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American singer-songwriter

Darius Rucker

Rucker at Yokota Air Base in Japan, May 2004

Rucker at Yokota Air Base in Nihon, May 2004

Background information
Nascency name Darius Carlos Rucker
Built-in (1966-05-13) May xiii, 1966 (age 55)
Charleston, South Carolina, U.Southward.
Genres
  • Rock
  • pop
  • land
  • R&B
  • blues[ane]
  • alternative stone[2]
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • songwriter
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Years active 1986–present
Labels
  • Atlantic
  • Hidden Beach
  • Capitol Nashville
Associated acts
  • Hootie & the Blowfish
  • Frank Rogers
  • Lionel Richie
  • Lady A
  • Adele
  • Edwin McCain
  • Jill Scott
  • Large Smo
  • Jason Aldean
  • Luke Bryan
  • Dopapod

Musical artist

Darius Carlos Rucker (born May 13, 1966) is an American singer and songwriter. He first gained fame equally the lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist of rock band Hootie & the Blowfish, which he founded in 1986 at the University of South Carolina along with Mark Bryan, Jim "Soni" Sonefeld, and Dean Felber. The band released 5 studio albums with Rucker as a member and charted vi top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. Rucker co-wrote most of the songs with the other members of the band.

He released a solo R&B album, Dorsum to So in 2002 on Hidden Beach Recordings but no singles from it charted. Six years afterward, Rucker signed to Capitol Nashville as a country music singer, releasing the anthology, Learn to Live that year. Its outset single, "Don't Retrieve I Don't Think About It", made him the first black artist to reach number one on the Hot Land Songs charts since Charley Pride in 1983. (Ray Charles hit number one in March 1985 in a duet with Willie Nelson with "Seven Spanish Angels".) It was followed by two more number ane singles, "It Won't Be Like This for Long" and "Alright" and the number three striking "History in the Making". In 2009, he became the start black American to win the New Artist Award from the Country Music Clan, and the second blackness person to win whatever award from the clan. A second album, Charleston, SC 1966, was released on October 12, 2010. The album includes the number one singles, "Come Back Vocal" and "This". His third country album True Believers (2013) reached No. 2 on the US Billboard 200 and No. ane on the US Top Country Albums Billboard nautical chart with singles "True Believers" (#24), "Wagon Wheel" (#one), and "Radio" (#14), all charting on the Billboard U.Due south. Country charts. His first country Christmas anthology, Abode for the Holidays (2014) reached No. 31 on the Usa Billboard 200 nautical chart and No. 7 on the Usa Land Nautical chart. His 4th land album, Southern Style (2014) reached No. 6 (US Billboard 200) and No. vii (Billboard Us Peak Country Albums), respectively with singles "Homegrown Honey" (#6) and "Southern Style" (#8) both charting on the U.South. Land charts in 2014 and 2015. His well-nigh recent state album When Was the Terminal Time (2017) charted #8 on the United states of america Billboard 200 and #2 on the The states Top Country Albums (Billboard).

Early life [edit]

Rucker was born and raised in Charleston, Southward Carolina.[iii] His unmarried female parent, Carolyn, a nurse at Medical Academy of South Carolina, raised him with his three sisters and two brothers.[4] According to Rucker, his father was never around, and Rucker saw him simply before church on Sundays.[5] His father was in a gospel ring called The Traveling Echoes.[half dozen] Rucker has said that he had a typical Southern African-American upbringing.[3] His family unit attended church every Sunday and was economically poor, and at one point, his mother, her two sisters, his grandmother and 14 children were all living in a three-sleeping accommodation house.[iii] But he says that he looks back on his babyhood with very fond memories.[3] His sister, L'Corine, recalled that singing was always his dream.[3]

Hootie & the Blowfish [edit]

Darius Rucker has been the lead vocalist of Hootie & the Blowfish since its formation in 1986. He met swain band members Mark Bryan, Jim "Soni" Sonefeld,[3] and Dean Felber while attending the University of South Carolina. Bryan beginning heard Rucker singing in the shower, and the two became a duo, playing R.E.1000. covers at a local venue.[7] They later recruited Felber and finally Sonefeld joined in 1989.[vii] Every bit a member of Hootie & the Blowfish, Rucker has recorded half-dozen studio albums: Cracked Rear View – 1994, Fairweather Johnson – 1996, Musical Chairs – 1998, Scattered, Smothered & Covered – 2000, Hootie & the Blowfish and Looking for Lucky – 2005, also charting within the pinnacle 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 six times.[8] All half dozen albums feature songs that Rucker, Bryan and Felber wrote. As the frontman, Rucker began to be chosen simply "Hootie" by fans,[9] though the band title combines the nicknames of his higher friends.[4] Before his rise to fame, he lived in the basement of the Sigma Phi Epsilon house at the University of South Carolina, attempting to launch his career through the college bar scene.

Rucker'south signature contribution to the band is his baritone voice, which Rolling Rock has chosen "ingratiating,"[10] Time has called "low, gruff, [and] charismatic,"[half dozen] and Amusement Weekly has characterized equally a "barrelhouse growl."[11] Rucker said they "flipped" the formula of the all black ring with a white frontman, similar Frank Sinatra performing with Count Basie.[9] Musically, he has sometimes been criticized or spoofed for not being "blackness plenty".[7] Saturday Dark Alive ran a sketch of Tim Meadows playing Rucker leading beer-drinking, white fraternity members in a counter-march to Louis Farrakhan's Million Human March.[6] [12] He also received expiry threats for singing the Hootie song "Drowning," a protest song confronting the flying of the Confederate flag above the Southward Carolina statehouse.[six]

Shortly later gaining a measure of fame, Felber and Rucker (who consider themselves all-time friends) moved into an apartment in Columbia, South Carolina.[seven] With Rucker's recognition as the frontman of a successful band came increased opportunities. In October 1995, he was asked to sing the national anthem at the Earth Serial.[12] Frank Sinatra invited him to sing at his 80th birthday party; he sang "The Lady Is a Tramp."[thirteen] That same week, he made a voice cameo in an episode of the sitcom Friends.[12] He as well joined Nanci Griffith on the song "Gulf Coast Highway" for her 1997 album Blueish Roses from the Moons,[xiv] and sang backing vocals on Radney Foster'southward 1999 album See What You Want to See.[15] He encouraged Atlantic Records to hold to a bargain with Edwin McCain and made a guest appearance on McCain's debut album, Honor Among Thieves.[16]

In regard to the time to come of Hootie & the Blowfish, Rucker was quoted by CBS news equally stating in late 2011, "I don't think we'll ever suspension up totally. We're Hootie & the Blowfish. ... Nosotros'll make another record and practise another bout someday. I don't know when, but information technology volition happen. There's i more than in u.s.."[17] After a ten-year hiatus, Rucker and the band announced that they would exist touring with Barenaked Ladies in 2019 while likewise releasing a new album that same year.[18]

Their sixth studio anthology Imperfect Circle was released on November 1, 2019.[nineteen]

Solo career [edit]

In 2001, he made his solo R&B debut album, The Return of Mongo Slade, for Atlantic Records. Because of contractual changes, information technology was never released by the label.[20] Subconscious Beach Recordings, an independent label, acquired the masters from Atlantic and released the album as Back to Then in July 2002.[20] The album included work from the product team of Jill Scott, and she made an appearance on the track "Hold On."[21] The unmarried "This Is My World" was featured in the 2001 comedy film Shallow Hal. In regards to the album, "That was just a minute in my life," he later told The Arizona Republic about the tape. "I was listening to a lot of Notorious B.I.K. and Lauryn Hill at that time, and I wanted to brand a neo soul record."[22] He besides said in the article that he doesn't anticipate recording an R&B-styled disc again. "State music is my solar day task now. I'll probably do this till it's all over, but that anthology was a lot of fun."[22]

Rucker appeared on a pop-star edition of the quiz testify Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? in July 2001.[23] He also portrayed a singing cowboy in a television commercial for the fast-food company Burger Male monarch, promoting its TenderCrisp Bacon Cheddar Ranch sandwich in 2005. In the commercial, he sang a jingle set to the tune of "Large Rock Candy Mountain."[24] In 2006 Rucker lent his voice to the rail "God's Reasons" written by Dean Dinning and Joel A. Miller for the film The However Life.

State music [edit]

2008–2009: Larn to Alive [edit]

In early 2008, Rucker signed to Capitol Records Nashville as the outset of a career in country music. His first solo single, "Don't Think I Don't Retrieve About It" (which he co-wrote with Clay Mills) debuted at No. 51 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts for the week of May 3, 2008. Information technology is the first single from his second album, Learn to Alive. For this anthology, Rucker worked with Frank Rogers, a record producer who has also produced for Brad Paisley and Trace Adkins.[25] Rucker also made his Yard Ole Opry debut in July 2008.[26] [27] The unmarried reached number one in September,[28] making Rucker the first solo, African-American artist to chart a number one country hitting since Charley Pride's "Night Games" in 1983.[29]

Rucker sings to a crowd during an Functioning Pacific Greetings tour concert.

Learn to Live was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on Feb 6, 2009, and received a platinum certification on August 7, 2009.[30] The album'southward 2d single, "It Won't Exist Like This for Long", spent three weeks at the top of the land chart in mid-2009. Its follow-upwards, "Alright", became Rucker's third directly No. ane hit, making him the first singer to have his offset three country singles attain No. 1 since Wynonna in 1992.[31] The album'south fourth single, "History in the Making" was released in September and peaked at No. 3.[32] The singles too crossed over to the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at 35, 36, 30 and 61.[33]

"You see a lot of people doing a ane-off, proverb, 'This is my country record.' But this is a career I'grand trying to build. The people that say that they don't get it, I'll permit the music speak for itself. I plan to exercise a lot of country records."[34]

—Rucker, Billboard, 2008

Billboard magazine said that "at that place's a sense of purpose that makes Rucker feel like a fellow member of the state family, rather than calculating interloper."[35] Rucker made visits to various country stations effectually the United states of america, explaining that he was aware that he was the "new child on the block."[36] Mike Culotta, the program director of Tampa, Florida, radio station WQYK-FM expected that Rucker would be "somebody who would have entitlement," only instead said that "Darius engaged everybody."[37] When Rucker found that "Don't Call up I Don't Call back Near It" went to number one, he cried.[38] On November 11, 2009, Rucker won the State Music Clan New Creative person of the Twelvemonth award (formerly known equally the Horizon Award), making him the first African American to practise then since the award was introduced in 1981.[39] Only 1 other African American has won at the CMAs: Charley Pride, who won entertainer of the twelvemonth in 1971 and male person vocalizer in 1971 and 1972.[40]

2010–2011: Charleston, SC 1966 [edit]

Rucker released his 2d country album, Charleston, SC 1966, on October 12, 2010. The title is inspired by Radney Foster'southward solo debut anthology, Del Rio, TX 1959. [41] Its starting time single was "Come Back Song,"[42] which Rucker wrote with Chris Stapleton and Casey Beathard.[43] It was his fourth country number one equally well equally a NO. 37 striking on the Hot 100.[32] [33] The album'due south second unmarried was "This", which was released to radio in November 2010 and also reached No. ane in the land chart.[44] Rucker wrote it with Rogers and Kara DioGuardi. "I Got Nothin'" was the album's third single, peaking at No. 18. Also included on the album is a duet with Brad Paisley titled "I Don't Care".[45] Charleston, SC 1966 received a gold certification.[46]

2012–2014: True Believers [edit]

On May 20, 2011, Rucker delivered the showtime address to the graduating class of the Medical Academy of Due south Carolina.[47]

On December 14, 2011, CBSnews.com reported that Rucker was working on a third land album with recording set up to brainstorm Jan 2012 followed by the release of the anthology early in the twelvemonth.[17] The anthology's lead-off single, "True Believers," made its chart debut in September. On October 12, 2012, Rucker told Broadway's Electrical Barnyard that his album would also exist titled True Believers.[48] "True Believers" peaked at No. xviii. Its second single is a cover of Bob Dylan and Ketch Secor's "Wagon Wheel" (previously fabricated famous past Former Crow Medicine Show), featuring bankroll vocals from Lady Antebellum. "Railroad vehicle Wheel" reached No. 1 on the Country Airplay chart in May 2013. True Believers was released on May 21, 2013. The album'southward 3rd single, "Radio", was released to country radio on July 22, 2013. The album'due south 4th single, "Miss Y'all", was released to state radio on February 3, 2014.

On October 2, 2012, Rucker was invited to join the Grand Ole Opry. Halfway through his set at the Opry that night he answered questions from the audience which included a question from Brad Paisley. Paisley said: "I have 2 questions. I, are yous still the worst poker player in the world? And two, would you like to go the newest fellow member of the Yard Ole Opry?" Rucker accustomed, and it became official on October 16.[49]

Rucker was a featured performer at the C2C: Country to State festival in London on March 17, 2013, which was headlined by Carrie Underwood.[fifty]

On News Year'southward Day 2013. he sang the national anthem at the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Florida.

On May 11, 2013, Rucker was the speaker at the commencement ceremony for the University of South Carolina in Columbia. Earlier his speech, he received an honorary doctorate of music.

Rucker besides sang the national anthem at the NBA finals on June 16, 2013.

On December 6, 2013, it was announced that Rucker'southward version of "Wagon Cycle" had earned him a nomination for Best State Solo Performance for the 56th Annual Grammy Awards. At the awards ceremony on January 26, 2014, Rucker won, becoming only the tertiary African American recording act (the first being Charley Pride, the second existence The Arrow Sisters) to win a song performance Grammy Honour in a country music category.

2014–2015: Southern Style and Home for the Holidays [edit]

On August 25, 2014, Rucker released a new single titled "Homegrown Honey" to country radio and to digital retailers. It served as the lead unmarried to his fourth country studio album, Southern Mode, released on March 31, 2015.[51] It reached No. 2 on the State Airplay nautical chart in Apr 2015. The album's 2nd unmarried, the championship track, released to country radio on May 4, 2015.

On September 15, 2014, it was appear that Rucker had completed his first Christmas anthology and that information technology would be released on October 27, 2014. Included is a collaboration with Sheryl Crow on "Babe, It's Common cold Exterior".[52] May 30, 2015 Rucker headlined Philadelphia'due south famous XTU 31st Anniversary Testify at the Susquehanna Bank Center. Christopher Bousquet named President of the Hootie fan club

Rucker makes an appearance on Sister Hazel's 2016 album, Lighter in the Dark.[53]

2016–nowadays: When Was the Last Time [edit]

On January six, 2016, Rucker announced that he was working on his fifth country anthology. The album'southward lead unmarried, "If I Told You" was released to country radio on July 5, 2016.[54] It reached number one in the Country Airplay chart nearly a year later, and peaked at number four on the Hot Country Nautical chart. Rucker besides returned to the C2C: Land to Country festival in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland in March 2017, where he was second on the bill to Reba McEntire.

On May 29, 2016, Rucker performed the national anthem prior to the 100th running of the Indianapolis 500.[55] Rucker too performed the national anthem for a game between the Buffalo Bills and the New York Jets on September 15. Rucker agreed to perform the song at the behest of personal friend and former Bills histrion Bruce Smith, whose jersey was being retired that night.[56] He sang the national canticle again ahead of the Saints-Dolphins game held at London's Wembley Stadium in October 2017, equally function of the NFL International Series.

Rucker was selected every bit i of thirty artists to perform on "Forever Country", a mash-upward track of "Have Me Home, Country Roads", "On the Route Again" and "I Volition Always Love You", which celebrates 50 years of the CMA Awards.[57] On July 24, 2017, Rucker released the second single from his upcoming album, titled "For the Outset Fourth dimension." On July 26, 2017, he shared details of his fifth country anthology, titled When Was the Terminal Time and it was released on October 20, 2017.

Rucker appeared as a mentor on seventeenth season of The Vox for Team Blake.[58] Rucker released Beers and Sunshine[59] in August 2020 under Capitol Records, and released a "summer mix" version of the song in 2021.[60] In 2021, Rucker contributed a comprehend of the Metallica song "Cipher Else Matters" to the clemency tribute anthology The Metallica Blacklist.[61]

Personal life [edit]

Rucker is an agog South Carolina Gamecocks fan besides as a Miami Dolphins and Cincinnati Reds fan.[62] He as well likes the film Stir Crazy, which he has seen more than 100 times.[63] To show his loyalty to his Academy, he gave a gratis concert which was held at the Colonial Life Arena afterwards the football squad was able to win 6 games following a pair of losing seasons subsequently joining the Southeastern Briefing.[7]

Rucker'southward female parent died in November 1992 of a heart attack.[4] [7] His grief inspired two Hootie & the Blowfish songs: "I'm Goin' Domicile" and "Non Even the Copse."[6] [vii] On April 21, 1995, his girlfriend (Elizabeth Ann Phillips) gave nativity to Rucker's showtime kid, Carolyn Pearl Phillips.[three] Rucker married Beth Leonard in 2000.[64] His 2d daughter, Daniella Rose, was born to his wife, Beth, on May 16, 2001.[65] They had a son, Jack, in 2005. The Hootie song "Where Were You" is nearly Rucker'south strained relationship with his father, and was released only in Europe, where Rucker thought that his father would be unlikely to hear information technology.[6] His country single "Alright" was inspired past his marriage.[66] Rucker and his wife announced their conscious uncoupling in 2020.[64]

Rucker is a friend of the golfer Tiger Woods, whom he met in a bar in 1993 when Woods was 18. Rucker sang at the golfer'southward wedding with Hootie & the Blowfish and at his father's funeral.[67] His interest in golf goes well beyond his relationship with Woods; he was a VIP guest of Squad USA at the 2016 Ryder Cup, and he attended Arnold Palmer's funeral soon before the Cup.[68] A women'southward college golf game tournament, the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate, is named for him.[69]

On Nov vii, 2016, Rucker told ESPN that he had become a partner in MGC Sports, a sports agency that currently represents golfers (amongst them Steve Stricker and Kenny Perry), football players, and coaches. He added that he was planning to reduce his performance commitments from 100 dates per yr to almost 30, and that he thought that his feel in the entertainment business organisation would be an asset to potential clients. Rucker will be able to piece of work without restrictions for golfers, just considering he is not registered with the NFL players' union, he initially volition simply exist able to run into with NFL players under very express circumstances.[68]

For the Hole-and-corner Boss series episode "Celebrity Undercover Boss: Darius Rucker" which premiered May 12, 2017, Rucker bearded himself as a 62-year-erstwhile music instructor, ran an open mic night and worked equally a roadie.[70]

Philanthropy and bear upon [edit]

Rucker has regularly worked with charities that support ill and underprivileged children, via benefit concerts, volunteering, the World Golf Foundation's The Offset Tee Program, and the Hootie & The Blowfish Foundation which has raised nearly $4.5 million to provide funding to public education systems throughout S Carolina.[71]

He serves as a board member of the MUSC Children's Hospital in Charleston, where his female parent worked for over thirty years from the time Rucker was a child, and has helped raise millions of dollars to assist build a new hospital.[72] [73]

He too fabricated a commitment to support St. Jude Children's Research Hospital after touring the facility in 2008. Since then, Rucker has spearheaded an annual issue resulting in over $ane.6 million raised for St. Jude'south to engagement.[74]

Tours [edit]

Headlining

  • Southern Style Tour (2015)
  • Practiced for a Good Fourth dimension (2016)

Co-headlining

  • Summer Plays on Tour (2018) with Lady Antebellum

Supporting

  • H2O Two: Wetter and Wilder Tour with Brad Paisley (2012)
  • Own the Night Tour with Lady Antebellum (2012)

Discography [edit]

Studio albums
  • Back to And then (2002)
  • Learn to Live (2008)
  • Charleston, SC 1966 (2010)
  • True Believers (2013)
  • Southern Mode (2015)
  • When Was the Terminal Time (2017)

Filmography [edit]

Twelvemonth Title Notes
2016 Live from Daryl'due south House with Daryl Hall in Charleston, SC
2017 CMT Crossroads Alongside with John Mellencamp in March
with Globe, Wind and Fire in June
2019 The Vox Season 17 for Team Blake
Brad Paisley Thinks He'south Special Brad Paisley alongside with Kelsea Ballerini, Jonas Brothers, Peyton Manning, Tim McGraw, Carrie Underwood, Kimberly Williams-Paisley
2020 Country Music Association Awards Alongside with Reba McEntire

Awards and nominations [edit]

Year Association Category Nominated work Result
1995 Grammy Awards All-time New Artist Hootie & The Blowfish Won
All-time Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal "Let Her Cry" Won
2009 Country Music Clan Awards New Creative person of the Twelvemonth Darius Rucker Won
Male person Vocaliser of the Yr Nominated
University of Country Music Awards Top Male person Vocalist Nominated
American Music Awards Favorite Country Male Artist Nominated
2011 CMT Music Awards CMT Functioning of the Year "Need You Now"
(with Adele)
Nominated
2012 State Music Association Awards Musical Effect of the Year "Stuck on Yous"
(with Lionel Richie)
Nominated
2013 Academy of Country Music Awards Single Record of the Year "Carriage Bike" Nominated
Song of the Year Nominated
Vocal Outcome of the Twelvemonth
(with Lady Antebellum)
Nominated
Country Music Association Awards Unmarried of the Year Nominated
Grammy Awards Best State Solo Operation Won
2014 Billboard Music Awards Top State Song Nominated
Top Country Artist Darius Rucker Nominated
2015 British Country Music Association Awards International Artist of the Year Darius Rucker Nominated
International Album of the Year Southern Way Won
International Song of the Year "Homegrown Beloved" Nominated
CMT Music Awards Video of the Year Nominated
2016 Performance of the Year "Alright" Nominated
2017 CMT Music Awards Performance of the Year "Pink Houses"
(with John Mellencamp)
Nominated
2018 University of Country Music Awards Gary Haber Lifting Lives Award Darius Rucker Won

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External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Darius Rucker at AllMusic
  • Darius Rucker talks about True Believers on Ben Sorensen's Existent Country

scottoltous.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darius_Rucker

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