Anthony "T." Graham Brown
(born October 30, 1954 in Arabi, Georgia) is an American country music artist. Active since 1986, Brown has recorded a total of thirteen studio albums, and has charted more than twenty singles on the Billboard
Hot Country Songs charts. Three of these singles — "Hell and High Water" and "Don't Go to Strangers" from 1986, and "Darlene" from 1988 — reached Number One, and eight more reached Top Ten.
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T. GRAHAM BROWN TICKETS
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Biography
Anthony Graham Brown was born October 30, 1954 in
Arabi, Georgia.
[1] He first performed in a duo called Dirk & Tony, before founding two more bands and eventually settling on the stage name T. Graham Brown.
Musical career
Brown moved to Nashville in 1982 and found work singing advertising
jingles for companies such as
McDonald's,
Disneyland and
Budweiser, and doing
demos. He was also the singing narrator in the
Taco Bell "Run For the Border" television spots. Brown also found work as a songwriter for Tree Publishing before signing to
Capitol Records in 1984.
[2]
Brown's first release for the label, "Drowning in Memories", peaked at #39 and was never included on an album. After it came the #7 "I Tell It Like It Used to Be", the first single from his 1986 album of the same name. Counting its title track, this album accounted for four singles: the #3 "I Wish That I Could Hurt That Way Again" and two straight Number Ones in "Hell and High Water" and "Don't Go to Strangers."
Brown's second album for the label,
Brilliant Conversationalist
, followed a year later. Although none of its singles went to Number One, it accounted for three more Top Ten hits in its title track, followed by "She Couldn't Love Me Anymore" and "Last Resort."
A third album, 1988's
Come as You Were
, produced his third and final Number One in "Darlene". After this came the #7 title track and #30 "Never Say Never." In early 1990, he sang guest vocals on the multi-artist charity single "Tomorrow's World", as well as
Tanya Tucker's single "Don't Go Out", from her album
Tennessee Woman
.
1990 also saw the release of his next album,
Bumper to Bumper
. This album's lead-off single "If You Could Only See Me Now" went Top Ten with a #6 peak, but the other singles — the #18 "Moonshadow Road" and #53 "I'm Sending One Up for You" — did not fare as well, with the latter being his first single to land outside the Top 40. That same year, he also released an unsuccessful greatest-hits package. His next album,
You Can't Take It with You
, only accounted for the #31 "With This Ring" before he exited Capitol in 1991.
Brown did not record another album until 1998's
Wine into Water
on the Intersound label. This album produced four more singles for him, although the #44 title track was the highest-charting single from it. He then released two more independent albums:
The Next Right Thing
in 2003 and
The Present
in 2006.
Discography
Albums
Year
| Album
| US Country
|
1986
| I Tell It Like It Used to Be
| 15
|
1987
| Brilliant Conversationalist
| 23
|
1988
| Come as You Were
| 22
|
1990
| Bumper to Bumper
| 33
|
1991
| You Can't Take It with You
| —
|
1998
| Wine into Water
| 47
|
2003
| The Next Right Thing
| —
|
2006
| The Present
| —
|
Live albums
Year
| Album
|
2001
| Lives!
|
2004
| Live at Billy Bob's Texas
|
Compilation albums
Year
| Album
|
1990
| Greatest Hits
|
2007
| Deja Vu All Over Again/The Best of T. Graham Brown
|
Singles
Year
| Song
| Chart Positions
| Album
|
US Country
| CAN Country
|
1985
| "Drowning in Memories"
| 39
| —
| Single only
|
"I Tell It Like It Used to Be"
| 7
| —
| I Tell It Like It Used to Be
|
1986
| "I Wish That I Could Hurt That Way Again"
| 3
| 2
|
"Hell and High Water"
| 1
| 1
|
"Don't Go to Strangers"
| 1
| 1
|
1987
| "Brilliant Conversationalist"
| 9
| 4
| Brilliant Conversationalist
|
"She Couldn't Love Me Anymore"
| 4
| 3
|
1988
| "The Last Resort"
| 4
| 4
|
"Darlene"
| 1
| *
| Come as You Were
|
"Come as You Were"
| 7
| *
|
1989
| "Never Say Never"
| 30
| 22
|
1990
| "If You Could Only See Me Now"
| 6
| 5
| Bumper to Bumper
|
"Moonshadow Road"
| 18
| 9
|
1991
| "I'm Sending One Up for You"
| 53
| 75
|
"With This Ring"
| 31
| 29
| You Can't Take It with You
|
"You Can't Take It with You"
| —
| 68
|
1998
| "Wine into Water"
| 44
| 61
| Wine into Water
|
1999
| "Happy Ever After"
| 68
| 90
|
"Never in a Million Tears"
| 63
| 94
|
"Memphis Women"
| 73
| —
|
2003
| "Middle Age Crazy"
| 58
| *
| The Next Right Thing
|
2006
| "The Present"
| —
| —
| The Present
|
Guest singles
Year
| Song
| Artist
| Chart Positions
| Album
|
US Country
| CAN Country
|
1990
| "Tomorrow's World"
| Various artists
| 74
| —
| Single only
|
"Don't Go Out"
| Tanya Tucker
| 6
| 11
| Tennessee Woman
|
2000
| "Now That's Awesome"
| Bill Engvall (w/ Neal McCoy and Tracy Byrd)
| 59
| —
| Now That's Awesome
|
References
- allmusic ((( T. Graham Brown > Biography )))
- Whitburn, Joel (1996). ''The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits'', p.473. ISBN 0-8230-7632-6.