Richard Smallwood
Richard Smallwood | |
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Background information | |
Born |
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. | November 30, 1948
Origin | Washington, D.C. |
Genres | Gospel music |
Occupation(s) | composer, music director, pianist, arranger |
Instruments | piano |
Years active | 1975-present |
Labels | Onyx/Muscle Shoals Sound, Sparrow, Word, Capitol, Jive, Verity |
Associated acts |
The Richard Smallwood Singers Vision |
Richard Smallwood (born November 30, 1948 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an American Gospel music artist who formed The Richard Smallwood Singers in 1977 in Washington, DC.
Biography
Richard graduated cum laude from Howard University with degrees in both vocal performance and piano, in addition to graduate work in the field of ethnomusicology. Smallwood was a member of The Celestials, the first gospel group on Howard University's campus. That group was the first gospel act to appear at Switzerland's Montreux Jazz Festival. Richard was also a founding member of Howard's first gospel choir.
Smallwood's recording career began in 1982 with the album The Richard Smallwood Singers. The album spent 87 weeks on Billboard's Gospel chart. Its followup, Psalms was nominated for a Grammy. Two years later the album Textures was also nominated. Textures spawned the now-classic "Center Of My Joy" written by Richard Smallwood along with Bill and Gloria Gaither. He won his first Grammy, along with a Dove Award for his production on the Quincy Jones' gospel project Handel's Messiah: A Soulful Celebration.
His music has been recorded by artists such as Destiny's Child, Yolanda Adams, Karen Clark-Sheard, and many more. He accompanied opera legend Leontyne Price at a White House Christmas celebration during the Reagan administration. Richard, with his current group Vision, has recorded several successful projects for Verity records. He finished his Masters degree in Divinity from Howard University in 2004 and was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2006.
Smallwood's next project was recorded live at the Hammerstein Ballroom at the Manhattan Center in New York. The concert features guests Kim Burrell on "Journey", Kelly Price on "Morning's Breaking," Chaka Khan on "Precious Is Your Name," as well as The Hawkins Family, Tramaine Hawkins, and the original roster of singers who comprised The Richard Smallwood Singers and Vision.[1]Aretha Franklin and The Clark Sisters will contribute to additional studio tracks to appear on the album.[2]
Discography
Albums
- with Union Temple Baptist Church Young Adult Choir
- Look Up And Live (1974)
- Give Us Peace (1976)
- with Richard Smallwood Singers
- Richard Smallwood Singers (Onyx/Benson Records, 1982)
- Psalms (Onyx/Benson Records, 1984)
- Textures (Word, 1987)
- Vision (Word, 1988)
- Portrait (Word, 1990)
- Testimony (Sparrow, 1992)
- Look up and live (Union Temple Young Adult Choir)
- Live at Howard University (Sparrow, 1993)
- with Vision
- Adoration: Live in Atlanta (Verity, 1996)
- Rejoice (Christmas Project) (Verity, 1997)
- Healing: Live in Detroit (Verity, 1999)
- Persuaded: Live in D.C. (Verity, 2001)
- Journey: Live in New York (Verity, 2006)
- Promises (Verity, 2011)
- Anthology Live (Verity,2015)
Compilations
- Gospel Greats (Benson, 1994)
- Memorable Moments (Sparrow, 1999)
- Praise & Worship Songs of Richard Smallwood With Vision (Verity, 2003)
- Quintessential Collection (EMI Gospel, 2007)
- "Center of My Joy" (Rhino/Shanachie, 2007)
Awards & recognitions
- Inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame on November 14, 2006 at the Richland Country Club in Nashville, TN.
- Received Howard University Distinguished Achievement Award.
Grammy, Stellar & NAACP Image Award Nominations
- 1984: Grammy Nomination, Best Soul Gospel Performance, Duo or Group - Richard Smallwood Singers: "Psalms"
- 1988: Grammy Nomination, Best Soul Gospel Performance, Male - Richard Smallwood: "You Did It All"
- 1990: Grammy Nomination, Best Soul Gospel Performance, Album-Richard Smallwood Singers: "Portrait'
- 1991: Grammy Nomination, Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Performance, Album-Richard Smallwood Singers: "Testimony"
- 1993: Grammy Nomination, Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Performance, Album-Richard Smallwood Singers: "Live"
- 2001: Grammy Nomination, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Performance, Album-Richard Smallwood with Vision: "Persuaded: Live in DC"
- 2001: NAACP Image Award Nomination for Best Gospel Artist, Traditional - Persuaded: Live in DC
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Artist Of The Year - Persuaded: Live in DC; Verity
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Song Of The Year - "My Everything (Praise Waiteth)"; Verity
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Choir Of The Year - Persuade: Live in DC
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Producer Of The Year - Persuaded: Live in DC
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Male Vocalist Of The Year - Persuaded: Live in DC
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for CD Of The Year - Persuaded: Live in DC
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Traditional Male Vocalist of the Year - Persuaded: Live in DC
- 2003: Stellar Award Nomination for Music Video of the Year - Persuaded: Live in DC
Stellar Award Wins
- 1992: Stellar Award for Best Group/Duo - Contemporary – Testimony
- 2000: Stellar Award for Choir of the Year - Healing – Live in Detroit [3]
- 2000: Stellar Award for Traditional Male Vocalist of the Year - Healing – Live in Detroit [3]
- 2000: Stellar Award for Traditional Choir of the Year - Healing – Live in Detroit [3]
- 2002: Stellar Award for Traditional CD of the Year - Persuaded – Live in DC
- 2002: Stellar Award for Traditional Choir of the Year - Persuaded – Live in DC
References
- ↑ "Ladywoo Ministry of Music". August 3, 2005.
- ↑ Murray, Jawn (August 30, 2005). "Jubilant Journey". AOL Black Voices.
- 1 2 3 "15th Annual Stellar Award Results". GospelFlava.com.
External links
- Richard Smallwood on Myspace - (Official Richard Smallwood Site)
- Richard Smallwood at AllMusic
- Richard Smallwood Awards
- Richard Smallwood Chart History on Billboard
- Photos of Smallwood's Journey Concert from Landru Design
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