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Ruben Studdard|The Return

The Return

Ruben Studdard

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Well, by titling his sophomore set -- sophomore, that is, if you don't count his ill-advised 2004 sojourn into gospel, which this American Idol winner clearly would like everyone to forget -- The Return, Ruben Studdard doesn't shy away from the perception that his career hasn't quite lived up to the expectations his 2003 American Idol win set up for him. Not that his 2003 debut, Soulful, was a flop, exactly: it hit number one and its first single, the perplexing "Sorry 2004," reached the Top Ten, but none of the other singles came close to the Top Ten -- in fact, there was only one other single, "What If," which didn't manage to crack the R&B Top 40 just a few months after the album's release. All this almost-success had the cumulative effect of making Studdard seem a bit like an also-ran and he was certainly eclipsed in stardom not only by 2003 AmIdol runner-up Clay Aiken, but 2004 winner Fantasia Barrino, a soul singer who actually was well suited for modern R&B, which Ruben was not. As his easy performances showed on the show, Studdard was best suited for '60s and '70s soul -- which, of course, had very little commercial potential in the 2000s. So, despite his success on the show, Studdard turned out to be a hard one to peg as a recording artist: he was too old-fashioned for contemporary R&B, yet his lazy, self-satisfied performances lacked the discipline for old-fashioned soul. So, it was hard to say where he should go, but in truth there was only road for him to follow: to try to be a modern spin on a classic soul loverman -- which of course meant being a new version of Luther Vandross, the quiet storm singer Studdard openly idolized and was often compared to on American Idol.
There was a certain grain of truth to those comparisons -- like Luther, Ruben favored slow grooves, and he patterned his phrasing after Vandross, but there is a crucial difference between the two: Vandross effortlessly exuded sensuality and Studdard is devoid of it. And considering that the main -- nay, only -- thrust of The Return is that Ruben Studdard is a master seducer, this presents a considerable problem. After all, his famous nickname, "the Velvet Teddy Bear," bears no sexual connotations whatsoever: it respectively refers to the silken tones of his voice and his considerable girth. Plus, it sounds cuddly, not sexy (when has a teddy bear ever been sexy?), but that's not how Studdard and his collaborators see it. No, they see Ruben as a seducer supreme, a loverman who has an utterly irresistible sexual charisma. This is a miscalculation. Not only has sex never been part of Studdard's persona -- his size and smile give him the aura of a friend, not a lover -- he cannot convey sexiness no matter how hard he tries, and he tries very, very hard to sound sexy here, which only makes his voice, never the most robust instrument, seem thinner than ever on record. Since his thin, strained voice is paired with mechanical approximations of classic Luther and Marvin grooves, given a hint of modern-day R. Kelly flavor, there's not much warmth to the sound of the music either. And The Return is truly an album where sound is paramount: there are a few well-written tunes, such as "Change Me," the one slow jam that Ruben comes close to selling convincingly, but for the most part, the album is one long, monotonous groove -- which could have made for good mood music if it was delivered by somebody who had the soul of a loverman, which Ruben simply does not. Ruben sounds self-satisfied, barely interested in the songs he's singing, so why would he be interested in the woman he's trying to bed? There's no sensuality, no warmth to his singing. Like before, Ruben exerts the minimum amount of energy on his performances; what once sounded like an effortless charm merely sounds lazy, particularly since he has few melodies to guide him. Without melodic hooks, he sounds like he's merely vocalizing, and since he doesn't have the energy or imagination to do soulful runs, he winds up merely sounding dull -- and when combined with the dull productions, the results are deadly boring.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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The Return

Ruben Studdard

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1
The Return (Of The Velvet Teddy Bear)
00:04:14

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Harold Lilly, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Kevin Cates, Composer, Lyricist - Kenneth Gamble, Composer, Lyricist - Leon Huff, Composer, Lyricist - Kevin "Khao" Cates, Producer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

2
Change Me
00:03:50

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Harvey Mason, Jr., Composer, Lyricist - Damon Thomas, Composer, Lyricist - Steve Russell, Associated Performer, Co-Producer, Composer, Lyricist - Taryll Jackson, Composer, Lyricist - Tank, Composer, Lyricist - Antonio Dixon, Composer, Lyricist - The Underdogs, Associated Performer, Mixing Engineer, Producer - Dabling "Hobby Boy" Harward, Recording Engineer - Chris Spilfogel, Recording Engineer - Aaron Renner, Assistant Engineer - Luke Boyd, Composer, Lyricist

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

3
Make Ya Feel Beautiful
00:03:27

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Producer, Associated Performer, Producer - Shea Taylor, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Ne-Yo, Producer - Shaffer Smith, Composer, Lyricist - James Bevelle, Recording Engineer - Daniel Laporte, Recording Engineer - Dave "Natural Love" Russell, Mixing Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

4
Get U Loose
00:03:54

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Harvey Mason, Jr., Composer, Lyricist - Steve Russell, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Dabling "Hobby Boy" Harward, Editor, Recording Engineer - Aaron Renner, Editor, Recording Engineer - Damon Thomas, Composer, Lyricist - Tank, Composer, Lyricist - The Underdogs, Mixing Engineer - Luke Boyd, Composer, Lyricist

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

5
Our Story
00:03:50

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - James Poyser, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Harold Lilly, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Ralph Cacciuri, Recording Engineer - Serban Ghenea, Mixing Engineer - John Hanes, Assistant Engineer - Tim Roberts, Assistant Engineer - Kevin Mahoney, Assistant Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

6
One Side
00:03:55

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Harold Lilly, Co-Producer, Composer, Lyricist - Mikkel Storleer Eriksen, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Recording Engineer - Mikkel S. Eriksen, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Recording Engineer - Tor Erik Hermansen, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist - StarGate, Producer - Serban Ghenea, Mixing Engineer - John Hanes, Assistant Engineer - Tim Roberts, Assistant Engineer - Kevin Mahoney, Assistant Engineer - Phil Margaziotis, Recording Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

7
What Tha Business Is
00:03:26

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Scott Storch, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Jason Boyd, Composer, Lyricist - Jason "Poo Bear" Boyd, Co-Producer - conrad Golding, Recording Engineer - Wayne "The Brain" Allison, Recording Engineer - Vadim "Chiss" Chislov, Assistant Engineer - Serban Ghenea, Mixing Engineer - John Hanes, Assistant Engineer - Tim Roberts, Assistant Engineer - Kevin Mahoney, Assistant Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

8
Rather Just Not Know
00:03:38

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Shaffer Smith, Composer, Lyricist - Nathan Perez, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Steve-O Valdez, Composer, Keyboards, Lyricist - Ne-Yo, Producer - Happy Perez, Associated Performer - Mike Tocci, Recording Engineer - Ann Mincieli , Recording Engineer - Serban Ghenea, Mixing Engineer - John Hanes, Engineer - Tim Roberts, Assistant Engineer - Kevin Mahoney, Assistant Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

9
Ain't No Party
00:03:40

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Harold Lilly, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Cainon Lamb, Composer, Lyricist - Lamb, Producer - Dave "Natural Love" Russell, Mixing Engineer - Mocha - Miguel "Pro" Castro, Arranger

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

10
Listen To Ya Heart
00:03:34

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Associated Performer - Matthew McAllister, Composer, Lyricist - Harold Lilly, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Vudu, Producer - Kamel Abdo, Recording Engineer - Antoine Carraby, Composer, Lyricist - Yomo Smith, Composer, Lyricist - Eric Wright, Composer, Lyricist - Mark Green, Composer, Lyricist - Bryon McCane, Composer, Lyricist - Charles Scruggs, Composer, Lyricist - Anthony Henderson, Composer, Lyricist - Steven Howse, Composer, Lyricist - Stanley Howse, Composer, Lyricist - John Frye, Mixing Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

11
I'm Not Happy
00:04:09

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Main Artist, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist - Harold Lilly, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Jim Jonsin, Producer - Joe G., Assistant Engineer, Recording Engineer - Jim Scheffer, Composer, Lyricist - Frank Romano, Composer, Guitar, Lyricist - Rob Marks, Mixing Engineer - Calvin Puckett, Composer, Lyricist

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

12
To Da Crib
00:03:33

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Main Artist, Producer, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - Kevin Cates, Composer, Lyricist - Kevin "Khao" Cates, Producer - Daren Barker King, Guitar - Jonathan Effinger, Composer, Lyricist - James Bevelle, Mixing Engineer, Recording Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

13
Blow Ya Mind
00:04:02

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist, Main Artist, Associated Performer, Composer, Lyricist - Michael "Flyte" Stuckey, Composer, Lyricist, Producer - James Bevelle, Recording Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

14
If Only For One Night
00:03:47

Ruben Studdard, Associated Performer, Main Artist, Producer, Associated Performer, Producer - Brenda Russell, Composer, Lyricist - Alvin Garrett, Producer - Dr. Henry Panion, Arranger, Conductor, Producer - James Bevelle, Mixing Engineer, Recording Engineer

(P) 2006 19 Recordings Limited

Presentación del Álbum

Well, by titling his sophomore set -- sophomore, that is, if you don't count his ill-advised 2004 sojourn into gospel, which this American Idol winner clearly would like everyone to forget -- The Return, Ruben Studdard doesn't shy away from the perception that his career hasn't quite lived up to the expectations his 2003 American Idol win set up for him. Not that his 2003 debut, Soulful, was a flop, exactly: it hit number one and its first single, the perplexing "Sorry 2004," reached the Top Ten, but none of the other singles came close to the Top Ten -- in fact, there was only one other single, "What If," which didn't manage to crack the R&B Top 40 just a few months after the album's release. All this almost-success had the cumulative effect of making Studdard seem a bit like an also-ran and he was certainly eclipsed in stardom not only by 2003 AmIdol runner-up Clay Aiken, but 2004 winner Fantasia Barrino, a soul singer who actually was well suited for modern R&B, which Ruben was not. As his easy performances showed on the show, Studdard was best suited for '60s and '70s soul -- which, of course, had very little commercial potential in the 2000s. So, despite his success on the show, Studdard turned out to be a hard one to peg as a recording artist: he was too old-fashioned for contemporary R&B, yet his lazy, self-satisfied performances lacked the discipline for old-fashioned soul. So, it was hard to say where he should go, but in truth there was only road for him to follow: to try to be a modern spin on a classic soul loverman -- which of course meant being a new version of Luther Vandross, the quiet storm singer Studdard openly idolized and was often compared to on American Idol.
There was a certain grain of truth to those comparisons -- like Luther, Ruben favored slow grooves, and he patterned his phrasing after Vandross, but there is a crucial difference between the two: Vandross effortlessly exuded sensuality and Studdard is devoid of it. And considering that the main -- nay, only -- thrust of The Return is that Ruben Studdard is a master seducer, this presents a considerable problem. After all, his famous nickname, "the Velvet Teddy Bear," bears no sexual connotations whatsoever: it respectively refers to the silken tones of his voice and his considerable girth. Plus, it sounds cuddly, not sexy (when has a teddy bear ever been sexy?), but that's not how Studdard and his collaborators see it. No, they see Ruben as a seducer supreme, a loverman who has an utterly irresistible sexual charisma. This is a miscalculation. Not only has sex never been part of Studdard's persona -- his size and smile give him the aura of a friend, not a lover -- he cannot convey sexiness no matter how hard he tries, and he tries very, very hard to sound sexy here, which only makes his voice, never the most robust instrument, seem thinner than ever on record. Since his thin, strained voice is paired with mechanical approximations of classic Luther and Marvin grooves, given a hint of modern-day R. Kelly flavor, there's not much warmth to the sound of the music either. And The Return is truly an album where sound is paramount: there are a few well-written tunes, such as "Change Me," the one slow jam that Ruben comes close to selling convincingly, but for the most part, the album is one long, monotonous groove -- which could have made for good mood music if it was delivered by somebody who had the soul of a loverman, which Ruben simply does not. Ruben sounds self-satisfied, barely interested in the songs he's singing, so why would he be interested in the woman he's trying to bed? There's no sensuality, no warmth to his singing. Like before, Ruben exerts the minimum amount of energy on his performances; what once sounded like an effortless charm merely sounds lazy, particularly since he has few melodies to guide him. Without melodic hooks, he sounds like he's merely vocalizing, and since he doesn't have the energy or imagination to do soulful runs, he winds up merely sounding dull -- and when combined with the dull productions, the results are deadly boring.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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