Consider it one of the challenges of superstardom.
You're not in tour mode, but you land a big gig. You don't have musicians on retainer and rehearsed. You don't have an elaborate stage set and crew to go with it. So what do you do?
If you're Usher, the biggest R&B star of this century, you call the Roots, the great hip-hop band, to play a handful of festival shows with you this year. But since they have a nightly TV gig with Jimmy Fallon, they weren't available to join Usher Thursday night at the Minnesota State Fair grandstand.
Instead, he phoned his pal, rapper Lil Jon, the master of crunk. Good move. Because when Lil Jon hit the stage after Usher's first three songs, the energy increased twentyfold.
He collaborated with Usher on "Missing U" and then threw down his own hits, 2003's "Get Low" and 2009's "Shots," elevating the party in a way that the ballad-oriented Usher couldn't. It didn't hurt that Lil Jon pandered to the 12,779 fans by wearing a Twins hoodie and cap.
Having Lil Jon on board kept Usher loose. This wasn't a tightly choreographed spectacle, like Usher has delivered in Twin Cities arenas four times, most recently in 2014. This was a low-budget (no band, just a DJ and dancers), big-ticket ($72 to $97) performance of crowd-pleasing quality.
The Chattanooga-born, Atlanta-based Usher, 38, who came across as a Michael Jackson wannabe in his early concerts, showed off some fancy dance moves that seemed flashier because he was sporting shiny gold sneakers. However, his moves were not as vibrant as those of his six backup dancers.
Not that anybody was complaining. Because Usher flashed his magnetic smile, pulled off his shirt to show off those famous abs and played all the hits that fans wanted to hear. And he let the fans carry the vocals on several of his biggest numbers, including "Nice and Slow" and "U Got It Bad."