Mario Winans is an American R&B singer, songwriter, and music producer. Born Mario Brown, he is the son of gospel recording artist Vickie Winans (neé Bowman) and her first husband, Bishop Ronald Brown. He is also the stepson of his mother's second husband, gospel singer, Pastor Marvin Winans whom she married in 1978. Marvin and Vickie Winans had a son, Marvin Winans Jr. (Mario's half brother.) Vickie and Marvin Winans divorced in 1995 and she has since remarried.
Mario Winans began learning piano, keyboards, and drums while still in grade school in Detroit, Michigan and learned how to work in a recording studio at an early age. He began producing gospel music professionally after graduating high school, eventually working with gospel music artists Fred Hammond, The Clark Sisters and various members of the Winans gospel music family.
Musical career
Story Of My Heart: (1995–1997)
In the mid-1990s, while in Atlanta Georgia, Mario Winans was signed to a production deal with Dallas Austin's Rowdy Records. He lived with friends until his breakthrough came as a songwriter, musician and co-producer on R. Kelly's "I Can't Sleep Baby" and "You Remind Me Of Something" from the R. Kelly album in 1995. He also worked with Pebbles and 98 Degrees.
Winans eventually released his debut album Story of my Heart on Motown in 1997. While the song "Don't Know" reached the U.S. R&B top 50, the album failed to chart.
Soon after, Winans teamed up with P. Diddy and his Bad Boy roster, playing drums on "Come With Me" by Diddy and Jimmy Page, based on the classic Led Zeppelin song "Kashmir" from their 1975 album Physical Graffiti.
Over the next several years Winans amassed a sizeable list of production credits for Bad Boy artists including Diddy, The Notorious B.I.G., Lil' Kim, Faith Evans, Loon, Black Rob, and 112. He has also worked with notable artists outside Bad Boy including Destiny's Child, Mary J. Blige, Whitney Houston, Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube, Tamia, and Brian McKnight.
Winans co-wrote the 2-part song "I Need a Girl" with P. Diddy and appeared on the "Pt. 2" version with Loon, Ginuwine, and Diddy, which became a hit recording in 2002. He also produced the Bad Boy remix compilation We Invented The Remix in 2002.
Hurt No More: (2001–2005)
Winans recorded his second album Hurt No More in 2001, 2002, and 2003 in between his busy schedule working with other artists. The album is based on stories of love and betrayal.
The first single "I Don't Wanna Know" was based on a sample of the Fugees' 1996 hit single "Ready Or Not", which itself was based on a slowed-down sample of the instrumental track "Boadicea" by Enya from her 1987 self-titled album. Enya and her representatives became angry since Winans did not seek her approval for the sample, as he was unaware that the Fugees sample he had used had itself been a sample. So, a compromise was reached to credit the single as "Mario Winans featuring P. Diddy and Enya". [1]. The song features a rap by P. Diddy and radio programmers and club DJs started playing the track when it started appearing on mixtapes. The song was released as the single in early 2004 and became a worldwide hit going to #1 in Germany and on the rhythmic top 40 radio chart in the United States; to #2 on the Billboard Hot 100, on the U.S. R&B/Hip-Hop singles chart, and on the world internet download charts; and to #3 on a composite world R&B chart (based on the R&B charts in the U.S., UK, Germany, France, and Australia) and on both the Australian and Norwegian singles charts. It also reached the top ten on a composite European singles chart.
Hurt No More was released on April 20, 2004 in the U.S. and, by early June 2004, had reached #1 on the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, #2 on the Billboard 200, and #3 on the UK's album chart.
The album's second single, "Never Really Was", used a sample of the orchestrated beginning of Madonna's 1986 hit, "Papa Don't Preach", as its background music. However, the song failed to chart in America. A remix version was released as a single featuring rapper Lil Flip.
The song "This is the Thanks I Get" began to chart on billboard and was stated to be the album's third and final single but no official release was set. The song went on to peak on Billboards R&B Chart at #112.
Love's Highway: (2006–Present)
Recently Winans appeared on Diddy's new album, Press Play producing, writing and singing on "Through The Pain (She Told Me)" and the new single "Last Night" with Keyshia Cole. "Last Night" was originally intended for his own album, which he has apparently been recording for release in 2007. "Put Your Arms Around Me"*[2] is the only confirmed track, it is possibly the first single.
A few newly recorded tracks have leaked on the Internet that may be included on Mario Winans' 3rd studio album said to be titled "Love's Highway". The album, slated for an early 2010 release, will include featured guests The Game, Busta Rhymes and Diddy.
Discography
Albums
Singles
As Featured Performer
Non-singles
- "Put Ya Arm Around Me" (#16 US, #7 UK)
- "Thanks I Get"
- "Mr Cool" (Tamia ft. Mario Winans)
- "Get Away" (Rick Ross ft. Mario Winans)
- "Ridin" (Belly ft. Mario Winans)
- "Rock the Party" (Benzino ft. Mario Winans)
- "Save Your Love" (Mams Taylor ft. Mario Winans & Stephen Michael)
Videos
- "Don't Know"
- "Don't Know remix" (Featuring: Mase)
- "I Don't Wanna Know" (Featuring: P.Diddy)
- "Never Really Was" (Featuring: Lil' Flip)
- "I Need a Girl Pt.2" (Featuring: BoY George)
- "You're the One" (guest appearance)
- "Down 4 Me" (guest appearance)
- "Best Friend" (guest appearance)
- "Rock the Party" (guest appearance)
- "Through the Pain (She Told Me)" (guest appearance)
- "Tell Me" (guest appearance)
- "Ridin" (guest appearance)
- "Forever" (guest appearance ft. Timati)
- "Dream" (guest appearance ft. Massiv)
Awards and nominations
- Grammy Awards
- 2005, Best Contemporary R&B Album: Hurt No More (Nominated)
- Image Awards
- 2005, Outstanding New Artist: Hurt No More (Nominated)
- MOBO Awards
- 2004, Best Song: "I Don't Wanna Know" (Nominated)
- 2004, Best Ringtone: "I Don't Wanna Know" (Winner)
- Vibe Awards
- 2004, R&B Song of the Year: "I Don't Wanna Know" (Nominated)
References
((reflist))
External links
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