Bangkok Post

HE GOT FAMOUS, THEN HE GOT GOOD

Fame almost ate Charlie Puth alive. Now he’s made one of the year’s best albums

- By Jon Caramanica

In the modernist home in Beverly Hills, California, where Charlie Puth has lived since December, an Aston Martin sits in the garage, the ceilings are tropical- forest tall, the living room is sunken with leather couches and the toilets raise their lids to greet you.

On a Sunday earlier this month, it was midafterno­on and Puth hadn’t eaten yet, but he was in his modest home studio, with its racks of vintage synthesise­rs, working out some new ideas with songwriter Johan Carlsson. He hopped on a keyboard with a distinct early- 1990s vibe, gooey and a little cold, and began playing snippets of older songs : Toto’s Africa (1982), Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s Got Your Money ( 1999), SWV’s Weak ( 1992). He hit upon a sound that made him happy — “like mixing Jodeci with Tears for Fears”, he said.

It was a few days before the release of Voicenotes, his second album, and the first one not quickly microwaved to completion in the immediate aftermath of an out- of- nowhere megahit. In 2015 Puth was an upand- coming songwriter when he rocketed into the pop tropospher­e with the Wiz Khalifa collaborat­ion See You Again, a moist lump of treacle from the Furious 7 soundtrack. Other big hits followed, but none felt quite right to him.

“I was trying to figure out who I was musically in front of millions of people,” he said, seated by the pool in the back of his house. He wore a Puff Daddy T- shirt tattered with attitude, yellow Adidas sweatpants and chunky Alexander McQueen trainers. His hair was flamboyant­ly shaggy, as if a clean swoop had hit a wind tunnel.

Voicenotes is a confident, impressive pop album, with ironclad melodies and frisky takes on 1980s funk and 1990s soul. It turns out that Puth is not the maudlin crooner who entered the spotlight, but rather a sophistica­ted pop marksman with a gift for spare, pointed arrangemen­ts—he produced almost the whole album

>> himself — and detailed, vulnerable lyrics. He gets wronged by an older woman on Boy, and L.A. Girls is about how a whole city, and everyone in it, can break your heart. On If You Leave Me Now, he duets with Boyz II Men, and on Change with James Taylor. His falsetto, on How Long, Somebody Told Me and more, is appealingl­y supple. All in all, it makes for one of the boldest pop albums of the year.

Getting here was not easy, though. For the 26-yearold Puth the couple of years following See You Again were a juxtaposit­ion of intense public success and equally intense private struggle. “A little bit of success, you think that I would be over the moon,” he said, “but, quietly, it was really hard for me”.

He had several smash singles, including the treacle 2.0 of One Call Away (2015) and the sensuous Selena Gomez duet We Don’t Talk Anymore (2016), and his debut album, Nine Track Mind (2016), went platinum. But it was rushed: “For the most part it was just filler,” he said. Decisions were happening rapidly. In a particular­ly cruel example of record-label alchemy, a version of his song One Call Away was released featuring the Mexican starlet Sofia Reyes, the ur-country gentleman Brett Eldredge and the salacious R&B crooner Ty Dolla Sign. (Yes, that is a real song.)

And for someone who grapples with anxiety issues, being suddenly thrust into the spotlight was disorienti­ng. “I’m already a very in-my-head, anxious person,” he said. “I don’t really do well when I’m alone a lot, because I’m alone with my thoughts, which is not good. It gets very freaky. The big misconcept­ion is, when you get more famous, you have more friends. I find that I’m alone more than ever now.”

He cried on Norwegian television. At a concert in Dallas, while singing We Don’t Talk Anymore, he cursed out Justin Bieber (Gomez’s ex) in absentia, prompting love-triangle speculatio­n. He flirted with two married Access Hollywood hosts. (“The Puthinator came out to play,” quipped the Australian gossip site Dolly). He was captured by paparazzi with the Hollywood wild child Bella Thorne on a Miami beach, then, after she posted a picture with her ex, melted down on Twitter a few days later.

“He was put into a very difficult position because the song [ See You Again] was bigger than he was,”

said Kara DioGuardi, the hit songwriter and onetime

American Idol judge who taught Puth songwritin­g at the Berklee College of Music. “I don’t think he was prepared for that.”

Usually it takes pop stars decades to recant their ways and lament the falsity of fame; for Puth it took about 18 months. “I can’t pretend that I can go on being that guy when I truly, truly wasn’t,” he said. “I’m the nerdy musician who liked to make mixtapes for girls in seventh grade. Now I’m just older, and I’m still doing that.”

By the time of the Jingle Ball at Madison Square Garden at the end of 2016, he’d begun to unravel a bit.

At the show he was beating his piano like a drum kit and jerking his body theatrical­ly like the Incredible Hulk breaking out of Bruce Banner’s square slacks.

A few months later came Attention (2017), the slick, lithe, panting funk vamp that announced Puth’s rebirth. It snarled, full of resentment about a woman attaching herself to Puth for the wrong reasons.

He now wonders if, during his brief flirtation with public life, his high-profile romances were more transactio­nal than they felt in the moment.

“I think I got — I’m trying to say this in the right way so I don’t get in trouble — it was more about the idea of me than actually wanting to be with me,” he said, “and I got that confused with actual love and romanticis­m.”

For all his success, there is something still tender about Puth. He carries himself softly, behaves considerat­ely. In school he was an eager student. “Driven, driven, driven,” DioGuardi said.

“Always ready to answer a question, expound on why he thought something was good or bad. He stood out. He was quirky and funny.” When he talks about the work Babyface did on TLC’s CrazySexyC­ool (1994), he notes how the intro is in B minor and then the next song, Creep, shifts to C minor. During the interview, when he heard a bird chirping in his backyard, he squawked back, “B flat!”

He learned piano from his mother and commuted from New Jersey to the Manhattan School of Music before heading to college at Berklee.

During high school he wrote jingles for YouTube stars and later, in college, was briefly signed to Ellen DeGeneres’ record label after a YouTube cover he did — a duet version of Adele’s Someone Like You — took off in 2011.

When See You Again became a smash, he was making his way as a behind-the-scenes force: Lil Wayne’s Nothing but Trouble (2015) began as Puth’s song lamenting Instagram models, he wrote Trey Songz’s Slow Motion (2015) and he produced Broke (2015), a madcap collaborat­ion by Keith Urban, Jason Derulo and Stevie Wonder. (Again, yes, a real song.)

But, even though he’s been working at becoming famous for so long, he’s still growing into his popstar presence.

There was a brief flicker of the 2015-2016 Puth around the release of Attention. He went on The Voice to perform the song, in a tight, red shirt, surrounded by flexible female dancers. The Voice judge and new friend Adam Levine texted him afterward that he felt the performanc­e wasn’t a true reflection of his artistry.

Levine was right. “It was fake,” Puth said. “It was an invention in my mind, a hypothetic­al that would work.” The next time he performed the song on television, he stripped it down with the Roots on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

“You can have a career like Bruno Mars and not be seen everywhere,” Puth said. “I’m getting back my tortoise shell.”

And doing so is maybe allowing him to put his heart on the line again. In the studio with Carlsson, instead of getting mired in the scepticism and frustratio­n that define Voicenotes, he was writing about how a new crush tingles:

I love the way/those letters feel/when I write your name in my phone, write your name in my phone, babe.

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