They call him U-S-H-E-R R-A-Y-M-O-N-D for a reason and on Super Bowl LVIII Sunday night, audiences all over the country learned why Usher Raymond is the true king of R&B.
Kicking off his 11-minute set (not the 15-minute set that was initially reported he would have) with his ever-popular song βCaught Up,β the beloved singer lit the stage on fire with a Cirque Du Soleil inspired performance complete with a band, with choreography led by Sean Bankhead. What followed was a medley of his other hits such as βU Donβt Call,β βSuperstar,β βLove In this Club,β βNice & Slow,β βConfessions,β βBurn,β and βU Got It Bad.β
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In addition to the Cirque Du Soleil, the performance also had HBCU and Greek fraternity influencesβspecifically Jackson Stateβs βSonic Boom of the Southβ marching band and the Kappasβ and was a complete ode to Atlanta, specifically their rollerskating (one day weβre going to talk about how hard it is to do choreography while on skates, but that day is not today) and strip club cultures.
The night also included surprise guest singers and performers such as Alicia Keys who joined Usher to sing βMy Booβand a little snippet of βIf I Ainβt Got You.β Complete with a red, sparkly outfit and a red piano, the two sang and cozied up together like they just dropped the song yesterday and for that, we thank them.
One other surprise of the night came when H.E.R. came out to do the guitar solo for βU Got It Badβ and a snippet of βBad Girlββwhich got some folks excited for all of .2 seconds with the hope that Beyonce would pop up to recreate her and Usherβs iconic moment.
Naturally, the βClimaxβ singer closed the show with Will.I.Am by performing βO.M.G.β and then pulled the most highly anticipated move by bringing Lil Jon and Ludacris to perform βYeah.β accompanied by a few strippers and stripper poles (with modestly-dressed dancers, donβt worry).
While the performance is definitely up there in the canon of great Super Bowl Performances, Iβd be remiss not to share a few of my grievancesβand I do mean a few. And those grievances include the fact that he didnβt perform βHey Daddy (Daddyβs Home), βNo Limit,β or βNew Flameβ, his set was four minutes shorter than expected, and he didnβt bring out Bey. I know the latter was a lofty ask but still! It could have been iconic!!
But disappointments asideβUsherβs performance gave what it needed to give. He should be proud because we damn sure are.
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