In 2001, Devo Springsteen introduced Legend to Kanye West, then an up-and-coming hip-hop artist; Legend was hired to sing during the hooks of West's music. After signing to West's label, he chose his stage name from an idea that was given to him by poet J. Ivy, due to what he perceived as an "old-school sound". J. Ivy stated, "I heard your music and it reminds me of that music from the old school. You sound like one of the legends. As a matter of fact, that's what I'm going to call you from now on! I'm going to call you John Legend." After J. Ivy continued to call him by the new moniker "John Legend", others quickly caught on, including Kanye West. Despite Stephens' reluctance to adopt a stage name, he eventually announced his new artist name as John Legend.[21][24]

A highly sought after collaborator, Legend was featured on several records in the following years. He appeared on albums by Fort Minor, Srgio Mendes, Jay-Z, Mary J. Blige, the Black Eyed Peas, Stephen Colbert, Rich Boy, J'Dillian MSTRKRFT, Chemistry, and Fergie, among others. Legend also tentatively worked with Michael Jackson on a future album for which he had written one song.[29] In August 2006, Legend appeared in an episode of Sesame Street. He performed a song entitled "It Feels Good When You Sing a Song", a duet with Hoots the Owl.[30] He also performed during the pregame show of Super Bowl XL in Detroit and the halftime show at the 2006 NBA All-Star Game.[31][32]


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In January 2008, Legend sang in a video for Barack Obama, produced by will.i.am called "Yes We Can".[34] The same year, Legend had a supporting, singing-only role in the 2008 movie Soul Men, where he plays the deceased lead singer of a fictitious soul group that includes Samuel L. Jackson and Bernie Mac. In October, he released his third studio album, Evolver.[35] Speaking about the reasons for calling the album Evolver, he stated: "I think people sometimes come to expect certain things from certain artists. They expect you to kind of stay in the same place you were at when you started out. Whereas I feel I want my career to be defined by the fact that I'm NOT gonna stay in the same place, and that I'm always gonna try new things and experiment. So, as I think this album represents a manifestation of that, I came up with the title 'Evolver'."[36] The album was preceded by dance-pop-influenced uptempo single "Green Light" which featured rapper Andre 3000 of OutKast and became his highest-charting single since "Ordinary People"; it was also nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Rap/Sung Collaboration.[37] On March 30, 2008, Legend performed "America the Beautiful" in front of a sold-out crowd of 74,635 in the Orlando Citrus Bowl, now known as Camping World Stadium, for WWE's WrestleMania XXIV.[citation needed]

As one half of Hollywood's coolest couple and one of the music world's most beloved crooners, it's tough to imagine that John Legend has ever been insecure about, well, anything. But it turns out that back in high school, John was just as unsure of where he fit in as the rest of us.

"In the ecosystem of high school, a lot of times, athletes and people who are bigger, stronger, and faster are the most dominant in that realm," the singer told Teen Vogue. "Maybe if you're someone who's a little nerdier or more creative, you're not sure how you fit in."

John Roger Stephens, later known as John Legend, was born on December 28, 1978, in Springfield, Ohio. Legend got his name from the poet J. Ivy, who described his sound as "old-school, like one of the legends." The name stuck because Legend chose it for his stage name years later.

While Legend's musical abilities are widely hailed, his academic background is quite impressive as well. Legend was homeschooled by his mother for a large portion of his childhood, and he quickly excelled. Legend skipped two grades, starting high school at only 12 years old.

When the Battle ended, closing out Season 24's Battle rounds, Legend was already focusing in on Brandon, praising the singer's "rare" voice and spectacular showcase of high notes that no one saw coming.

"Brandon, you would hit some of those high notes and I was looking at Kara some of the time and expecting that it was coming out of her," Legend said. "And then I was like 'Oh, no, that's Brandon singing!' Your higher register is so beautiful."

The lucky high schoolers got to watch John Legend play his hit songs "Love Me Now" and "All of Me" in their own gym. The unique performance was part of a program called Axe Senior Orientation, which brought Legend and the poet Carlos Andrs Gmez to the school to mentor three students and help them develop artistic pieces that challenge what it means to be masculine.

"Lookin' back at my life make my heart race / Dance with the devil and test our faith," raps Nipsey over appropriately grand, string and piano-filled production by Khaled, working with STREETRUNNER and Tarik Azzouz. The song's chorus, sung by Legend, is similarly gutting. "They'd rather see me down, put my soul in the fire / But we keep goin' higher, higher," he sings.

Danielle Hodges, Adrian Guzman, Kemet Kittrell and Santee Snaith who, at the time of filming, were 10th graders unfamiliar with a high school environment since they were learning remotely during the peak of the pandemic. Now seniors, they're excited for the project to finally be here.

Legend's talents were not restricted to music. Although he was homeschooled until the age of six, Legend was also an academic star, winning the city spelling championship in the fourth grade and graduating from high school at the age of sixteen as his class's salutatorian. The fact that he was always young for his school class earned him the nickname "Doogie Howser," after a television show about a teenager who becomes a physician. However, his musical talent kept him from being a social pariah: In addition to being salutatorian, he was also his high school's prom king.

After his early graduation from high school, Legend attended the University of Pennsylvania. There, he joined the student a cappella group, called Counterparts. He also became the director of the choir for the Bethel AME Church, outside of Philadelphia. Both positions allowed him to hone his craft as a singer and musician while majoring in English, with a concentration in African-American Literature.

After graduating from high school at age 16, Legend left Ohio to attend the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. While there, he participated in Counterparts, an a cappella group at the university that received national recognition. He also became the choir director, pianist, and head of the music department at Bethel AME Church in Scranton, Pennsylvania, a position he kept for nine years, until around the time of his major-label debut. When he was 19, a friend who was also friends with hip-hop and soul singer Lauryn Hill introduced him to Hill and had him play piano for her. Impressed, she invited him to play piano on the recording of her song "Everything Is Everything." After that, he tried out for her band, but was not hired.

In 1999, at age 20, Legend graduated with an English degree and moved to New York City to work as a management consultant. Meanwhile, he began playing in nightclubs, selling self-produced CDs of his music at his shows. A longtime musician friend introduced him to Kanye West, and Legend helped West write some of the songs on his highly successful debut album, The College Dropout.

"Hear Our Talk With John Legend: Kanye in the Studio, Loving Stevie Wonder and More," Rolling Stone, _our_talk_with_john_legend_kanye_in_the_studio_loving_stevie_wonder_and_more (August 13, 2006).

Legend's father was a factory worker and a drummer and visual artist on the side. As a boy, Legend's musical education had gospel and classical sides, as he took formal piano lessons but also honed his performing instincts with membership in a church choir at age six. His mother was the director, his grandmother the organist, his grandfather the pastor. By age 10 or 11 he was directing choirs himself. The church "is such a great training ground for young black musicians," Legend explained to Lorraine Ali of Newsweek. "You have an audience, it's an important part of the service, and it makes you wanna be a better musician. If you're good in the church, people know you all around your area." Indeed, Legend had a regional reputation by the time he graduated from high school.

That laid-back personality is a bit of a surprise considering his uncle is John Legend, a singer, songwriter, pianist, record producer and actor. His uncle followed his high school career in Springfield, Ohio, and certainly will at Kentucky.

Staggering statistics reflect the reality of these statements, with 86 percent of Latino and 86 percent of Black middle and high school students reading below grade level, as well as 50 percent of students from low-income communities failing to graduate high school.

At HuffPost, we believe that everyone needs high-quality journalism, but we understand that not everyone can afford to pay for expensive news subscriptions. That is why we are committed to providing deeply reported, carefully fact-checked news that is freely accessible to everyone. 006ab0faaa

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