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T. G. Sheppard

 
Artist: T.G. Sheppard
 
  • Born: July 20, 1944, Humboldt, TN
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of T.G. Sheppard," "Greatest Hits," "Super Hits"
  • Representative Songs: "Only One You," "I Loved 'Em Every One," "Do You Wanna Go to Heaven"

Biography

After working his way through the record industry, T.G. Sheppard emerged in the mid-'70s as one of the leading country-pop singers, bringing the music closer to the rock-influenced, cosmopolitain sounds of urban cowboy. A native of Humboldt, TN, Sheppard headed off to Memphis after high school, getting involved in the record business on several different levels. He tried recording as a pop artist and even signed with Atlantic Records under the name Brian Stacy, opening shows for the Beach Boys. A few years later, he took a job with a Memphis record distributor, then ended up in record promotion, where the job entailed calling radio stations and trying to persuade them to play his company's records. In that capacity for RCA, he helped break Elvis Presley's "Suspicious Minds," Perry Como's "It's Impossible," and John Denver's "Take Me Home Country Roads." After "going independent," he came across a demo tape of "Devil in the Bottle." He tried to talk a number of artists into doing the song, and when no one was interested, he decided to do it himself on Motown's fledgling country division, Melodyland Records. Primarily a recitation, "Devil in the Bottle" became a number one hit in 1975, but within three years, the company folded, and Sheppard's career was in limbo. Connecting with record producer Buddy Killen, he signed with Warner, and starting in 1979, the two churned out some of country's best-crafted singles over a four-year period. Sheppard gradually moved away from recitations and grew significantly as a vocalist, though the press often ignored his achievements. He changed producers several times in the mid-'80s and, after a divorce in 1987, took a couple of years off for personal reflection. When he returned, Sheppard found it difficult to regain his earlier momentum.

As the nephew of the Grand Ole Opry comedian Rod Brasfield, Sheppard (born William Neal Browder, July 20, 1942) was exposed to music at a young age, and throughout his childhood, his mother gave him piano lessons. At the age of 16 he ran away from his Humbold, TN, home, arriving in Memphis where he became a backup vocalist and guitarist in the Travis Wammack Band. During this time, he was billing himself as Brian Stacy, and that was the credit on his first singles for Sonic Records. The label dropped him after all of his records failed, and he moved to Atlantic's Atco divison, where he released the rock & roll single "High School Days" in 1966. Though it didn't break nationally, it was a hit in the South, and soon he was opening for the likes of the Beach Boys and the Animals, while befriending Elvis Presley.

Instead of leading him toward a performing career, the minor success of "High School Days" made Sheppard decide to work behind the scenes in the record industry, and later in 1966 he became a record promoter for Hot Line Distibutors. Initially, he worked for Stax, but he quickly became the Southern regional promoter for RCA, where he helped push records by his friend Presley, as well as John Denver. While he was working for RCA, he also founded his own production and promotion company, Umbrella Productions. While working at promotion for Umbrella in 1972, he discovered a song by Bobby David called "Devil in a Bottle." Every record company he directed it to over the next year and a half turned the song down, so he decided to record a version himself. Eventually, he convinced Motown's developing country subsidiary Melodyland to license the record. Deciding to use T.G. Sheppard as his performing name, the vocalist released the record in the fall of 1974. "Devil in the Bottle" unexpectedly climbed to number one early in 1975, followed shortly by another number one single, "Tryin' to Beat the Morning Home." Later in the year, "Another Woman" reached number 14 and "Motels and Memories" peaked at number seven, establishing Sheppard as a promising artist. Shortly after the release of "Motels and Memories," Motown was sued by a Los Angeles church over the right to use the name "Melodyland," and the label had to change its name to Hitsville. Sheppard had four other hit singles on Hitsville -- including a cover of Neil Diamond's "Solitary Man" and the number eight "Show Me a Man" (1976) -- before Motown finally decided to shut the label down.

By the time Hitsville collapsed, Sheppard was on his way to becoming a star -- Cash Box magazine named him Best New Male Artist of 1976 -- so he was immediately snapped up by Warner. Sheppard became a genuine country star at Warner, paritially because the label promoted him correctly and partially because his sound -- a smooth fusion of R&B rhythms, pop production, and country songwriting -- became the blueprint for the urban cowboy movement that became country's most popular genre of the late '70s. After having two number 13 singles ("Mister D.J.," 'Don't Every Say Good-Bye") early in 1978, Sheppard released "When Can We Do This Again" in the summer. The single started a streak of 15 straight Top Ten hits that ran for the next five years. During that time, he had no less than ten number one singles: "Last Cheater's Waltz" (1979), "I'll Be Coming Back for More" (1979), "Do You Wanna Go to Heaven" (1980), "I Feel Like Loving You Again" (1980), "I Loved 'Em Every One" (1981), "Party Time" (1981), "Only One You" (1981), "Finally" (1982), "War Is Hell (On the Homefront Too)" (1982), and the Karen Brooks duet "Faking Love" (1982). Over those five years, his style rarely changed -- every record was well-crafted, highly produced country-pop highlighted by Sheppard's smooth croon.

Sheppard continued to chart well throughout the latter half of the '80s, and between 1986 and 1987 he had a number one single and three number two records in a row ("Strong Heart," "Half Past Forever (Till I'm Blue in the Heart)," "You're My First Lady," "One for the Money") after he switched labels and signed to Columbia. However, his audience dipped dramatically in 1988, when his radio-ready sound became unsurped by a number of new traditionalist performers like Dwight Yoakam, Randy Travis, and George Strait. Between 1989 and 1990, he didn't record at all, and he was dropped by Columbia. In 1991, he returned to the charts with the Curb/Capitol single "Born in a High Wind," but he didn't remain with the label long. For the remainder of the '90s, he continued to tour and play concerts across a country, all the time lacking a new record contract. ~ Tom Roland, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: T. G. Sheppard
Top
T.G. Sheppard
Background information
Birth name Billy Neal Browder
Born July 20, 1942 (1942-07-20) (age 66)
Origin Humboldt, Tennessee,
United States
Genre(s) Country, Countrypolitan
Occupation(s) Singer, Songwriter
Years active 1975 – Present
Label(s) Warner Bros. Records
Curb Records
Columbia Records
Associated acts Mac Davis, Kenny Rogers, Larry Gatlin, Eddie Rabbitt
Website TG Sheppard Official Site

T. G. Sheppard (born Billy Neal Browder (after his father, Billy Browder), 20 July 1942, Humboldt, Tennessee) is an American country music singer. He never graduated from high school, but was one credit away from doing so. He ran away from his home at the age of 17 to become involved in the music industry in Memphis, Tennessee. Initially he worked in the record business and tried recording pop music under the name, Brian Stacy.

In 1974, Sheppard signed with Melodyland (later Hitsville) Records, which was a short-lived country label that was owned by Motown Records, and recorded the song "Devil in the Bottle," which became a No. 1 hit on Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart and also became a Top 60 Pop hit in 1975. The follow-up, "Tryin' to Beat the Morning Home," also went to No. 1 and cracked the Top 100 during the summer of 1975. Several subsequent releases during 1975-1977 also made the Top 10 like "Motels and Memories" and "Show Me A Man".

Early in his career, TG became close friends w/Elvis Presley. Elvis gave TG his first tour bus and TG even lived at Graceland for a while during their friendship. A relative of TG's at a performance of his in his hometown of Humboldt, TN gave a first-hand account of TG mentioning the recent passing of his friend, Elvis, beginning to honor him by singing one of Elvis' songs, & having to leave the stage to compose himself before returning to finish the song. TG & Elvis were very close.

In 1977, Sheppard signed with Warner Bros. Records, where he enjoyed his greatest success. Starting with that summer's "When Can We Do This Again," he had a series of fifteen consecutive Top 10 releases, including 10 No. 1 songs. The biggest included "Last Cheater's Waltz" (1979); "I'll Be Coming Back For More" and "Do You Want to Go to Heaven" (1980); "I Loved 'Em Everyone" and "Party Time" (1981); "Only One You," "Finally" and "War is Hell (On the Homefront Too)" (1982). Another major hit came in 1984: "Slow Burn." "I Loved 'Em, Everyone" also reached the top-forty on the U.S. pop singles charts.

In 1985, he moved from Warner Bros. to Columbia Records, where he continued to enjoy success. After just missing the top 20 with "Fooled Around and Fell in Love" (a remake of the Elvin Bishop hit), he returned to the top 10, with his biggest success during this time frame coming with 1986's "Strong Heart" (the last of his 14 No. 1 hits, as it turned out). Three more songs peaked at No. 2 in 1987: "Half Past Forever (Till I'm Blue in the Heart)," "You're My First Lady" and "One for the Money."

Sheppard's success continued until about 1988, when rootsy neo-traditionalist artists began to eclipse more polished pop-country artists like Sheppard on the country charts. He continued to tour and play throughout the 1990s, but did not sign a new record contract, and did not release any new material until his 2002 live release, T.G. Sheppard: Live at Billy Bob's, which found Sheppard performing his classic hits for an enthusiastic crowd at the famed honky tonk in Fort Worth, Texas.

He has a new CD out called "Timeless" which has him singing songs from the big band era. In the mid to late 1980's T.G. Sheppard was an associate sponsor on the #25 Folgers Chevrolet driven on the Nascar Winston Cup circuit by Tim Richmond and Ken Schrader. In 1990 the Folgers sponsorship moved to Roush racing and driver Mark Martin.

TG is married to a fellow song-writer / singer, Kelly Lang, and they currently reside in Hendersonville, TN.

Contents

Discography

Albums

Year Title Chart Positions Label
US Country US
1975 T.G. Sheppard 12 Melodyland
1976 Motels and Memories 28
Solitary Man 16 Hitsville
1978 T.G. 42 Warner/Curb
1979 Daylight
3/4 Lonely 4
1980 Smooth Sailin' 19
1981 I Love 'Em All 7 119
1982 Finally! 4 152
Perfect Stranger 25
1983 Greatest Hits 5 189
Slow Burn 17
1984 One Owner Heart 26
1985 Livin' on the Edge 26 Columbia
T.G. 54 Warner/Curb
Greatest Hits 2
1986 It Still Rains in Memphis 26 Columbia
1987 One for the Money 47
1988 Biggest Hits
Crossroads
1997 Nothin' on But the Radio Outwest
2002 Live at Billy Bob's Texas Smith Music

Singles

Year Title Chart Positions Album
US Country US US AC CAN Country
1975 "Devil in the Bottle" 1 54 1 T.G. Sheppard
"Tryin' to Beat the Morning Home" 1 95 2
"Another Woman" 14 17
1976 "Motels and Memories" 7 1 Motels and Memories
"Solitary Man" 14 100 11 Solitary Man
"Show Me a Man" 8 13
1977 "May I Spend Every New Years with You" 37 single only
"Lovin' on" 20 18 T.G.
"Mister D.J." 13 27
1978 "Don't Ever Say Goodbye" 13 18
"When Can We Do This Again" 5 29 Daylight
"Daylight" 7 9
"Happy Together" 8 6
1979 "You Feel Good All Over" 4 20 3/4 Lonely
"Last Cheater's Waltz" 1 7
"I'll Be Coming Back for More" 1 23
1980 "Smooth Sailin'" 6 7 Smooth Sailin'
"Do You Wanna Go to Heaven" 1 15
"I Feel Like Lovin' You Again" 1 3
1981 "I Loved 'Em Every One"A 1 37 3 3 I Love 'Em All
"Party Time" 1 2
"Only One You" 1 68 20 1 Finally!
1982 "Finally" 1 58 17 10
"War is Hell (On the Home Front Too)" 1 5 Perfect Stranger
"Faking Love" (w/ Karen Brooks) 1 1
1983 "Without You" 12 10 Greatest Hits
"Slow Burn" 1 1 Slow Burn
1984 "Make My Day" (w/ Clint Eastwood) 12 62 11
"Somewhere Down the Line" 3 5
"Home Again" (w/ Judy Collins) 57 42 One Owner Heart
"One Owner Heart" 4 3
1985 "You're Goin' Out of My Mind" 10 8
"Fooled Around and Fell in Love" 21 34 Livin' on the Edge
"Doncha" 8 5
"In Over My Heart" 9 28
1986 "Strong Heart" 1 1 It Still Rains in Memphis
"Half Past Forever (Till I'm Blue in the Heart)" 2 3
1987 "You're My First Lady" 2 5
"One for the Money" 2 2 One for the Money
1988 "Don't Say it with Diamonds" 48 * Crossroads
"You Still Do" 14 *
1991 "Born in a High Wind" 63 single only
  • A"I Loved 'Em Every One" also peaked at #8 on the RPM Adult Contemporary Tracks chart in Canada.

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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