Home | About Us | Contact | Shopping Cart | Checkout

Georgia Music Hall of Fame Music Store GEORGIA MUSIC STORE
 
rock jazz r&b rap country blues electronica classical more…
shop
partner retailers look for these logos to order georgia music from our partner retailers
look for these logos to order georgia music from our partner retailers

T. Graham Brown

 T. Graham Brown rose to country stardom through the uniquely Southern phenomenon of beach music, a party-ready mix of old-time rock & roll, R&B, country, and blues. Born in Arabi, GA (his real first name is Anthony), he got his start performing while attending the University of Georgia, as part of the beach-music duo Dirk & Tony. He then joined the outlaw country band Reo Diamond, and retooled his image as a hairy, tattooed wildman in a ten-gallon hat. Moving on in 1979, Brown formed his own R&B band, Rack of Spam, and officially settled on T. Graham Brown as his stage name. He moved to Nashville three years later, where with the help of Harlan Howard he found work singing demos and commercial jingles. In 1983, he signed with CBS as a staff songwriter, and went on to join the Tree International publishing firm in the same capacity. Meanwhile, he also landed a deal as a recording artist with Capitol, and released his debut album, I Tell It Like It Used to Be, in 1986. Partly recorded at Alabama's legendary Muscle Shoals studios, the record spawned a number one country single in "Hell or High Water," and both the title track and "I Wish That I Could Hurt That Way Again" went Top Ten. 1987's Brilliant Conversationalist gave Brown a second number one in "Don't Go to Strangers," and two more Top Tens with "She Couldn't Love Me Anymore" and the title cut. Meanwhile, he made appearances in the 1987 films Greased Lightning and Cursed, and the following year he and his backing group, the Hardtops, played Elvis' band in Heartbreak Hotel. 1988's Come as You Were continued Brown's success with the chart-topping "Darlene" and two further Top Tens in the title track and "The Last Resort." Unfortunately, Brown was also battling alcoholism, and his problems began to take their toll on his career. He managed one further Top Ten country hit in 1990's "If You Could Only See Me Now," and also dueted with Tanya Tucker on the hit "Don't Go Out" that year. But after his 1991 album, You Can't Take It With You, missed the charts, he found himself dropped by Capitol, and spent most of the '90s sorting himself out. He finally returned in 1998 with the acclaimed comeback effort Wine into Water, which reaffirmed his roots rock leanings and marked his most personal effort to date. The concert album T. Graham Brown Lives! appeared in 2001. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide


:: View more Georgia country artists.

 

Main Releases

The Present (2006)

Come as You Are (2006)

Live at Billy Bob's Texas (live) (2004)

The Next Right Thing (2003)

Lives (2001)

Wine into Water (1998)

Don't Go to Strangers (1996)

You Can't Take It with You (1991)

Bumper to Bumper (1990)

Come as You Were (1988)

Brilliant Conversationalist (1987)

I Tell It Like It Used to Be (1986)

Singles

If You Could Only (1990)

Compilations

Deja Vu All Over Again/The Best of T. Graham Brown (2007)

At His Best (2006)

I Tell It Like It Use to Be [RCR/Cbuj] (2005)

T. Graham Brown (2004)

Greatest Hits [Bonus DVD] (enhanced CD-ROM) (2004)

Best of T. Graham Brown [Readers Digest] (2004)

Original Artist Hit List (2003)

I Tell It Like It Used to Be [Green Line] (1996)

Super Hits (1995)

Greatest Hits [Cema] (1995)

All-Time Greatest Hits (1993)

The Best of T. Graham Brown [Liberty/Curb] (1992)

Greatest Hits [Capitol] (1990)

All Music Guide© 2006 All Music Guide, LLC
Content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC