Donald Lawrence

Donald Lawrence (born May 4, 1961, Gastonia, North Carolina) is an American gospel music songwriter, record producer and artist. He studied at Cincinnati Conservatory, where he earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in music. While in Cincinnati, he was also the Minister of Music at the Southern Baptist Church on Reading Road. The multiple Grammy and Stellar Award winner has collaborated with a diverse roster, as vocal coach to the R&B group En Vogue, musical director for Stephanie Mills, songwriter for The Clark Sisters, and collaborator with a host of artists including Peabo Bryson, Kirk Franklin, Karen Clark Sheard, Donnie McClurkin, and Mary J. Blige.

Donald Lawrence
Born (1961-05-04) May 4, 1961
GenresGospel music
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, record producer, choir director, record producer, actor
InstrumentsVocals
Years active1992–present
LabelsGospoCentric, Reprise, Crystal Rose, Star Song, Island, EMI Gospel, Quiet Water Entertainment, Verity
Associated actsThe Tri-City Singers, Dewayne Woods, The Murrills, The Clark Sisters, Kierra Sheard Hezekiah Walker, Sheri Jones-Moffett, Ricky Dillard, O'landa Draper, Natalie Grant, Paul S. Morton
Websitedonaldlawrence.com

Biography

Early musical career

Lawrence took on The Tri-City Singers after a friend vacated his position as musical director.[1] (NOTE: The three cities that The Tri-City Singers come from are Spartanburg, SC, Gastonia, NC, and Charlotte, NC.[2]) The group debuted in 1993 with A Songwriter's Point Of View on a then-brand-new independent record label called GospoCentric Records. The set debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Top Gospel Charts.[3] The group's follow-up release Bible Stories would top those same charts when it arrived in 1995.[4] It was the first to be billed as Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers and featured black church-ubiquitous hits such as "A Message For The Saints", "I Am God" and "Stranger". The album was released on Lawrence's newly minted label Crystal Rose Records which was distributed through Sparrow Records.

In 1997, Donald Lawrence produced the live portion of Karen Clark Sheard's Grammy-nominated Finally Karen debut. Lawrence & Tri-City also released the seasonal Hello Christmas the same year. Later, Lawrence signed a contract with the Island Records imprint Island Inspirational. Though a live recording did take place for release,[1] the album never materialized.

In 2000, Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers signed to EMI Gospel. To promote the new album, a maxi CD of the lead single "Testify" to the mainstream. House remixes by Junior Vasquez sent the song to No. 33 on Billboard's Mainstream Dance Charts.[5] When tri-city4.com was finally released in late summer 2000, the set peaked at #2 on Billboard's Top Gospel Charts and #13 on Billboard's Heatseekers Charts.[3] The album also got a profile boost from the all-star standout "God's Favor", featuring vocal turns from Karen Clark Sheard, Kim Burrell, and Kelly Price.

Lawrence waited almost two years before delivering the follow-up Go Get Your Life Back in early 2002. "The Best Is Yet to Come", a song sonically much in the vein of the previous smash "Testify," was chosen as the album's lead single. This release featured guest appearances from Ann Nesby (formerly of Sounds of Blackness) and gospel pioneer Bishop Walter Hawkins. The momentum continued with the 2003 release of Restoring The Years, a greatest hits album featuring two new songs.

The next album would mark a fresh start for Donald Lawrence. I Speak Life was his first solo album, the debut for his newly inked recording contract with Verity Records, and also the first release under his new sublabel Quiet Water Entertainment. Though the album was without The Tri-City Singers, guest appearances were plenteous. Donnie McClurkin, Hezekiah Walker, Faith Evans, Richard Smallwood, and Carl Thomas all contributed to the album. Even jazz notables Ramsey Lewis and Lalah Hathaway were on hand for a remake of the Bible Stories classic "Don't Forget To Remember". The effort earned Lawrence a total of 7 Stellar Award nominations, and 6 wins.[6]

In March 2006, The Tri-City Singers announced that they would retire, but not before one last live recording.[7] Finale: Act One and Finale: Act Two were released simultaneously on April 4, 2006. Each release was a CD/DVD set that chronicled the audio and video of one half of the concert, with packages that locked into one another respectively. A special edition of Finale was later released with both CDs and DVDs. The blowout concert included guest appearances from Bishop Walter Hawkins, Karen Clark Sheard, Vanessa Bell Armstrong, Daryl Coley, LaShun Pace, Darwin Hobbs, and many other gospel luminaries. The album's lead single "The Blessing Of Abraham" was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Gospel Performance in December 2006.[8] His sophomore solo album, The Law of Confession Part I was released in February 2009. Donald said in an interview that The Law of Confession, Part II will be released soon, but he's focusing on other projects.[9]

Donald Lawrence was featured on the title track "Released" by Bill Winston presents Living Word". He is also the host of Verizon's "How Sweet The Sound Choir Competition".

Discography

Albums[4]

  • 1993 A Songwriters Point Of View (The Tri-City Singers) (GospoCentric, 1993) (US Gospel #2)
  • 1995 Bible Stories (Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers) (Crystal Rose, 1995) (US Gospel No. 1, CCM #10)
  • 1997 Hello Christmas(Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers) (Star Song, 1997) (US Gospel #7)
  • 2000 tri-city4.com (The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2000) (US Gospel No. 2, Heatseekers #13)
  • 2002 Go Get Your Life Back (Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2002) (US Gospel #4)
  • 2003 The Best of Donald Lawrence & the Tri-City Singers: Restoring the Years (EMI Gospel, 2003) (US Gospel #21)
  • 2004 I Speak Life (Donald Lawrence & Co.) (QWE/Verity, 2004) (US Gospel #2)
  • 2006 Finale: Act One (Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2006) (US Gospel #4)
  • 2006 Finale: Act Two (Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2006) (US Gospel #5)
  • 2009 The Law of Confession, Part I(Donald Lawrence & Co.) (Zomba/Verity Records, 2009) (US #72, US Gospel #2)
  • 2011 YRM (Your Righteous Mind)(Donald Lawrence & Co.) (Zomba/Verity Records, 2011) (US #41, US Gospel #1)
  • 2013 20 Year Celebration, Vol. 1: Best for Last (Donald Lawrence & The Tri-City Singers) (eOne, 2013) (US Gospel #1)
  • 2018 Goshen- Donald Lawrence and The Tri-City Singers Reunion album

Singles [5]

  • "Don't Give Up" with Kirk Franklin, Hezekiah Walker, and Karen Clark Sheard (Island, 1996)
  • "Testify (Remixes)" (The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2001)
  • "Never Seen The Righteous" (The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2002)
  • "The Best Is Yet To Come" (The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2002)
  • "The Blessing Of Abraham" (The Tri-City Singers) (EMI Gospel, 2006) (Billboard No. 97 R&B)
  • "Back II Eden" (Donald Lawrence & Co.) (Zomba/Verity Records, 2009)
  • "YRM (Your Righteous Mind" (Donald Lawrence & Co.) (Zomba/Verity Records, 2010)
  • "Spiritual" (Donald Lawrence & Co.) (Zomba/Verity Records, 2011)
  • "The Gift" (Donald Lawrence & Co.) (eOne Music, 2013)

Awards

Stellar Awards 2006
  • Artist of the Year for I Speak Life
  • CD of the Year for I Speak Life
  • Producer of the Year for I Speak Life
  • Group/Duo of the Year for I Speak Life
  • Contemporary Group/Duo of the Year for I Speak Life
  • Contemporary CD of the Year for I Speak Life
Stellar Awards 2007
  • Artist of the Year for Finale: Act One
  • Choir of the Year for Finale: Act One
  • Producer of the Year for Finale: Act One
  • Contemporary CD of the Year for Finale: Act One
  • Contemporary Choir of the Year for Finale: Act One
  • Special Event CD of the Year for Finale: Act One
  • Music Video of the Year for Finale: Act One
Stellar Awards 2008
  • Producer of the Year for The Clark Sister – Live! One Last Time"22nd Annual Stellar Award Winners (2007)". GospelFlava.com. Retrieved January 14, 2007.
gollark: Is this a LIE, like your phases?
gollark: You said there was enough memory, though?
gollark: Can I store a LUT for all pairs of integers?
gollark: Great! I'll have to concatenate it into one file and stuff.
gollark: I already wrote it, even if some features don't actually work.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.