The cost was the silence that followed his early success. After three albums in five years -- Urban Hang Suite, Embrya, and Now -- Maxwell disappeared for eight years without offering any explanation to his fans or his label. He did not tour, did not record, did not give interviews or make any public appearances during that time. The industry assumed he had burned out or lost interest in making music altogether. He returned in 2009 with BLACKsummers'night, an album that debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 and won a Grammy for Best R&B Album, proving that the voice had not diminished during the long silence and that the audience had not forgotten him.
Ascension (Don't Ever Wonder) is the one. The song is built around a bassline that walks like it owns the street and a vocal that hovers above the groove without ever rushing toward resolution. Maxwell's falsetto is not a gimmick or a studio trick -- it is the instrument through which he communicates things that a regular speaking voice cannot carry. He never became a prolific artist by industry standards.

Five albums in over twenty years is not commercial pace, but every album arrived fully formed and every one mattered deeply to the audience that had waited years for it.