Boyz II Men is an American R&B/soul singing group from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1988 as a quintet, Boyz II Men found fame as a quartet, with members Wanya Morris, Michael McCary, Shawn Stockman, and Nathan Morris, on Motown Records during the early 1990s.
Based on sales, Boyz II Men is one of the most successful R&B groups of all time. It has recorded five #1 pop hits between 1992 and 1997 and has since sold more than 25 million records. Three of its #1 hits, "End of the Road", "I'll Make Love to You", and "One Sweet Day" (a duet with Mariah Carey), set and broke records for the longest period of time a single remained at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Boyz II Men was originally signed to Motown Records from 1990 to 2000, at which point it was moved to parent label Universal Records. After the 2000 album Nathan Shawn Michael Wanya, Boyz II Men moved to Arista Records. In 2003, Michael McCary left the group due to chronic back problems resulting from scoliosis. As of 2005, Wanya Morris, Shawn Stockman, and Nathan Morris continue to tour and record as a trio.
The members of Unique Attraction idolized New Edition, one of the most popular R&B groups of the 1980s. They found inspiration in New Edition's harmonies and routines, and eventually renamed the group "Boyz II Men" after one of New Edition's songs.
Sneaking backstage after a 1989 concert performed by Bell Biv DeVoe (a New Edition spin-off group consisting of Ricky Bell, Michael Bivins, and Ronnie DeVoe), Boyz II Men performed an a cappella rendition of New Edition's "Can You Stand the Rain" for New Editon/BBD leader Michael Bivins. Bivins was impressed by the group, and began plans to sign them to Motown Records through a production deal with his Biv Ten Records company. But before the group began recording, Marc Nelson left because of personality conflicts, reducing the quintet to a quartet.
Boyz II Men's first single, the Dallas Austin-produced "Motownphilly" featured BBD as guest performers, and was accompanied with a music video that presented the group in hip hop style. (The video also included cameos from Black Thought and ?uestlove of the Roots pre-fame.) Their second single was a cover of a classic Motown tune, G.C. Cameron's "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday" from the 1975 film Cooley High, while "Uhh Ahh" served as the third single.
From the beginning, Boyz II Men featured all four members trading leads, avoiding the usual R&B group arrangement of one or two lead singers and a team of background singers. The multiple-lead arrangements became a Boyz II Men trademark, and it became typical to hear Wanya Morris' vibrato-heavy tenor, Shawn Stockman's smoother tenor voice, Nathan Morris' baritone, and Michael McCary's deep bass (notably used in spoken-word sections of many Boyz II Men hits) trading bars in each song.
The album's liner notes identified nicknames for each member of the group. These nicknames were devised in collaboration with Bivins in an attempt at marketing. Wanya was "Squirt," Shawn was "Slim," Michael was simply "Bass," and Nathan was named after a soap opera character who brandished a nerdy style, "Alex Vanderpool."
In time, Wanya Morris would become something of the de-facto leader of the group, handling its operations and business interests, but the group never presented one man as more important than the other.
Cooleyhighharmony was a major success for the group, Bivins, and Motown. It eventually sold over nine million copies, "Motownphilly" and "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday" were #1 R&B hits and top five U.S. pop hits, the album won the 1992 Grammy Award for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals, and Boyz II Men joined Hammer's high-profile 2 Legit 2 Quit tour as an opening act. While traveling the country, their tour manager Khalil Roundtree was murdered, and the group's future performances of "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday" were dedicated to him.
"I'll Make Love to You" broke "End of the Road's" 13-week record at #1, by spending 14 weeks at the top of the chart (a feat equaled earlier that year by Whitney Houston's cover of "I Will Always Love You"). "On Bended Knee" replaced "I'll Make Love to you" at #1, making Boyz II Men the third act to replace themselves at #1, after Elvis and The Beatles. Meanwhile, II sold more than 12 million copies in the United States alone, becoming one of the best-selling albums ever released by an R&B group act.
It was the group's collaboration with Mariah Carey that proved to be the most notable. "One Sweet Day", a duet between Carey and Boyz II Men included on Carey's 1995 LP Daydream, became a smash success, and topped the US pop charts for a record sixteen weeks.
The influences of the group were felt and heard across throughout the R&B world, with several R&B competitors showing obvious inspiration from Boyz II Men's work and singing style, among them, Shai, Soul for Real, BLACKstreet, All 4 One, and later Dru Hill, Jagged Edge, and (featuring old Boyz II Men member Marc Nelson) Az Yet. Boyz II Men's closest competitor, Uptown Records act Jodeci, were, with their grittier and more sexually charged style, the polar opposite of Boyz II Men's wholesomeness. Jodeci's style had its own followers (many of them, Dru Hill and Jagged Edge in particular, they shared with Boyz II Men), but their influence on the music industry as a whole was not as widespread as that of Boyz II Men.
Also notable is that several record producers, Lou Pearlman in particular, saw Boyz II Men's popularity with white audiences, and developed several acts in the same vein as Boyz II Men, but with white male singers instead of black ones. Because of this, Boyz II Men is often considered to have started the "boy band" craze that reached a climax by the end of the 1990s, with groups such as The Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC, going on to widespread international success, and others, such as Motown act 98 Degrees, finding more moderate mainstream success.
Evolution was released in 1997 to mixed reviews and sold two million copies, far below II's 12 million and Cooleyhighharmony's 9 million. Only one of Evolution's singles, the Jam/Lewis-penned "Four Seasons of Loneliness", made it to #1. The second single, the Babyface-helmed "A Song for Mama" (the theme song to the Babyface-produced film Soul Food) was a Top 10 hit, but the follow-up "Can't Let Her Go" underperformed.
As the label problems mounted, health problems began to take their toll on the group. While on tour to support the Evolution album, Wanya Morris developed a polyp on his vocal cords, and the group was forced to postpone part of the tour until he recovered. Meanwhile, Michael McCary was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, which limited his ability to dance at live performances; the other three members eventually resorted to having McCary seated on a stool while they did all the dancing themselves.
Boyz II Men's final Top 40 hit was "I Will Get There", a Diane Warren-penned single released in support of the soundtrack to DreamWorks' first animated feature, The Prince of Egypt. "I Will Get There" is also notable for being one of the few Boyz II Men hit singles completely sung a capella.
Their only studio LP for Universal, 2000's Nathan Michael Shawn Wanya, was chiefly written and produced by the group itself, in an attempt to update their sound and ward off critics who questioned the group's reliance on Babyface's hit-making songcraft. While the critics were more receptive to Nathan Michael Shawn Wanya than they had been to its predecessor, the LP only sold 500,000 copies, and although its two singles, "Pass You By" and "Thank You in Advance" received media attention, neither ultimately became hits.
| Year | Album title | Chart position | Sales status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1991: | Cooleyhighharmony reissued in 1993 with additional tracks | #3 US, #7 UK | 9x Platinum US |
| 1994: | II also issued in Spanish language version | #1 (12 weeks) US, #17 UK | 12x Platinum (Diamond) US |
| 1997: | Evolution also issued in Spanish language version | #1 (1 week) US, #2 CAN | 2x Platinum US |
| 2000: | Nathan Michael Shawn Wanya | #4 US | Gold US |
| 2002: | Full Circle | #10 US | Gold US |
| 2004: | Throwback, Vol. 1 | #54 US | |
| 2005: | Winter/Reflections | ||
| 2006(TBA): | The Remedy |
| Year | Album title | Chart position |
|---|---|---|
| 1992: | Christmas Interpretations (Christmas LP) | #19 US |
| 1995: | The Remix Collection Platinum US (remix LP) | #17 US |
| 1999: | The Ballad Collection (compilation LP) | |
| 2001: | The Greatest Hits Collection (greatest hits LP, deluxe edition in 2004) | #89 US |
| 2003: | The Best of Boyz II Men (greatest hits LP) |
| Year | Single title | Chart position |
|---|---|---|
| 1991: | "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday" | #2 US |
| 1991: | "Uhh Ahh" | #16 US |
| 1992: | "Please Don't Go" | #49 US |
| 1992: | "End of the Road" | #1 US weeks, #1 UK weeks |
| 1993: | "In the Still of the Nite (I'll Remember)" | #3 US, #27 UK |
| 1993: | "Let It Snow" | #32 US |
| 1994: | "I'll Make Love To You" | #1 US weeks, #5 UK |
| 1994: | "On Bended Knee" | #1 US, #20 UK |
| 1995: | "Thank You" | #21 US, #26 UK |
| 1995: | "Water Runs Dry" | #2 US, #24 UK |
| 1995: | "Vibin'" | #56 US |
| 1995: | "One Sweet Day" (Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men) | #1 US Weeks, #6 UK |
| 1995: | "I Remember" | #46 US |
| 1995: | "Hey Lover" (LL Cool J featuring Boyz II Men) | #3 US, #17 UK |
| 1997: | "4 Seasons of Loneliness" | #1 US, #10 UK |
| 1997: | "A Song for Mama" | #7 US, #34 UK |
| 1998: | "Can't Let Her Go" | #23 UK |
| 1999: | "I Will Get There" | #32 US, #23 US R&B |
| 2000: | "Pass You By" | #27 US R&B |
| 2000: | "Thank You in Advance" | #80 US, #40 US R&B |
| 2002: | "The Color of Love" | #51 US R&B |
| 2002: | "Relax Your Mind" (featuring Faith Evans) | #52 US R&B |
| 2004: | "What You Won't Do for Love" | #60 US R&B |
American musical groups | Philadelphia music groups | Boyz II Men | Rhythm and blues musical groups | Rhythmic Top 40 acts | 1990s music groups | Soul musical groups | Motown performers | Super Bowl halftime performers | People from Philadelphia | Kids' Choice Awards winners
Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men | Boyz II Men
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