "I am constantly evolving as a person and as an artist," says John Legend. "You still have the legacy of what you did before and the people's memory of that will always be there, but with each album you get to question that, to play with it and even rebel against if you want to and I did that with this album." John Legend proved he was no ordinary R&B singer with his outstanding debut "Get Lifted," and he successfully evaded the sophomore jinx with the classic "Once Again." Bona fides secured, John Legend is ready to party on "Evolver." John Legend kicks off the fun with "Green Light," the album's rollicking first single featuring Andre 3000, OutKast's rhyme-wizard-meets-bespokesmodel. "I am a true Andre fan and he doesn't rap much any more so I was really happy he wanted to do this," says John Legend, who leaves the piano behind on this synthesizer-driven track. "I knew he wouldn't have chosen to be on the song if it wasn't hot." On the Pharrell-penned track, "It's Over," John Legend repeatedly croons, "What do you keep calling for?" over a thumping new jack swing-inspired beat featuring Kanye West giving his paramour the kiss off. Getting dumped never sounded so good. "Cross the Line" has John Legend attempting to take a platonic relationship to the next level. "Men and women can be friends," John Legend says, "but guys always have sex on the brain to some extent. On the right night, in the right dress, with the right amount of drinks, she can get it." John Legend teams up with Buju Banton on "Can't Be My Lover," a reggae-tinged bonus track that has Legend resisting the charms of a relentless seductress. "Buju brings the dance hall authenticity to this song," John points out. "No one sounds like him." "Good Morning" has John Legend sweet-talking an overnight guest into staying to watch the sunrise and more. "I've never been the kick-the-girl-out-of-the-bed-at-the-end-of-the-evening guy," John Legend says. "I want her to stay." While John Legend tackles the emotional complexities of relationships on tracks like the will.i.am-produced "Satisfaction" and "I Love, You Love" "This Time" find the artist pledging to give up his playboy ways. "This time I want it all," John Legend sings in his signature full-bodied baritone. "I'm showing you all the cards/Giving you all my heart." "You can hear my voice crack on that song and it sounds like I'm struggling, which is a good thing," John Legend admits. "Everyone is auto-tuning their voices in an attempt to sound perfect and as a result everyone ends up sounding the same. But I like to hear the imperfections. That's what gives the voice character." John Legend turns serious with the socially conscious anthem "If You're Out There," which he debuted in Denver during a historic performance opening the Democratic National Convention in August 2008. "The song is a rallying cry," says John Legend, "and when I was writing it I knew I didn't want to temper it with cynicism. I wanted to be unabashedly hopeful. Let's go all the way." "If You're Out There" reflects John Legend's passion for social change. In 2007, John Legend and his team launched the Show Me Campaign whose mission is to fight poverty through fostering sustainable development. Through John Legend's work with economist Jeffrey Sachs and Millennium Promise, the Show Me Campaign has adopted a village in western Tanzania called Mbola. The campaign funds a robust program to help lift this village out of extreme poverty. Additionally, John Legend and Sachs have toured the U.S. on a "Poverty Action Tour" to bring the message of sustainable development to the nation's college students. John Legend has recently been honored with the 2008 Humanitarian Award from CARE and the 2008 Difference Award from OneXOne. John Legend has come a long way since his days an in-demand session writer and musician working with Lauryn Hill, Alicia Keys and Kanye West, among others. Born and raised in Springfield, Ohio, the singer (born John Stephens) began playing piano at the age of four. John Legend was singing in his church choir by seven and blossomed into a choir director in his teens. John Legend began to work his way into the Philadelphia music scene while studying at the University of Pennsylvania (where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1999). Kanye West gave John Legend his first big break when he signed the artist to his G.O.O.D Music production company in 2004. It would prove to be one of West's smartest decisions. John Legend's debut, "Get Lifted," opened at 7 on the Billboard Top 200 and turned the singer into an overnight sensation. Featuring the hit singles "Ordinary People," "Used to Love U," and "So High," the album quickly became both a critical and commercial success, selling more than three million copies and earning John Legend a slew of awards, including Grammys for Best New Artist, Best Male R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B album. John Legend's critically acclaimed follow-up, "Once Again," released in 2006, not only cemented his status as a true artist's artist, but secured his place in the soul music pantheon. Entering the Billboard Top 200 at 3, the album quickly went platinum and won John Legend several more awards, including a Grammy Award for Best R&B Vocal Performance for the single "Heaven." That same year, John Legend was awarded yet another Grammy for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals for the single "Family Affair" (from the Sly and the Family Stone tribute album, "Different Strokes by Different Folks"). Reflecting on his evolution, John Legend says that at this point in his life he is the most confident that he's ever been. "I'm more comfortable with my entire being," he says. "I'm more engaged in the world around me. In every aspect of my life—in relationships, sexually, emotionally, intellectually—I've grown up. This album is a statement about where I am right now."
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| home • contact us • rss • twitter • facebook site map • terms of use • privacy policy | |||||
| Copyright © 2006-2010 by Pop Tower. All rights reserved. This website has no affiliation with any television network or movie studio. |
|||||
