Sneha Girap (Editor)

Don Bryant (songwriter)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation(s)
  
Singer, songwriter

Role
  
Singer

Instruments
  
Vocals

Spouse
  
Ann Peebles (m. 1974)


Labels
  
Hi

Record label
  
Name
  
Don Bryant

Associated acts
  
Don Bryant (songwriter) cpsstaticrovicorpcom3JPG400MI0001593MI000

Born
  
April 4, 1942 (age 81) Memphis, Tennessee, United States (
1942-04-04
)

Albums
  
Precious Soul, The Complete Don Bryant on Hi Records (disc 1), It's All in the Word

Similar People
  
Ann Peebles, Willie Mitchell, Mike Scott, Missy Elliott, Timbaland

Don bryant try me wmv


Donald Maurice Bryant (born April 4, 1942, Memphis, Tennessee, United States) is an American singer and songwriter.

Contents

Don Bryant (songwriter) s3amazonawscomfatpossummediadonbryant1024x6

Don bryant clear days and stormy nights


Early Life

Bryant was born in Memphis, Tennessee, the middle of ten children. He began singing in church at age 5. He soon joined his father’s family vocal group and would eventually form a gospel quartet for a high school radio show, finding success singing secular pop songs on Dick “Cane” Cole’s popular WLOK show. The quartet, performing as The Four Kings, would part with Cole to become the front band for Willie Mitchell, with Bryant as the leading man.

Hi Records

In 1960, the still teenage Bryant was offered a shot at songwriting, penning “I Got To Know” for The 5 Royales. He wrote material for other artists at Hi Records while continuing to record with The Four Kings and as a solo artist, resulting in a 1969 solo album. However, with the success of Al Green, Otis Clay, and other vocalists at Hi, Bryant’s singing career took a backseat to writing, joining Earl Randle, Dan Greer, and Darryl Carter as Hi’s top staff writers. Bryant is credited on as many as 154 titles.

By 1970, Willie Mitchell had begun to pair Bryant with his newest act, a young Ann Peebles, for whom he wrote “99 Pounds” and “Do I Need You.” The pair co-wrote the Top 40 hit "I Can't Stand the Rain" in 1973, and would be married the following year. Bryant spent much of the subsequent decade writing and opening for Peebles, with his final Hi single coming in 1981, a duet with his wife called “Mon Belle-Amour.”

Bryant focused mainly on gospel albums throughout the 1980s and 1990s, and ultimately stopped performing altogether outside of church services.

Return to Performing

Following a conversation between producer Scott Bomar and former Hi Records drummer Howard Grimes, Bryant was invited to perform as a vocalist with Memphis-based soul homage outfit The Bo-Keys. After some convincing from Grimes, Bryant accepted and, within a few months, found the inspiration to return to the studio. Bryant and The Bo-Keys recorded Don’t Give Up on Love in the fall of 2016, which was released on the Fat Possum label in 2017. The album features an array of Bryant’s past triumphs as well as new material.

Discography

  • Precious Soul (Hi Records), 1969
  • Don’t Give Up on Love (Fat Possum Records), 2017
  • As Donald Bryant and a Chosen Few

  • What Do You Think About Jesus? (By Faith Records), 1987
  • I’m Gonna Praise Him (By Faith Records), 1989
  • It’s All in the World (By Faith Records), 2000
  • References

    Don Bryant (songwriter) Wikipedia