Hello Beautiful People,
I am very excited to share with you the world
premiere of my new music video for "All Of Me"!
Watch it now HERE.
This video is very special to me and you'll see why...
Of course, "All Of Me" is the latest
single from my new album, Love In The Future, out now.
Love,
John Legend
Album
Review
This is John Legend's first solo studio album since
2008's Evolver. Between the two releases, he recorded the Grammy-winning Wake
Up! with the Roots, scored a gold single with "Tonight (Best You Ever
Had)" (from the Think Like a Man soundtrack), was featured on a couple
albums' worth of songs by other artists, and somehow managed to be deeply
involved in philanthropy. He also got engaged.
Although he proposed to model
Chrissy Teigen five years after meeting her, much of Love in the Future seems
drawn from a romance that was quicker to bloom. "The Beginning…" sets
a tone of urgency with a scene from the day after their first night spent
together. Legend sings with certitude, "Pick some names, boy or girl/Then
we'll change, change the world." That sense of blissful urgency — of
seizing the moment, getting lost, and knowing that the future is set — is
belied in the pacing. Even the album's standard 16-track edition meanders at a
crawling pace. It's broken up by the occasional soaring arrangement or some
hypnotically clanking/pinging percussion, as heard on highlight "Made to
Love," which resembles a latter-day Moby collaboration with distant hand-clapping spooky background vocals, and a sample from Lil Louis' noisy
house classic "Video Clash."
This is a heavy, laboriously made set of
songs. The list of producers alone includes Hit-Boy, Bink, 88 Keys, the
Runners, Doc McKinney, Q-Tip, and Ali Shaheed Muhammad. Kanye West, and Dave
Tozer pile on as co-producers and co-executive producers. Perhaps they ensured
that the whole album would have its dramatic, slightly eerie tone; even the
covers of Bobby Caldwell's "Open Your Eyes" and Anita Baker's
"Angel" are a little uneasy.
That level of sonic indulgence seems
like it should be incompatible with an artist who is, essentially, a piano man,
but Love in the Future is among Legend's best work, made for couples who are
into one another for the long term while feeling a little daring and crazy. (A
Deluxe Edition added four bonus tracks.)
Biography
Neo-soul singer and pianist John Legend combined the
raw fervor of Cody ChesnuTT and the burning precision of D'Angelo. Born John
Stephens, Legend was a child prodigy who grew up in Ohio, where he began
singing gospel and playing piano at the tender age of five. Legend left Ohio at
16 to attend college in Philadelphia, and it was there that he first found a
larger audience. Not yet out of his teens, Legend was tapped to play piano on
Lauryn Hill's "Everything Is Everything" in 1998. After completing
college, he moved to New York, where he began to build a loyal following
playing in nightclubs and releasing CDs that he would sell at shows. He also
became an in-demand session musician, playing and occasionally writing for a
wide array of artists, including Alicia Keys, Twista, Janet Jackson, and Kanye
West.
It wasn't until West signed the young talent to his
new label that the Legend name was adopted with 2004's Solo Sessions Vol. 1:
Live at the Knitting Factory. Get Lifted, Legend's first studio album, was
released that December. On the strength of enduring single "Ordinary
People," the album reached the Top Five of the Billboard 200. This led to
three Grammy Awards: Best R&B Album, Best R&B Male Vocal Performance,
and Best New Artist. Once Again, which peaked at number three on the Billboard
200 and number one on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, followed in October
2006 and eventually went platinum. Live from Philadelphia, sold exclusively at
Target stores, was a successful stopgap release — a Top Ten album, despite its
limited retail presence. October 2008's Evolver spun off the sprightly
crossover hit "Green Light" but managed only gold-selling status.
Legend followed it with September 2010's Wake Up!, in which he was backed by
the Roots. The album featured covers of still-relevant, socially aware songs like
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes' "Wake Up Everybody" and Donny
Hathaway's "Little Ghetto Boy." After he toured with Sade, Legend
collaborated with producers and writers including West and Dave Tozer for Love
in the Future, released in September 2013.
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