The Williams Brothers (Gospel group)
The Williams Brothers | |
---|---|
Also known as |
The Sensational Williams Brothers The Williams Brothers Gospel |
Origin | Jackson, Mississippi |
Genres | gospel, urban contemporary gospel, traditional black gospel, southern gospel |
Years active | 1960 | –present
Labels | Word, Nashboro, Savoy, CBS, New Birth, Malaco, A&M, Melendo, Blackberry, Compendia, Warner Bros., Myrrh, MCA |
Website |
facebook |
Members |
Doug Williams Melvin Williams Henry Green |
Past members |
Leon "Pop" Williams Leonard Williams Frank Douglas Maurice Surrell Derrick Horne Maulty "Tuff" Jewell IV Pharis "June Bug" Evans, Jr. Ralph Lofton Terrell Midge Gatlin |
The Williams Brothers is an American traditional black gospel music group from Jackson, Mississippi, they were formed in 1960 by Leon "Pop" Williams, who was the Williams' father, and early on the Williams' brother Frank Douglas was a member. At its inception, The group consisted of three brothers, Doug Williams, Leonard Williams, Melvin Williams, and their cousin, Henry Green and a non-family member Maurice Surrell. Later on the group would add Derrick Horne, Maulty "Tuff" Jewell IV, Pharis "June Bug" Evans, Jr., Ralph Lofton, Jr., and Terrell Midge Gatlin. They released 42 albums with various labels during their tenure, and 23 albums charted on the Billboard charts, mostly on the Gospel Albums chart. They have been nominated for the Grammy Award in the Best Traditional Gospel Album category at the 34th, 37th, 43rd, 47th, and the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards. In 1999, the group was inducted into the International Gospel Music Hall of Fame, which is in Detroit, Michigan.
Background
The Jackson, Mississippi-based traditional black gospel group, The Williams Brothers started in 1960 by Leon "Pop" Williams (November 24, 1908/1909 – September 6, 1989),[1][2] who was the father of the Williams Brothers and an early member of the group, which he died in a car accident,[1][2] Another early member of the group was Frank Douglas (born June 25, 1947).[1][3] At their origination, they were made up of three brothers, Doug Williams, Leonard Williams (born July 1, 1951),[1] Melvin Williams, and their cousin, Henry Green.[3] Over the years, the group added Derrick Horne, Maulty "Tuff" Jewell IV, Pharis "June Bug" Evans, Jr., Ralph Lofton, and Terrell Midge Gatlin to their rostrum.[3]
History
The group released 42 albums with a myriad of labels from 1960 until 2014, and those labels were the following: Word Records, Nashboro Records, Savoy Records, CBS Records International, New Birth Records, Malaco Records, A&M Records, Melendo Records, Blackberry Records, Compendia Records, Warner Bros. Records, Myrrh Records, and MCA Records.[4] They have had 23 albums chart on the Billboard magazine charts, mainly on the Gospel Albums chart, and those were the following: Feel the Spirit, Blessed, Hand in Hand, A New Beginning, Ain't Love Wonderful, The Is Your Night, The Williams Brothers Greatest Hits Volume 1, The Williams Brothers, The Best Of And More "Live", In This Place, Still Standing, The Concert, Still Here, SoulLink Live, Greatest Hits Plus, Soullink Live 3: Man in the Mirror, On Broken Pieces: A Hurricane Relief Effort, The Journey Continues, My Brother's Keeper, Celebrating 50 Years, Live At The Hard Rock: Part I, My Brother's Keeper II, and Songs Of Worship, Praise & Deliverance.[5] The group has received five Grammy Award nominations during their tenure in the Best Traditional Gospel Album category, at the 34th edition for the album This Is Your Night, at the 37th edition for In This Place, at the 43rd edition for The Concert, at the 47th edition for Still Here, and at the 52nd edition for The Journey Continues. In 1999, the group was inducted into the International Gospel Music Hall of Fame, which is located in Detroit, Michigan.[1]
Members
- Current
- Doug Williams
- Melvin Williams
- Henry Green (born March 23, 1943, Smithville, Mississippi)[6]
- Former
- Leon "Pop" Williams
- Leonard Williams
- Frank Douglas
- Maurice Surrell
- Derrick Horne
- Maulty "Tuff" Jewell IV
- Pharis "June Bug" Evans, Jr.
- Ralph Lofton
- Terrell Midge Gatlin
Discography
(*) – Denotes a Grammy Award nomination, for that particular album
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions[5] |
---|---|---|
US Gos | ||
Feel the Spirit |
|
3 |
Blessed |
|
1 |
Hand in Hand |
|
2 |
A New Beginning |
|
4 |
Ain't Love Wonderful |
|
6 |
This Is Your Night* |
|
4 |
The Williams Brothers Greatest Hits Volume 1 |
|
33 |
The Best Of And More "Live" |
|
16 |
In This Place* |
|
1 |
Still Standing |
|
15 |
The Concert* |
|
21 |
Still Here* |
|
15 |
SoulLink Live |
|
9 |
Greatest Hits Plus |
|
26 |
Soullink Live 3: Man In The Mirror |
|
36 |
On Broken Pieces: A Hurricane Relief Effort |
|
27 |
The Journey Continues* |
|
16 |
Celebrating 50 Years |
|
24 |
Live At The Hard Rock - Part I |
|
21 |
My Brother's Keeper II |
|
18 |
Songs of Worship, Praise & Deliverance |
|
16 |
Concept music videos
- I'm Just A Nobody
- Sweep Around
- I'm Too Close featuring Stevie Wonder
- Still Here
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 McNeil, W.K.; Sherrod DuPree, Sherry (2005). "Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music". p. 424. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- 1 2 Orlando Sentinel (September 8, 1989). "MCCOMB, Miss. - LEON 'POP' WILLIAMS, 79, a gospel music...". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- 1 2 3 Carpenter, Bil. "The Williams Brothers : Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- ↑ AllMusic. "The Williams Brothers : Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- 1 2 Billboard. "The Williams Brothers: Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- ↑ AllMusic. "Henry Green : Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved March 24, 2015.