Last Friday, Usher took the stage at the Colosseum in Caesarโs Palace for the opening night of his Las Vegas residency. For many in the audience, it was their first concert since the country began pulling itself out of the COVID-19 pandemic. For Usher, it was another major milestone in his nearly 30-year career that cemented him among the greats.
โWhat I saw is an opportunity to go back and do things that I hadnโt done before and also find a way to introduce all of my audience to each other,โ Usher tells ESSENCE of signing on for the weekly concert series. โWe managed to put together a show that I think has definitely made a lot of people happy and more than anything itโs a pleasure and a continuum of my passion because I love this.โ

For three nights a week throughout July and August (with additional shows dates after Christmas and into the new year), Usher and his band of dancers deliver non-stop energy as they perform the greatest hits from the 42-year-oldโs career, some with a twist. โI had the opportunity to try some things I hadnโt tried before,โ Usher says. โIโm skating on stage. I brought a lot of Atlanta culture in here.โ
As a native of the Georgia capital, itโs a natural integration. But thereโs a larger message Usher sends audiences when he incorporates moves typically seen at the cityโs Black-owned skating rink Cascade into the show or the Magic City-esque tricks strippers perform alongside him as he sings โBad Girl.โ He wants fans to understand Black Americans have their own unique culture and, further, that independence can be a part of that narrative.

As far back as 2015, Usher began speaking out in support of Juneteenth, wearing a t-shirt during his performance at ESSENCEFest in which the date July 4 was struck out and Juneteenth was written beneath it. โIndependence is something that has been declared by this country and it actually gives us the confidence to move forward. For us as African Americans, or either native Black Americans โ because hereโs where we are, hereโs where we landed, hereโs what we built up โ we deserve to have that day recognized as a national holiday,โ Usher says when asked about that moment. โWe have native Black American culture so we deserve independence.โ
This year, Juneteenth was declared a national holiday, but six years ago there wasnโt as much awareness of the significance of the date. As such, some took offense to the shirt Usher wore which was designed by Pyer Moss fashion designer and creator Kerby-Jean Raymond. โAs an African native Black American you should know your independence day. [The shirt] wasnโt to shun it was to be awakened. There was a lot of criticism that came in that moment and I didnโt care. Itโs like hey I really do want you to understand what this means,โ Usher adds.

Usherโs commitment to opening peopleโs eyes to the contributions of Black Americans seeps over into many facets of his work as a performer. This past spring, he partnered with Rรฉmy Martin to create โTeam Up For Excellence,โ a film that explores the connection between cognac and music with roots that are undeniably African American such as Jazz, blues, and hip-hop. And whatever backlash may have followed Usherโs 2015 moment of fashion activism was certainly worth it. For his part in this phase of Americaโs awakening, Usher was present at the White House when the bill declaring Juneteenth a federal holiday was signed into law this past June.
โTo have the piece that Iโd written read on the floor, I thought, man, Iโve done something major with my life in addition to what Iโve offered, which is joy. Iโve also done something that I feel is significant โ not to say Iโm done because thereโs more to do. But that felt like, Iโve arrived at a place that I never thought I wouldโve been,โ Usher says. โI didnโt forsee that part of my life.โ
Check out our full interview with Usher in the video above.