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USHER INTERVIEW FOR 'DYING FOR DOLLY'
U turn
U remind me
Interview: Joan Rivers: True Hollywood Story
Usher: "Don't quit your day job"
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Movie Trailer: Texas Rangers
(RealVideo) (Windows Media)
Movie Trailer: Light It Up
(QuickTime) (RealVideo)
Interview: Usher Q&A
On his plans to become the ultimate entertaine
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| PlayAddShareLink | Bedtime | 1999 | Live | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | Call Me A Mack | 1993 | Poetic Justice | Rap/Hip Hop/Dance |
| PlayAddShareLink | Can U Get Wit It | 1994 | Usher | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | Caught Up | 2004 | Confessions | Pop |
| PlayAddShareLink | I Need A Girl | 2002 | Diddy | Rap/Hip Hop/Dance |
| PlayAddShareLink | The Many Ways | 1994 | Usher | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | My Boo | 2004 | Confessions | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | My Way | 1997 | My Way | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | Nice And Slow | 1997 | My Way | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | Think Of You | 1995 | Usher | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | U Don't Have To Call | 2001 | 8701 | R&B/Soul |
| PlayAddShareLink | U Got It Bad | 2001 | 8701 | Rap/Hip Hop/Dance |
| PlayAddShareLink | U Make Me Wanna | 1997 | My Way | Rap/Hip Hop/Dance |

USHER DISOGRAPHY
AUDIO MUSIC (CONFESSIONS)
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DISK 1 |
AUDIO |
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1. INTRO |
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2. YEAH |
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3. THROWBACK |
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4. CONFESSTIONS (INTERLUDE) |
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5. CONFESSIONS |
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6. BURN |
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7. CAUGHT UP |
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8. SUPERSTAR (INTERLUDE) |
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9. SUPERSTAR |
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10. TRUTH HURTS |
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11. SIMPLE THINGS |
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12. BAD GIRL |
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13. THATS WHAT ITS MADE FOR |
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14. CAN YOU HANDLE IT |
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15. DO IT TO ME |
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16. TAKE YOUR HAND |
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17. FOLLOW ME |
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CLICK HERE ON THE ICONS TO SEE AND HEAR USHER!!! |

Intro
Yeah!
Throwback
Confessions (Interlude)
Confessions Part II
Burn
Caught Up
Superstar (Interlude)
Superstar
Truth Hurts
Simple Things
Bad Girl
That's What It's Made For
Can U Handle It?
Do It To Me
Seduction
Take Your Hand
Follow Me
Confessions Part I
Other Songs:
Yeah! (Remix)
She's Got The Part
You'll Be In My Heart
U Don't Have To Call (Remix)
Call Me A Mack
Nice & Slow (B-Rock Remix)
You Make Me Wanna (JD's Remix)
You Make Me Wanna (Timbaland Remix
Confessions Part II (Remix)
My Boo
Untitled Usher Project (2005) (announced)
Dying for Dolly (2005) (filming) .... Darrel Williams
Geppetto (2000) (TV) .... Ring Leader
Light It Up (1999) .... Lester Dewitt
She's All That (1999) .... Ron James, Campus DJ
"The Bold and the Beautiful" (1987) TV Series .... Raymond (#1)
The Faculty (1998) .... Gabe Santora
"Moesha" (1996) TV Series .... Jeremy (1997-1998)
USHER IN GLAMOUR
Cover guy: July 2005
Date of birth: 14 October, 1978
Family: Usher was raised by his beloved mother, Jonnetta, alongside his younger brother, James, in
Love life: Since splitting with long-term girlfriend Rozonda 'Chilli' Thomas of TLC in 2004, Usher's been linked to a string of A-list beauties, including Naomi Campbell, but for now he classifies himself "single and mingling".
The new: P Diddy. Just like Puffy, Usher is hoping to find lasting success with his own record label, fashion line and acting career.
Breakthrough moment: Usher burst onto the scene with his self-titled debut album back in 1994.
Biggest hit: Usher's album Confessions was the biggest seller in the world in 2004.
Why we love him: Because we've never known someone quite so happy to be given a GLAMOUR award! "Man, I'm happy to a point where I can't quite articulate it," he told us. "When I got the call, I'd finished promoting my album and decided I wasn't doing any more shows or photo shoots. But when I was told I was being made Man of the Year and I was going to be on the cover of GLAMOUR I was like, 'Are you serious?' So I practically came out of semi-retirement to do this, that's how excited I am!"
USHER TALKS TO VH1
It was once suggested that young Usher Raymond might be the successor to Michael Jackson, but it's clear he's gone much further than that. Usher is the total soul man package: a sweet voice, hip dance moves and a chest more ripped than a He-Man
action figure. Since 1993, he's been a chart mainstay, with a string of hits that include "U Got It Bad," "U Remind Me" and "U Don't Have to Call …"
His new single "Yeah" gives the letter U stuff a rest, but its blend of R&B and Atlanta's "crunk" sound has continued Usher's chart reign. Lil Jon and Ludacris help out on the club-friendly hit, but the forthcoming album Confessions tones down the party vibe - this time out Usher's involved in some introspection. Inspired by his recent split with TLC's Chilli, the singer gets pained and passionate on songs like "Burn."
Helped by an army of marquee producers that includes the Neptunes and Jam & Lewis, Usher is staying up with the trends while digging deep into the essentials of great soul music. He told VH1 about his fitness regimen, his take of the Janet Jackson scandal, and why it's time R&B went back to basics.
VH1: How does it feel to be known as having the best abs in show business?
Usher: Hard work truly does pay off! As a kid I'd see Marky Mark or Randy Jackson, who had a ridiculous six pack … There were so many guys who had these six packs, and that was something that I wanted to work on. So I started a long time ago in hopes that this day would come, where I could be recognized for my hard work on my abs.
VH1: How has your workout regime changed over the years?
Usher: My workout has gone from physical to mental. I went from doing like a thousand push-ups a day to now barely making a hundred, because I'm always working. I'm not gonna say I'm chubby, fat or out of pocket. I'm looking good! But you have to be more selective about how you eat.
VH1: So what's your diet like?
U: I'm on a see-food diet, right now - I see it, I eat it. In a second, I'll go back. I'm very disciplined. When I don't want to eat, I won't eat. I go on a fish, chicken and broccoli diet, and throw in some carbs - preferably sweet potatoes. Unless I'm near Mister Chows. Whenever I'm near Mister Chows, I lose myself. I have to have that mandarin dessert!
VH1: Tell me about the first single, "Yeah."
U: "Yeah" features Ludacris and Lil Jon. You hear me say, "Peace up, A-town down." That's the official sign to let you know it's an ATL invasion.
VH1: You've said that you're strictly an R&B artist, though, not hip-hop.
U: The collaboration of these three great energies in hip hop, music and R&B made "Yeah" what it is. I want hip-hop fans to love it. I want R&B fans to love it. That's why "Yeah" has so many different elements. I'm conducting myself as an artist would in everything that I do: I try to think outside the box. [Watch Clip]
VH1: How does that filter through to the album, Confessions?
U: I chose to deal with a lot of different producers that understood how to interpret R&B from a jazz standpoint, an old school throwback standpoint, a new school point, a traditional classic standpoint … The collaboration of all those ideas make up what my album is about.
VH1: "Yeah" sounds like the first crunk/R&B song.
U: You know what's funny, though? Me and Jon worked together a long time ago - before crunk really took off. Him having such a huge success with crunk music made our team-up more attractive, or made it an eye jerk - like, "Lil Jon and Usher? What?" But I love to be right in the middle of what's hot. No one had done a crunk R&B record, and that's what we wanted.
VH1: There's less dancing than usual in the video.
U: I chose to give you more of a narrative than dance in this video. I wanted to give you the story of "Yeah" and what it is, how it happened, what it was, and then also give you the dance. There is a big dance number at the end of the video where we all come together and in our own ATL style, we give it to you. We get crunk. You know what I'm talking about? [Watch Clip]
VH1: Confessions sounds like it's your break-up record.
U: Breaking up is a natural evolution when you try to figure out what you want in life. If you're with an individual who isn't moving in the same direction and at the same rate that you are, it ain't going to work.
VH1: But it's not that easy to get over it.
U: No, because it's going to burn. You've gotten attached, you love that person. You spent the utmost respect, time and dedication to try to create a comfortable relationship for that person. It didn't work, so it burns. I've been known for doing records like that. I did "U Got It Bad" because me and the person that I dealt with had broken up not too long ago. So when we created this record, we thought, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
VH1: The lyrics seem more painful in "Burn" than any of your other breakup songs. Is that a product of getting older?
U: I wrote "Burn" a year ago, so I didn't write it about my current situation. But it does apply in a way. It's a product of growing up. No one can really explain that gut-wrenching feeling you feel when you're going through it, when you figured, "I thought that this was my soul mate. I thought I found the person who had it and I thought I could be that person, too." You've gotta go through something to get to something sometimes. My mom always said, "If there were no humps in life, there would be nothing to get over."
VH1: Did you hesitate to write personal lyrics this time because everyone would be speculating?
U: I didn't care about that. I feel like it takes real situations to make real music. I wrote not just about my most recent relationship, but relationships that go back and issues that happened three, four years ago, that I just locked away. I came to the reality that you can't really be right for anyone until you get right by yourself. Michael Jackson said it best, "You start with the man in mirror." The truth will set you free.
VH1: What did you think of the Janet Jackson farrago?
U: I saw the incident. First and foremost, I was shocked, because I cannot believe that Janet would show her t*ttie on a show like that. That's a family show. It was a hot move, no doubt about it, but it was the wrong timing. It kind of pissed me off, because I'm looking at TV, and I notice that every performance is built off of shock value. What about the entertainment of it? [Watch Clip]
VH1: What do you think the state of R&B and soul is in 2004?
U: It's almost as if R&B is running away from the classic way of looking at art or music. Stevie Wonder and the greats are probably looking at the industry saying, "Wow, I guess hip hop is the new pop or R&B." No, R&B has a face; R&B has a name. I don't mind being the sole [representative] for it. I'm going to give you what I feel is real and what made me love music.
VH1: Where else do you hear that kind of reality?
U: R&B needs someone who can say, "Look, this is what it is and this is how you create it." You can hear those influences in the music. If it's not Michael Jackson, if it's not Quincy Jones, if it's not Stevie Wonder, if it's not Marvin Gaye, if it's not Sam Cooke, if it's not Sly & the Family Stone, if it's not Smoky Robinson, if it's not The Four Tops, if it's not … You need to reestablish R&B in a classical sense.
VH1: I was listening to Sam Cooke the other day, and I was just like - wow!
U: It's timeless! I miss turning on the radio and hearing songs that were uplifting, records that were honest. I can't forget what made me love music. I can't forget being five years old and looking around and seeing everybody have a good time listening to James Brown, Otis Redding, listening to all those great singers that just made you love music, that made you love life, or made you have a voice to speak!
VH1: People forget how R&B was once as articulate and contemporary as rap music.
U: It ain't soft to be R&B. Who ever said that? Maybe hip-hop said that, but that ain't true. R&B ain't never been soft. Sly & the Family Stone weren't soft. Was Barry White soft? No! He was a cold piece! He made you understand the game. Was Curtis Mayfield soft? No, he was your "Pusher Man"! Maybe we need to really recognize where music is going, and how important R&B is.
LOS ANGELES — Sure, Usher's been on the big screen before, but that was B.C. (Before Confessions). Now that he's one of the world's biggest music stars, the R&B singer is hoping to up his status as an actor ("She's All That" and "Light It Up" are his best known previous films), and he's dedicating most of 2005 to the cause. His first stride is "Dying for Dolly" with Emmanuelle Chriqui (who played opposite another pop star, Lance Bass, in "On the Line") in the title role and veteran Chazz Palminteri as her mob-boss father. Compared with, say, "The Dukes of Hazzard" with Jessica Simpson, "Dying for Dolly" has flown under the radar. So, determined to get the details on the movie and Usher's celluloid comeback, MTV News' Sway paid a visit to the set, an abandoned club in downtown
USHER ON THE SET OF ‘DYING FOR DOLLY’


Usher: It's a love story. It's a romantic comedy and the plot of the story, basically, is my character, Daryl Williams, falls in love with an Italian crime boss's daughter. And it's really a story about love and the obstacles that you'll go through in certain situations. Sometimes life is what happens when you're making other plans: You may have a direction that you think is working for you and then something else will happen.
Sway: We haven't seen you in movies in a while, so what attracted you to this role?
Usher: This is sort of my hiatus from music, and I wanted [this movie] to be a project that would be outside the box and not what you would normally expect. When I heard the title, I said the same thing: "Dying for Dolly"? But then I read the script, and it was really a great script, and there's a really a great director associated with it in Ron Underwood ["City Slickers"]. I respect the work that he's done before.
Sway: A lot of people may not be familiar with Emmanuelle. What did you guys see in her to put her in this role?
Usher: She is just a natural talent, a graceful, truly beautiful Italian, a charismatic woman. I think that every Italian woman would feel like, "I think that's my story. That's me."
Sway: Tell me about the scenes you guys shot today. I saw some dancing, but you didn't dance. What was that about?
Usher: This is a scene where me and Dolly go to a place I work. I'm gonna DJ, and the last place I would've wanted to bring her was a place that I do my thing. I kind of run into a few other females that I dealt with. She takes me out to the dance floor and I don't even want to dance. Then it just turns into a really cool moment, a funny moment.
Sway: Was she at least a wee bit intimidated about having to do a dance scene with you?
Usher: Well, [my character] doesn't really dance. That's not really his thing. He's a producer and Ultimate Records is the name of his label. He has a whole vision. He's searching for that family support, as well as dream of being very successful as an executive, as a producer, as a DJ, all of that. And then all of a sudden he's thrown a curveball in life: He's in a mobster's setting, in a mobster's family, falls in love with a mobster's daughter. It's like, "Ahh!"
Sway: That's a lot of character in one role. How hard did you have to prepare for it?
Usher: It was pretty easy in the sense of understanding the love story, but I'm gonna try some really creative things. Ron Underwood is a great director who gives me good notes and directs me. In preparing for it, I just looked at movies like "A
Sway: Who's Kevin Hart?
Usher: Come on, man, "Soul Plane"!
Sway: No, for real. I didn't see "Soul Plane."
Usher: You should for the comedy of Kevin Hart as well as the comedics in it.
Sway: Now, I've watched your career since you first came on the scene and it seems like now you're starting to really break through and get that crossover appeal, but you're staying true to yourself. Are these movies a part of that formula?
Usher: It's a part of creativity. I'm like any other cat who has a lot of dreams and aspirations to do a lot: Jay-Z, all of them. They've done their movies as well as records as well as producing. I never let grass grow under me: I got my label coming, production, etc. There's just so much more coming. And then in business, I know you guys heard about the Usher Raymond IV Debit MasterCard, which, you know, dictates success. Get that card! There's truly great benefits in it, man.
Sway: I'm trying to get mine.
Usher: As a matter of fact, I'm gonna send you one.
In Usher's Words!
1. I know a lot of girls would like to be that special girl in your life. Do you have a girlfriend right now?
Usher: "No, I don't. I've been so busy working that I haven't had the time to give to a lady that I care about".
2. What does your mom think about the girls you date?
Usher: "She respects my opinion and the choices I make. So far, we've had no disagreements in that area-probably because she's seen me grow as a man and I've seen her grow as my mom and as my manager. She's real cool".
3. Is she strict on you with regards to curfew and all that?
Usher: "Well, not really. Everyone grows up and she realizes that I'm an adult now. It's just that in show business, you get to see people grow up right before your eyes, so the public still sees me as a little boy sometimes. I think that's changing now".
4. In what ways?
Usher: "I like to get up close and personal with my audience, but sometimes women do get out of control". (the interviewer cut Usher off) I remember the incident you're talkin bout. (Usher continues-->)"I just kinda laughed it off. She got carried away, but no one got hurt-so no harm was done".
5. Do you like aggressive women?
Usher: "I like women who are good conversationalists. I like to talk on the phone and in person and if they can keep me interested with conversation, then I like that".
6. What physical qualities are important to you?
Usher: "Lips. Nice lips are cool, but I don't have a lot of special specific things that they must have".
7. What would be the ideal date for you and the special someone?
Usher: "I'd like to take her to church. I don't want them to seem like an overly religious person or nuthin', but I think that we all could use a little church".
8. What about after church? Where would you go?
Usher: "Maybe we could go get somethin to eat at one of the better soul food restaurants in town. If a person is good as a companion then the rest is bound to come through. Or, maybe we could go for a long ride in my Porsche. Then we could really get some talkin done. Basically, I like to keep positive people in my life".