N2U are a quartet band from the U.S.
The quintet hailing from Atlanta and Southern California comprises Chris Buck,
25; Mark Richard, 21; Don Lee Samuels, 20; and Antonio Avant (a.k.a. Asa),
25, Levi Jones, 26.
N2U was formed when the talents of vocalist Chris Buck inspired visionary
producer-director-manager Chris Stokes (B2K, Immature/IMx) to put together
a crew of singers that would breathe fresh air onto radio playlists and evoke
the best of traditional soul music. Stokes, who discovered multi-platinum songbird
Brandy, often works with his artists at several levels—as stylist, manager,
music producer/songwriter and video director. He has also directed the films
House Party 4 and the street-dancing fable You Got Served. In addition to his
breakthrough successes with B2K, IMx and Marques Houston, he has also produced
songs for Destiny's Child and the Dangerous Minds, Menace II Society and Barbershop
soundtracks.
The four-member crew that is N2U cites Stevie Wonder, Al Green, Michael Jackson,
and several gospel greats among their musical influences. "We want to
be innovative and set the mold that people follow by bringing back soulful
music, meaningful lyrics, and stories that touch people's lives," says
Asa, a native of ATL (Atlanta). Between them, the guys have the experience
to back it all up.
Chris Buck never wanted to do anything but music. Growing up in Carson, California,
just south of Los Angeles, he's been singing since the age of four. From singing
in church choirs to a string of locally successful groups, Buck says his thoughts
about his calling in life are "deeper" than he can talk about. When
it comes to his gritty and melodic voice, however, he has no problems expressing
how he feels. On N2U's first single "Issues," he leads his bandmates
in a plea for earnest efforts to work out problems in a relationship. It's
a song about love and sacrifice—some things he's experienced while pursuing
his dreams. "One of the things I believe in is 'follow your own heart'
and that's what got me to the point of landing a record deal."
Asa, who the other group members call the "wise man," also grew
up with his whole family singing praise music. "It was natural for me
because my mom is a minister," he explains. Although he graduated from
college and started a corporate career in technology, Asa was always honing
his vocal chops. Providing back-up vocals for popular R&B crooners Keith
Sweat and Joe, he was also an active player on the thriving Atlanta music scene
that brought us Usher, Lil Jon, and Outkast. Even with respected producers
Kenny Whitehead (Marques Houston) and The Underdogs (Britney Spears, Michael
Jackson, Toni Braxton) writing the bulk of the songs on the N2U debut, Asa
contributed an interlude on the album called "Because of You." Not
embarrassed by the music's blatant sensitivity, he wants to tug at the listener's
heartstrings: "If you take our voices away and leave the lyrics on paper,
it reads like a love letter."
N2U's versatile Mark Richard likes to keep things real. He counts music as
having saved his life. "I would sing anything for anybody--Frank Sinatra,
Smokey Robinson, the jingle from a Sprite commercial--and literally prayed
for something to happen," says the native Southern Californian who is
of Mexican and African-American heritage. An aspiring athlete whose career
was cut short by the school of hard knocks, Richard lived on the streets for
a year until he decided to try his hand at producing records. On this path,
he met Chris Buck and the rest is history. His bandmates say he keeps their
minds open with his love of all types of music—including jazz and hard
rock. "Some songs you just gotta dig," he explains.
The youngest group member, Don Lee Samuels, compares himself to an engine,
always going and thinking, "What's next?" While singing in church,
attending school in South Georgia, and working with kids at the local YMCA,
Samuels started writing songs and working with local producers. That's how
his demo and photo got into Stokes' hands last fall, at the height of his search
for the four young men who would comprise N2U. "All our personalities
connect and make this crazy chemistry," says Don Lee. "I think we're
going to bring this unique sound and style to the marketplace that tells a
lot about who we are as a group of urban young men."
Don Lee has hit it right on the head. On their self-titled debut album, N2U
have cooked up a combination of straight-talking songs that aim to be classics.
From sexy midtempo grooves like "Breaking the Law" to the bold, vulnerable
lead track, "Issues," the four voices make the message intensely
personal. They're ready to give a little something you can really feel.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
2005: Issues
[edit] Singles
2005: "Baby Mama Love" (featuring Jermaine Dupri)
2005: "Issues"