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Monday, 1 February 2016

Grady Smith on country Justin Timberlake becomes the latest pop star to 'go country'

Timberlake was joined onstage in Nashville by Garth Brooks and joins a long line of pop stars looking to country music for inspiration and liberation

 

Garth Brooks and Justin Timberlake team up onstage in Nashville. Photograph: YouTube

Justin Timberlake got back to his roots during the Nashville, Tennessee, stop of his 20/20 Experience world tour on Friday night. The Suit and Tie singer, originally from Memphis, offered the Bridgestone Arena a surprise rendition of the Garth Brooks smash I’ve Got Friends in Low Places, and he sent the crowd into a joyous uproar when he brought Brooks onstage to sing a raucous 10-minute version of the song with him.

Brooks, clad in dad jeans baggy enough to craft at least two more of Timberlake’s skinny suits, gamely played along, even launching into the famous “kiss my ass” verse, which he rarely performs in concert any more. For Timberlake, the whole moment strangely worked, and the inherent goofiness of I’ve Got Friends allowed him to flaunt his playful and genuinely funny persona without feeling like he was in a Saturday Night Live sketch.

But is Timberlake ready to trade in his Tom Ford slacks for Wranglers? Well, it would be a stretch to say that the surprise duet, a well-executed piece of promotion for both him and Brooks, was a clear signal that Timberlake is ready to move beyond pop/R&B into new musical realms. But Timberlake’s flirtation with country music isn’t straight out of left field. While promoting Inside Llewyn Davis in late 2013, Timberlake spoke openly about his desire to get a foot in the door of Music Row. “There’s still so much that can happen in Nashville, and I look to the future and I want to be a part of it,” Timberlake told the Tennesseean. “And I’m not just blowing smoke.” On some level, whether in production or recording, Timberlake wants to go country, and the dapper star isn’t the only pop performer keeping an eye on the Southern epicenter of music culture either.

As Taylor Swift makes her transition from country to pop, it appears that a bevy of her new pop cohorts have their sights set on her former stomping grounds, at least as a point of major intrigue. Perhaps we’ll be hearing Welcome to Nashville pretty soon. Kelly Clarkson has gone out of her way to ingratiate herself to the country world, guesting on tracks by Jason Aldean and Trisha Yearwood, releasing a country single of her own featuring Vince Gill, and even launching a Nashville charity event, the Miracle on Broadway. In terms of cred, it doesn’t hurt that she’s married to the stepson of industry legend Reba McEntire, either.

Katy Perry has also built ties to country music recently, mostly through her endorsement of Follow Your Arrow singer Kacey Musgraves. Perry invited Musgraves on her massive, candy-coated Prismatic tour this year, and they collaborated on an episode of CMT Crossroads, during which Perry looked visibly thrilled to deliver real songwriters’ songs, full of wry wit and melancholy, without incessant belting. She said she’d like to record an acoustic album much like Musgraves’s one day. Miley Cyrus made covering her godmother Dolly Parton’sJolene a major pillar of her comeback, and newly minted pop royalty Meghan Trainor and Ariana Grande both performed at this year’s CMA Awards. (Given the dire lack of industry support, country music is running low on female superstars, and the women of pop are typically welcomed to awards shows with open arms.) Older stars like Sheryl Crow, Darius Rucker and even Lionel Richie have been able to extend their careers and expand their audiences by immersing themselves in the Nashville music scene.

It’s no secret that the genre distinctions between country and pop have blurred in recent years. As pop has moved in the direction of EDM and hip-hop, country music has filled the traditional pop void with stars like Sam Hunt and Lady Antebellum. Pop hits like Avicii’s Wake Me Up and Pitbull’s Timber reference America’s roots music legacy, and country hits like Jerrod Neimann’s Drink to That All Night have been remixed with guest spots from Mr Worldwide himself. But there seems to be a distinct difference of perspective in how the two genres view each other. For pop stars like Timberlake and Perry, country music represents a kind of incisive storytelling not possible at the dizzying heights of global superstardom. It’s substantive and nuanced in a way that the most broad, anthemic pop hits can’t be. But for country stars like Neimann and Florida Georgia Line, pop music represents an enticingly raunchy and party-primed method of engagement, free from the moral foundations and traditional instrumentation of country.

The irony here is that, at the moment, pop music is far more substantive than mainstream country. If the bros of country really wanted to emulate pop, they’d be releasing songs about body image (like All About That Bass) or high school social structures (such as Lorde’s Team) or strained parent-child relationships (Imagine Dragons’ I Bet My Life). And if Timberlake wanted to win at country radio, he’d merely need to make a song about trying to pick up a Southern dime in Daisy Dukes. But music’s biggest stars, like the public at large, don’t want to be restricted by any kind of social or artistic definitions, and so genre pretexts really don’t matter. For these musicians, branching from pop to country or vice versa isn’t just a flight of fancy – it’s liberating.

Justin Timberlake buys his own social network with Myspace investment

Singer turned actor Justin Timberlake takes a stake in $35m purchase of Myspace from News Corp

 

Justin Timberlake has taken a stake in Myspace after News Corp sold the social network for $35m. Photograph: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Justin Timberlake is to take a "major role" in the new direction of Myspace after he emerged as one of those behind a $35m deal for the ailing social network.

The singer turned actor, who starred as Facebook investor Sean Parker in the Hollywood hit The Social Network, took a stake in Myspace along with the online advertising company, Specific Media.

The unlikely entrepreneur will "lead the business strategy" for the fallen social network, the Specific Media chief executive Tim Vangerhook, said on announcing the $35m deal on Wednesday evening.

Myspace has shed billions of dollars from its price tag since it was dethroned as the dominant social network in 2008. Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation agreed on Wednesday to sell Myspace for a fraction of the $100m it was seeking – a sign of the site's dramatic fall from greatness.

News Corp will retain a minority stake in Myspace after putting the struggling social network up for sale earlier this year, engaging investment bank Allen & Co to find a buyer.

In an interview with AdAge, Vanderhook said Timberlake, 30, had put his own money into buying Myspace, but refused to disclose how much. He confirmed that the former N Sync singer will have an office in Myspace but that he was "probably not going to be there every day".

Asked whether he thought Timberlake had been inspired by his star turn in The Social Network, Vanderhook said: "I don't think it was so much that – that was just ironic. He's really passionate about how can he create a better community."

Timberlake said in a statement: "There's a need for a place where fans can go to interact with their favorite entertainers, listen to music, watch videos, share and discover cool stuff and just connect. Myspace has the potential to be that place.

"Art is inspired by people and vice versa, so there's a natural social component to entertainment. I'm excited to help revitalise Myspace by using its social media platform to bring artists and fans together in one community."

Just this week, Parker said Myspace's fall from grace was down to it being a "junkheap of bad design", while Facebook blossomed with lots of new features.

He told TV host Jimmy Fallon at the NExTWORK conference: "They weren't successful in treating and evolving the product enough, it was basically this junkheap of bad design that persisted for many many years. There was a period of time where if they had just copied Facebook rapidly, they would have been Facebook. They were giant, the network effects, the scale effects were enormous."

Myspace is expected to shed more than half of its 500 remaining staff as part of the deal. The layoffs follow a 30% staff reduction in April last year, and a further 47% cut in January. Two years ago Myspace employed more than 1,400 people.

News Corp bought Myspace in 2005 for $580m. In 2006 Google signed a $900m deal to sell ads on Myspace; by 2007 it had 300m registered users worldwide and was being valued at $12bn. By November 2010 the user figure had fallen to 91m.

Facebook passed Myspace in terms of numbers of users two years ago and is now approaching 700m globally. As people dropped Myspace, so did advertisers. Market research firm eMarketer estimates that the site will earn about $183m in worldwide ad revenues this year, down from $605m at its peak.

Specific Media, a US digital advertising company founded by brothers Tim, Chris and Russell Vanderhook in 1999, said it planned to work with Timberlake to turn Myspace around by making it "the premiere digital destination for original shows, video content and music".

The company added it intended to use Myspace's infrastructure to "deploy socially activated advertising", enabling brands to take their campaigns viral by allowing users to share ads with friends.

News Corp's Myspace sale comes as a new generation of internet firms are attracting sky-high valuations. Zynga, the online games developer behind hits including CityVille and FarmVille, is planning an initial public offering that could value it at $20bn. LinkedIn, the business-focused social network, has already gone public and is valued at $8.6bn. Next year Facebook is expected to go public – analysts have estimated it could be worth $80bn or more.

Sunday, 10 January 2016

Justin Timberlake Can’t Take Criticism, So He’d Rather Kill His Critics


Justin Timberlake sometimes “wants to fucking kill everybody.” The eternally cool pop star, actor, and Myspace investor broke character in his new GQinterview for the magazine’s new Men of the Year issue. Journalist Amy Wallace sat down to speak with the man in his hometown of Memphis, Tennessee, where he revealed that “I feel — literally — like a bunch of people just took a shit on my face.”

Timberlake was apparently steamed at the critical reception for both his latest acting endeavor, Runner Runner, and his second album of 2013, The 20/20 Experience 2 of 2. He specifically took issue with respective reviews from industry trade publications Variety and Billboard, who’d summarily dismissed the works. “Where did all this vitriol come from?” JT asked. “It’s mean. And I’m not cut out for it.”

Oh, but he went on. “The movie didn’t do well at the box office, so I should quit? Hold on a second. If I was somebody else, you wouldn’t have said that. I have the number one album this week, and I shouldn’t have released it? Come on, man. You sound like a dickhead… It just shocked me because, like, you’re trade magazines. None of your opinions count. And by the way, none of you can do it.”

Echoing Kanye West’s “never forget I’m from Chicago” Jimmy Kimmel Livemonologue, the former ‘N Sync singer said, “It’s a struggling city with a defeatist attitude. I’m from this town, and I grew up with a little bit of a chip on my shoulder, so sometimes I find it funny that I’ve been able to acquire the patience it takes to be kind to people in our business. Because sometimes I just want to fucking kill everybody.”

At last, no strings attached. Read more at GQ, and see Timberlake’s massive tour schedule below.

Justin Timberlake tour dates:

November 13 – Raleigh, NC @ PNC Arena
November 15 – Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
November 16 – Columbus, OH @ Nationwide Arena
November 18 – Memphis, TN @ Fedex Forum
November 19 – St. Louis, MO @ Scottrade Center
November 21 – Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center
November 26 – Los Angeles, CA @ Staples Center
November 27 – Anaheim, CA @ Honda Center
November 29 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Arena
November 30 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Arena
December 02 – Phoenix, AZ @ US Airways Center
December 04 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
December 05 – Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
December 11 – Indianapolis, IN @ Bankers Life Fieldhouse
December 12 – Cleveland, OH @ Quicken Loans Arena
December 14 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Consol Energy Center
December 15 – Louisville, KY @ KFC Yum! Center
December 17 – Atlanta, GA @ Philips Arena
December 19 – Orlando, FL @ Amway Center
January 13 – Edmonton, AB @ Rexall Place
January 14 – Edmonton, AB @ Rexall Place
January 16 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena
January 17 – Seattle, WA @ Key Arena
January 19 – San Jose, CA @ SAP Center
January 20 – Los Angeles, CA @ LA Forum
January 22 – Denver, CO @ Pepsi Center
February 07 – Fargo, ND @ Fargodome
February 09 – St. Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
February 10 – Omaha, NE @ CenturyLink Center
February 13 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
February 14 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
February 16 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
February 17 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
February 19 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
February 22 – Buffalo, NY @ First Niagara Center
February 24 – Washington, DC @ Verizon Center
February 25 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
February 27 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden
March 04 – Ft. Lauderdale, FL @ BB&T Center
March 05 – Miami, FL @ American Airlines Arena
March 30 – Sheffield, UK @ Motorpoint Arena Sheffield
April 01 – London, UK @ O2 Arena
April 02 – London, UK @ O2 Arena
April 04 – Glasgow, UK @ The SSE Hydro
April 05 – Glasgow, UK @ The SSE Hydro
April 07 – Manchester, UK @ Phones 4U Arena
April 08 – Manchester, UK @ Phones 4U Arena
April 11 – Birmingham, UK @ LG Arena
April 12 – Birmingham, UK @ LG Arena
April 14 – Zurich, CH @ Hallenstadion
April 16 – Zurich, CH @ Hallenstadion
April 18 – Amsterdam, NL @ Gelredome
April 20 – Cologne, DE @ Lanxess Arena
April 22 – Cologne, DE @ Lanxess Arena
April 24 – Berlin, DE @ O2
April 26 – Paris, FR @ Stade de France
May 01 – Antwerp, BE @ Sportpaleis
May 02 – Antwerp, BE @ Sportpaleis
May 04 – Hamburg, DE @ O2 World
May 06 – Copenhagen, DK @ Parken
May 08 – Oslo, NO @ Telenor Arena
May 10 – Stockholm, SE @ Tele 2 Arena
May 12 – Helsinki, FI @ Hartwall Arena
July 12 – Charlotte, NC @ Time Warner Cable Arena
July 14 – Baltimore, MD @ Baltimore Arena
July 16 – Albany, NY @ Union Center
July 18 – Uncasville, CT @ Mohegan Sun
July 19 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden
July 22 – Ottawa, ON @ Canadian Tire Centre
July 25 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre
July 26 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre
July 28 – Detroit, MI @ The Palace of Auburn Hills
July 30 – Kansas City, MO @ Sprint Center
August 03 – New Orleans, LA @ New Orleans Arena
August 05 – San Antonio, TX @ AT&T Center
August 08 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Center
August 11 – San Jose, CA @ SAP Center at San Jose

Justin Timberlake review – comes alive when he brings SexyBack back 4 / 5 stars

 
Timberlake performs in Melbourne. Photograph: Graham Denholm/Getty Images

If Justin Timberlake’s patchy 2013 album The 20/20 Experience passed you by (and it certainly did me), you could be forgiven for thinking he’d become “former musical artist Justin Timberlake”, especially given his past five years dedicated to Hollywood.

The immense 20/20 Experience world tour, which stopped off on Thursday at Melbourne’s cavernous Etihad stadium, put paid to such notions. Indeed, with such an emphasis on vastness – in the volume of the bass, the size of the stage, a two-act set list, the presence of two drummers and a big band – it almost felt as though the experience was tailor-made to remind you of Timberlake’s musical prolificacy.

The set was comprised largely of hits – all of them – and a few album tracks, from 2002’s Justified to the album that shares the tour’s title.


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Timberlake remains a charmingly earnest showman, so much so that occasional expletive-ridden exclamations from the now 33-year-old performer felt as embarrassing as they would had he unloaded them on the set of The All-New Mickey Mouse Club.

Beginning with the syrupy Pusher Love Girl, a 20/20 slow jam that makes me long for the glory days of Barry White’s Love Unlimited Orchestra, Timberlake’s interaction with his big band the Tennessee Kids had the ease that only a never-ending tour can bring about (this one has been going since late 2013). After a thunderous round of “Aussie, Aussie, Aussie”, Timberlake wisely tore into a pair of classics: Rock Your Body and FutureSex/LoveSound, both of which saw the set spring into a visual symphony of colour and light.

The spectacle took place on a Perspex-trimmed stage, heavy with hydraulics that allowed the band (and a white baby grand) to materialise at will, while the white honeycomb backdrop and proscenium bedecked with Hype Williams-esque digital projection occasionally gave the impression that Timberlake had commandeered the Tet spaceship from the coldly stylish Oblivion.

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The first act continued in a ponderous fashion until it ended with the icy masterpiece from Justified, Cry Me a River. Accompanied by bleak projections of tornado-whipped spacescapes, it was a welcome reprieve from 20/20’s blander neo-soul.

After a brief interval, Timberlake returned – initially in disembodied CGI avatar form – with a hypnotic laser show that signalled a lift in the energy levels, crucial as by that point anyone who wasn’t huddled in general admission like a colony of emperor penguins was shivering in the freezing Etihad.

If the set list dragged somewhat, the visual element was never less than dazzling – and the spaceship mood was amped to 11 when, in an extended take of Let the Groove Get In, the Perspex section of the stage began to ascend into the arena and crowd. It made Charlie Watts’ catwalking drum riser from the Rolling Stones’Bigger Bang tour look like a modest trickery.

Despite the spectacular, the 20/20 Experience suffers from mixed metaphor. Older hits were freshened up with unnecessary prog-leaning guitar solos and drum duets, while Timberlake’s neo-soul direction (typified by the presence of the Tennessee Kids) seemed out of place amid a light show that might have been better suited to a prime-period Chemical Brothers set.

In fact, despite the mega-selling nature of his newer work, it was 2006’s FutureSex/LoveSounds that had the most synchronicity with the light and stage show, particularly the penultimate track, SexyBack. The futurist arrangements originally laid down by producers Timbaland and Danja were wisely left largely intact (except for a bewildering decision to present the glorious What Goes Around Comes Around as an acoustic torch song).

Not only that, but the choreography that accompanied those songs – more or less unchanged since the FutureSex/LoveShow tour and videos – allowed Timberlake to remind us there was a time when he seemed to be the natural heir to Michael Jackson – a point made all the more poignant by a brief cover of Human Nature.

By the time the two hour-plus set drew to a close, we were left thinking Timberlake should ditch his Thicke-isms and bandleader aspirations and return to the comforting, cold bosom of turn-of-the-century R&B. An anniversary tour featuring either Justified or FutureSex/LoveSounds performed in full would be a dream. What goes around comes around, after all.

Justin Timberlake

Justin Randall Timberlake (born January 31, 1981) is an American singer, songwriter, actor, and record producer. He appeared on the television shows Star Search and The All-New Mickey Mouse Club as a child. In the late 1990s, Timberlake rose to prominence as one of the two lead vocalists and youngest member of NSYNC, which eventually became one of the best-selling boy bands of all time. During the group's hiatus, Timberlake released his debut studio album Justified (2002), which included the successful singles "Cry Me a River" and "Rock Your Body", and earned his first two Grammy Awards.

His second record, FutureSex/LoveSounds (2006), distinguished from his previous release by its wide-range of musical influences, debuted atop the US Billboard 200 and produced the Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles "SexyBack", "My Love", and "What Goes Around... Comes Around". With his first two albums exceeding sales of 10 million copies worldwide, he was established as one of the most commercially successful singers of the decade. From 2008 through 2012, Timberlake focused on his acting career, effectively putting his music career on hiatus; he held starring roles in the films The Social Network, Bad Teacher, In Time, and Friends with Benefits.

In 2013, Timberlake resumed his music career with his third and fourth albums The 20/20 Experience and The 20/20 Experience – 2 of 2, exploring neo soul styles with the song structures of 1960s and 1970s rock. The former became the best-selling record of the year in the US with the largest sales week, and spawned the top-three singles "Suit & Tie" and "Mirrors", while the latter produced the top-ten song "Not a Bad Thing". Time named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2007 and 2013. Timberlake's work has earned him numerous awards, including nine Grammy Awards and four Emmy Awards, the latter being for his appearances on Saturday Night Live. His other ventures include record label Tennman Records, fashion label William Rast, and the restaurants Destino and Southern Hospitality.

Justin Timberlake Biography

Singer Justin Timberlake got his start on The New Mickey Mouse Club and made it big with boy band 'N Sync, before becoming a solo singer and budding actor.

Synopsis

Born on January 31, 1981, Justin Timberlake began his career on The New Mickey Mouse Club, starring with Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera. In 1995, he became a teen heartthrob with the pop group 'N Sync. After the pop groups immensely successful run in the '90s, Timberlake went solo in 2002, releasing his own album, Justified. Timberlake proved he could stand alone with the Grammy-winning album, and continued his success as a solo artist with FutureSex/LoveSounds (2006) and The 20/20 Experience (2013). Aside from a prominent singing career, Timberlake also proved himself a talented actor, starring in Alpha Dog (2006), The Social Network (2010) and In Time(2011).

Early Life

Justin Randall Timberlake was born on January 31, 1981, in Memphis, Tennessee. Raised a Baptist, Timberlake grew up singing in the church choir. From 1993 to 1995, he performed on The New Mickey Mouse Club, along with pop stars Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera and JC Chasez. Afterward, Timberlake and Chasez, along with Lance Bass, Joey Fatone and Chris Kirkpatrick, formed the all-male singing group 'N Sync. The boy band would go on to become one of the hottest pop groups of the 1990s, releasing No Strings Attached in 2000 and Celebrity in 2001.

Solo Career

In 2002, Timberlake decided to pursue a solo career, debuting with the hit song "Like I Love You." Later that year, he released his first solo album,Justified, which sold more than 7 million copies worldwide. He received two Grammy Awards in 2004 for Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Male Pop Vocal Performance. The wins came on the heels of a controversial Super Bowl performance with Janet Jackson in which Timberlake accidentally tore off a portion of Jackson's costume revealing her bare breast.

Successful Collaborations

As a solo artist, Timberlake has often collaborated with the Black Eyed Peas, receiving an Grammy nomination with the band for "Where Is The Love?" He has also worked with Nelly, Snoop Dogg and Nelly Furtado and started his own record company, JayTee Records, in 2005. The following year, he released his second solo album, FutureSex/LoveSounds, which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard chart. The album's lead single, "SexyBack", spent several consecutive weeks at No. 1. In 2008, Timberlake helped make Madonna's single, "4 Minutes", a Top 10 hit. Not only did he provide complimentary vocals, he was also a co-writer of the song. Timberlake also contributed to several other tracks on Madonna's Hard Candy album.

Acting Pursuits

Also in pursuit of an acting career, Timberlake has experienced success in both film and television. While parts in Alpha Dog (2006) and Black Snake Moan (2006) garnered little notice, he did hit it big as the voice for a young King Arthur in 2007's smash animated film Shrek the Third, which featured Mike Myers as the title character. Other work soon followed, as Timberlake teamed up with Myers once again when he appeared in the 2008 comedyThe Love Guru. He also had a role in the drama The Open Road (2009) with Jeff Bridges and Mary Steenburgen.

One of Timberlake's most notable performances to date was in 2010's The Social Network, the drama about the creation of Facebook. Timberlake played real-life internet tycoon Sean Parker in the film. Turning to more comedic fare, he starred in Bad Teacher with Cameron Diaz and in Friends with Benefits with Mila Kunis, both in 2011. Timberlake also has a leading role in the 2013 thriller Runner Runner with Ben Affleck. Keeping in stride with his latest string of more serious roles, Timberlake has also taken on the part of Neil Bogart in the film Inside Llewyn Davis (2013).

In addition to his roles on film, Timberlake has made a name for himself in the television industry as well. Timberlake made his first appearance on Saturday Night Live as both a host and musical guest in 2006. His routines and comedic timing made him a fan favorite among the hosts who have graced the stage. Having won two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series in 2009 and 2011, he has proven himself as a versatile actor with his work in TV.
Recent Musical Success

In January 2013, Timberlake returned to the music scene with the hit single "Suit & Tie." The song appeared on his album The 20/20 Experience released that March, reaching the top of the album charts in its first week. Before the long-awaited album was released, Timberlake performed "Pusher Love Girl" and "Suit & Tie" alongside Jay-Z at the 2013 Grammy Awards ceremony. Timberlake continued to enjoy this wave of success in August when he picked up the VMA Vanguard Award at the MTV Video Music Awards. At the ceremony, he gave an impressive performance, which also featured a reunion with his 'N Sync bandmates.

He quickly followed The 20/20 Experience with The 20/20 Experience Part 2 of 2 in October of the same year. The follow-up album didn't find the same critical acclaim that the previous iteration found, however the album still produced the hit single "Take Back the Night."
Personal Life

Timberlake once dated fellow pop singer Britney Spears and actress Cameron Diaz. In 2007, he began dating actress Jessica Biel. After an on-and-off relationship that lasted several years, the couple got married in October of 2012, in Puglia, Italy. They later issuing the following statement toPeople magazine: "It's great to be married, the ceremony was beautiful and it was so special to be surrounded by our family and friends." The couple welcomed a son, Silas Randall Timberlake, in April 2015.

In addition to his music and acting careers, Timberlake has also opened several restaurants, started a clothing line and participaSinger Justin Timberlake got his start on The New Mickey Mouse Club and made it big with boy band 'N Sync, before becoming a solo singer and budding actor.


10 Things You Never Knew About Justin Timberlake





Responsible for not one but a pair of US number one albums in 2013 – both parts of ‘The 20/20 Experience’ topped the chart stateside, with the first also hitting number one in the UK – Justin Timberlake is well and truly back in the music game after a period away. Seven years separate 2006’s ‘FutureSex/LoveSounds’ and ‘The 20/20 Experience’, the hiatus filled with golf, acting, philanthropy and general fame servicing. But the prodigal son of the 1990s boyband scene couldn’t keep quiet forever – and ‘The 20/20 Experience’ proved to be the biggest-selling album of 2013 in the States.

Clash went digging for some lesser-known factual nuggets about the megastar performer. And this is what we clawed from the digital earth of the internet…

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‘Mirrors’, from ‘The 20/20 Experience’ (2013)

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At the innocent age of 11, Justin dolled up in a 10 gallon hat and a plaid Western shirt to sing Alan Jackson’s ‘Love's Got A Hold On You’ for the American TV show Star Search, appearing as Justin Randall (Randall is his middle name). According to People Magazine, he did not win. (Watch the performance.)

Between the years of 1993 and ‘96, Justin starred in children’s variety television show The Mickey Mouse Club. During this time, he performed alongside other young starlets like Ryan Gosling, Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears. Timberlake roomed with Gosling during this period, and Gosling’s mother even acted as Timberlake’s legal guardian for a season of the show.

At the age of 16, whilst rising to success with ‘N Sync, Justin began dating Stacy Ann Ferguson. She was six years his senior, and the lead singer of a band called Wild Orchid. She is now more commonly known as Fergie, singer in The Black Eyed Peas.

In 2002, Justin became the first ever victim of Ashton Kutcher’s Punk’d show, in a prank described by TIME as one of the most Epic Moments In Reality TV History. The pop star was confronted by agents intending to repossess his cars, dogs and home, due to unpaid income taxes. Timberlake went through no little visual distress, before Kutcher appeared to reveal the prank. (Watch some pretty shaky footage.)

In an interview with E!, long time collaborator Timbaland revealed how ‘Cry Me A River’ came about. Following a heated phone call with his then-girlfriend Britney Spears, Timberlake arrived at the studio to work with Timbaland looking “visibly angry”. According to Timbaland, “I was like, ‘Man, don't worry about it,’ and he was like, ‘I can't believe she did that to me,’ and he was like, ‘You were my sun, you were my earth...’” These words became the opening lyrics to the song.

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‘Cry Me A River’, from ‘Justified’ (2002)

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Timberlake’s second major album tour, FutureSex/LoveShow, was the 37th most profitable tour by a musician of all time, grossing a total $126,800,000 across 119 shows in total. Some of the support acts included questionable pop-punk band Good Charlotte and former somebody Natasha Bedingfield.

‘That Girl’ on ‘The 20/20 Experience’ is co-written by Jamaican DJ and reggae musician King Sporty, real name Noel Williams. He’s best known for co-authoring the 1980 Bob Marley hit, ‘Buffalo Soldier’.

The title of ‘The 20/20 Experience’ is inspired by an incident involving a close friend’s first listen of the album. In an interview with American TV host Ryan Seacrest, the singer explained: “I was playing some of the stuff for my friends and they would come in and out of the studio and I'd say, ‘What do you think of this?’ And my best friend said, ‘This is music that you can see,’ and for some reason that stuck with me.”

Lou Pearlman, Timberlake’s former manager while in ‘N Sync, was arrested in 2006 for masterminding one of the biggest Ponzi schemes ever recorded in American history. It is believed that Pearlman rallied up debts of over $300 million by persuading banks and individuals to invest in companies that only existed on paper. In 2008, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison.

While working on her 2008 album ‘Hard Candy’, Justin was ordered by Madonna to drop his pants so she could administer a shot of vitamin B12 into his buttocks.

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‘TKO’, from ‘The 20/20 Experience – 2 Of 2’ (2013)

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Words: Joe Zadeh

Justin Timberlake tours the UK in March/April. Most dates are sold out, but should you fancy your chances…


March

30th – Motorpoint Arena, Sheffield

April

1st + 2nd – 02 Arena, London

4th + 5th – SSE Hydro, Glasgow

7th + 8th – Phones 4U Arena, Manchester

11th + 12th – LG Arena, Birmingham