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Confessions

- Amazon

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Confessions - Amazon
  • List Price: $18.98
  • Now Price: $6.28
  • Release date: 2004-10-05
  • Formats: Special Edition
  • Tracks: Disc 0:
    1. Intro
    2. Yeah! Featuring Lil Jon & Ludacris
    3. Throwback Featuring Jadakiss
    4. Confessions
    5. Confessions Part II
    6. Burn
    7. Caught Up
    8. Superstar (Interlude)
    9. Superstar
    10. Truth Hurts
    11. Simple Things
    12. Bad Girl
    13. That’s What It’s Made For
    14. Can U Handle It?
    15. Do It To Me
    16. Take Your Hand
    17. Follow Me
    18. My Boo – Duet With Alicia Keys
    19. Red Light
    20. Seduction
    21. Confessions Part II Remix Featuring Shyne, Kanye West & Twista
  • A CD is always more compelling when you know it's lifted from the artist's autobiography, and that's certainly the case with Confession, Usher's first record since 2001's 8701. The Atlanta singer's string of hits over the past decade have been decidedly PG-13 rated, almost veering towards teen pop, but he's changed all that on this co-produced offering, which he claims is "the real him." It would be too simplistic to just brand this record a break-up record, chronicling his public split with TLC's Rozonda "Chili" Thomas; it is that, but so much more. It would be more accurate to call this Usher's coming of age record, bridging the gap from boy to man, as he navigates the emotional fallout from the disintegration of his relationship, and the events that led up to it--real or imagined. But other than a guilty conscience, it seems unclear why Usher feels compelled to disgorge his secret life, as he documents his infidelities, transgressions, and emotional perfidy in the album's prodigious twenty one songs, that range from insinuating sultry R&B grooves to the decidedly crunky "Yeah," which pairs an insistent keyboard romp with Lil' Jon's assertive beats, and Ludacris' rather humid rhymes. --Jaan Uhelszki
    A CD is always more compelling when you know it's lifted from the artist's autobiography, and that's certainly the case with Confession, Usher's first record since 2001's 8701. The Atlanta singer's string of hits over the past decade have been decidedly PG-13 rated, almost veering towards teen pop, but he's changed all that on this co-produced offering, which he claims is "the real him." It would be too simplistic to just brand this record a break-up record, chronicling his public split with TLC's Rozonda "Chili" Thomas; it is that, but so much more. It would be more accurate to call this Usher's coming of age record, bridging the gap from boy to man, as he navigates the emotional fallout from the disintegration of his relationship, and the events that led up to it--real or imagined. But other than a guilty conscience, it seems unclear why Usher feels compelled to disgorge his secret life, as he documents his infidelities, transgressions, and emotional perfidy in the album's prodigious twenty one songs, that range from insinuating sultry R&B grooves to the decidedly crunky "Yeah," which pairs an insistent keyboard romp with Lil' Jon's assertive beats, and Ludacris' rather humid rhymes. --Jaan Uhelszki
    Confessions


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