Interested in hiring a famous band for your corporate event? Book Darius Rucker. In 1989, Darius joined Mark Bryan, Jim Sonefeld, and Dean Felber to create the rock band Hootie & the Blowfish. The band released their first album, the enormously popular Cracked Rear View, in 1994, which yielded the hits "Hold My Hand," "Let Her Cry" and "Only Wanna Be With You." Within a year of its release, the album had gone multi-platinum. By the time the group released their second album, Fairweather Johnson, their debut had sold 13 million copies in the U.S. alone.
At this time band leader and singer Darius Rucker is performing as Corporate Event Entertainment. though out the United States. For booking for your next Convention or Company Party, or to ask how much famous bands for corporate events cost, call Music Garden today at 800-689-BAND(2263) or email by clicking the more information tab on this page.
BIO
Darius Rucker is a singer/songwriter known as the frontman of the musical group Hootie & the Blowfish and as a solo country artist. In 1994, Darius Rucker’s band Hootie & The Blowfish broke into the mainstream with Cracked Rear View. The record skyrocketed to number one and featured smash hits such as, "Hold My Hand," "Time," "Let Her Cry," and "I Only Want to Be With You," sold more than 16 million units, and earned the group two Grammy awards. Rucker went on to a successful solo career as a country music artist.
Rucker was born on May 13, 1966, in Charleston, South Carolina. Rucker later described his childhood as a "typical Southern African-American upbringing," involving long hours at church on Sundays and enduring various financial struggles. At many points in his life, his mother, two aunts, maternal grandmother and 14 children lived together in a three-bedroom apartment. The Rucker family was very musical, and Darius frequently sang around the house to his mother's Al Green and Betty Wright albums. As Rucker grew older, he became more involved with his church and high school choirs. But it wasn't until he graduated from Middleton High School and entered the University of South Carolina that Rucker approached music with a career-driven eye.
In 1986, after meeting fellow musicians Mark Bryan, Jim Sonefeld and Dean Felber, Rucker began forming musical ambitions. He formed the musical duo Wolf Brothers with friend Brian, and eventually convinced Felber to also join them. In 1986, the trio founded the band Hootie & The Blowfish, named after two USC classmates — one had owl-like glasses, the other had a rotund face — with Rucker as the frontman. The group played the college circuit for several years before convincing friend and drummer Sonefeld to join the fold. His songwriting skills made a strong impact on the rest of the band members, who also began stepping up their songwriting attempts.
After college, the quartet embarked on a full-time touring schedule, often performing in exchange for free beer or very little money. In 1991, the group released their debut album, the self-financed Kootchypop, which they began selling on the road. The EP, only available at their shows, sold more than 50,000 copies — a big success for a self-promoted band. Their success gained the interest of an Atlantic Records talent scout, who signed the group.
In 1994, Hootie & The Blowfish broke into the mainstream on the Atlantic label with their album Cracked Rear View. The record skyrocketed to number one, and featured smash hits such as, "Hold My Hand," "Time," "Let Her Cry," and "I Only Want to Be With You." The group's bluesy harmonica solos — working in tandem with Rucker's deep, baritone voice—gave the band a unique sound that caught the attention of listeners. The album sold more than 16 million units. It also impressed musical critics, earning the group two Grammy awards.
In 1996, on the heels of their success from Cracked Rear View, Rucker and the group released their highly anticipated follow-up, Fairweather Johnson. The album didn't enjoy the same phenomenal sales as their debut, but it still performed well on the charts. In 1998, after the band released the album Musical Chairs, Rucker began focusing on a solo career. After a year-long delay on the album's release, due to contractual issues with Atlantic, Rucker released his mellow R&B record, Back to Then, on the Hidden Beach Recordings label in 2002.
Solo Success
Rucker continued to tour and perform with Hootie & The Blowfish while working on his sophomore solo effort, a country album called Learn to Live. The album's first single, "Don't Think I Don't Think About It" jumped to to Top 20 on the Billboard charts in July of 2008, making Rucker the first African-American singer to reach the top of the country charts since Charley Pride in 1988. Rucker's newfound fame in the country realm also earned him an invitation to the Grand Ole Opry later that year, and his performance earned a standing ovation.
Rucker's single eventually hit number one on the country charts, and the album received platinum status in 2009. The album's next two singles "It Won't Be Like This For Long" and "Alright" also hit the top of the charts, making Rucker the first country music singer to have his first three singles reach number one since Wynona Judd in 1992. Rucker's album also gained the attention of critics, and earned him two Country Music Association award nominations in 2009, including Male Vocalist of the Year.
Continuing to thrive as a country music artist, Rucker released Charleston, SC 1966 in 2010, which topped the country album chart and featured the hit "This." His next record, True Believers (2013), helped him add another Grammy to his collection. The song "Wagon Wheel" earned him a win in the best country solo performance category in 2013. His most recent effort, 2015's Southern Style, was another success, lifted up by such songs as the title track and "Homegrown Honey."'
His fifth album, When Was the Last Time, was released in October 2017.
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