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Will Downing

Since the early 1980s, Will Downing is among the steadiest and consistently productive artists in R&B. Not cut out to adopt commercial production trends, he has tended to stick resolutely to his own trademark meld of sophisticated modern soul and jazz. He mixes refined originals with spirited covers, and combines a deep, rich, upper baritone instrument with a silky, smooth delivery and a jazz singer's phrasing. After his self-titled debut appeared in 1988, 1993's Love's the Place to Be was the first to crack the Top 200. After Tonight (2007) and Classique (2009), landed well within the Top 40. 2010's Love, Lust, & Lies: An Audio Novel finished just outside it. While 2014's Euphoria and 2015's Chocolate Drops went Top 30 at R&B, 2016's Black Pearls and 2017's Soul Survivor climbed into the chart's Top Ten. 2023's Pieces featured the prolific R&B, jazz, and gospel singer Audrey Wheeler-Downing adding her voice to four of its seven tracks. Born in 1963 and raised in Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, Downing grew up in a working-class family with a father who was a skycap at a local airport and a mother who was a schoolteacher. By his teens, Downing was an avid singer and member of his school's choir. He enrolled at Brooklyn's Erasmus Hall High School, an institution known for its vibrant arts program, and noted alumni including Barbra Streisand, Stephanie Mills, and record exec Clive Davis. He then spent a year attending college at Virginia Union University in Richmond, Virginia, before returning to New York to pursue a music career. Initially, Downing began his recorded professional career as a background vocalist during sessions for several acts, including Jennifer Holliday, Nona Hendryx, and Rose Royce. After he was part of Arthur Baker's one-album group Wally Jump, Jr. & the Criminal Element, he signed a solo deal with Island and debuted with a cover of Deniece Williams' "Free" that peaked at number 48 R&B. Baker and Brian Jackson assisted in Downing's production of the self-titled parent album (1988), which had more in common with Loose Ends, Sade, and house stalwarts Blaze than with anything informed by Teddy Riley's new jack swing. Its most successful single, "Sending Out an S.O.S.," featured Audrey Wheeler, Downing's wife and frequent collaborator. The singer released two more albums for Island: Come Together as One (1989) and A Dream Fulfilled (1991). The latter, featuring "I Try" and a version of Paul Davis' "I Go Crazy," significantly increased his fan base of listeners who craved mature R&B and vocal jazz unaffected by hip-hop. Downing moved to Mercury, where he released another trio of albums and closed out the '90s with a Verve Forecast-issued collaboration with saxophonist Gerald Albright, Pleasures of the Night. An affiliation with Motown yielded only All the Man You Need, which was nominated for a Grammy in the category of Best Traditional R&B album. One deviation into twitchy, Timbaland-styled production excepted, it was the same old Downing through and through, highlighted by an update of Bill Withers' "Grandma's Hands" and an original, "Share My World," written with Stevie Wonder. As with all of Downing's releases, an impressive group of musicians brought it to life. Its sessions involved the likes of bassist Pino Palladino, drummer Ahmir Thompson, trumpeter Nicholas Payton, and, of course, Wheeler. Reflecting Downing's clout in the jazz market, he found a home at GRP and, from 2002 through 2005, issued an album each year. The singer closed out that stretch in strong form with Soul Symphony (2005) that peaked at number 85. He then moved to Concord subsidiary Peak. However, during this period he suffered from the debilitating muscle disease polymyositis, which rendered him immobile and put him in the hospital for over half-a-year; shortly after he recorded his final vocal for After Tonight (2007), he temporarily lost the ability to speak. The album was his most commercially successful, peaking inside the Top 40. That said, he topped it with 2009's Classique that went to 23 on the Top 200, and number three at R&B. Undeterred, he continued to deliver albums that resonated, delivering Lust, Love & Lies: An Audio Novel in 2010, after which he released a handful of albums on his Sophisticated Soul label including 2014's Euphoria and 2015's Chocolate Drops -- both reached number 22 on the R&B charts. He moved to Shanachie for Black Pearls (2016), on which he paid tribute to Phyllis Hyman, Jean Carn, and Randy Crawford, among other women who have inspired him. In 2017 he delivered the studio album Soul Survivor, featuring the single "Feeling the Love" with vocalist Avery Sunshine. The gospel-themed The Promise arrived the following year. Turning his attention to smaller releases, Downing offered up a pair of EPs in 2019's Romantique, Pt. 1 and 2020's Romantique, Pt. 2. He also recorded standalone singles like "Right Where You Are" and "So Many Good Die Young." In 2023, he continued the trend of shorter releases on Pieces, a seven-track set of sophisticated originals. First-call session vocalist and spouse Audrey Wheeler-Downing assisted with backing vocals on four tracks, including "Love On You" and its remix single.
© Andy Kellman /TiVo

Discography

54 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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