You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Music

  • Kravitz’s creative outlets
    Lenny Kravitz has too much going on. The 47-year-old multiplatinum rocker is hitting the road to promote his ninth album, “Black and White America,” which was released last year.
  • Police: Houston found in bathtub
    Whitney Houston was under water and apparently unconscious when she was found in a hotel bathtub, Beverly Hills police said Monday.
  • Noted, but not awarded
    Since its beginnings in the 1970s, rap music has transformed from an underground, street-based sound to a definitive part of pop culture, transcending race and becoming one of the strongest – and most prolific – voices of today’s generation.
Advertisement
New releases
Among albums out today:
“7th Symphony,” Apocalyptica
“Tomorrow Morning,” Eels
“Back to Me,” Fantasia Barrino
“We Cry Out: The Worship Project,” Jeremy Camp
“Georgia Warhorse,” JJ Grey
“Teenage Dream,” Katy Perry
“The Reason Why,” Little Big Town
“Love Revolution,” Natalie Grant
“The Orchard,” Ra Ra Riot
“Burning the Day,” Randy Rogers Band
“I’ll Fly Away,” Randy Travis
“Warp Riders,” The Sword
Associated Press
Music Review

Usher slacks in follow-up

Fails to reach potential in ‘Versus’

It’s only been a few months since Usher released “Raymond v. Raymond,” but he’s back with another album – kind of.

“Versus” is a nine-song project that will be available today as a single disc or part of a deluxe, rereleased version of “Raymond v. Raymond.” But “Versus” isn’t all new material. It has two songs you’ve already heard – his current hit, “There Goes My Baby,” which was on “Raymond v. Raymond,” and the remix to “Somebody to Love,” which features protege Justin Bieber and is on Bieber’s album.

So, with only seven new tracks, it’s more like an EP, and like “Raymond v. Raymond,” it’s another uneven effort from an artist talented enough to do better.

Songs like “DJ Got Us Fallin’ in Love,” featuring Pitbull, will get you moving on the dance floor, but that has more to do with the standard club beat than Usher. “Hot Tottie” is another so-so track, despite the guest appearance of Jay-Z, who delivers a surprisingly uninspired verse; maybe he’s had one too many cameos of late.

Usher shines when he’s able to display his sterling voice, plus his signature sensuality and swagger. On the album’s best song, “Lay You Down,” he seduces with every note, every moan. The uptempo “Lingerie” sounds like it’s circa the 5-year-old “Confessions,” but given the excellence of that album, that’s actually a good thing. And “Love ’Em All” and “Get in My Car” feature Usher at his playboy best.

If we had more of these kind of songs, this would be a tight, must-get song collection; as is, you’re better off cherry-picking and creating your own, even shorter Usher EP.

Any points Usher loses for being crass, he gets back from the bombastic groove on “Get in My Car,” where he croons, “There’s too many girls in here to waste my time on you, what you gonna do?”