Here I Stand

Here I Stand

With what felt like the globe-spanning success of Confessions, USHER was playing with house money in terms of crafting a follow-up. He descended from his high four years later in 2008 with Here I Stand, an album that reflected the explosion of Black artists from hip-hop culture reaching a new convergence with Top 40-aspirant pop music. He recruited will.i.am for “What’s Your Name”, capturing the late-2000s obsession with ’80s nostalgia—synth-pop to metallic fashions abound. Jeezy, one of Atlanta’s foremost voices at the time, joined for “Love in This Club,” which, in sound, inspires visions of the beginning of bottle service with shooting sparklers being popularised, while “Best Thing” features prime The Blueprint 3-era JAY-Z. But despite its of-the-moment trendiness, the album still had the textbook DNA of an USHER project. Usual attempts at ballads with conceptual scenarios are riddled throughout the project, the most prominent being “Trading Places”, in which his partner pulls out her card for shopping sprees and does the constant complimenting, while he makes the bed and focuses on personal upkeep. And “Moving Mountains” is his signature “This just isn’t working out no matter how hard we try” number. Here I Stand, in hindsight, did not reach the narrative and commercial heights of its immediate predecessor, but, like everything USHER has ever released, shines as a collection of indelible, undeniable singles.

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