Taking their name from the Nashville street
where they once rehearsed, Sawyer Brown made their national
TV debut on the show Star Search in 1984. After winning
$100,000, the band landed a record deal with Curb Records
and charted its first single, "Leona," the same
year. Following up with pulsating party songs "Step
That Step" and "Betty's Bein' Bad," Sawyer
Brown won the Country Music Association's Horizon Award
in 1985.
Although
the band continued to tour and churn out singles through
the late '80s, Sawyer Brown had only sporadic hits (1987's
"This Missin' You Heart of Mine" and 1989's "The
Race Is On") until "The Walk" in 1991. The
poignant song of a father-son relationship began a string
of Top 5 hits that continued until 1995. During that time,
the band's music changed somewhat, drifting from high-energy
fun tunes to more thought-provoking fare like "The
Dirt Road," "Café Down on the Corner"
and "All These Years." In 1997, Sawyer Brown were
named the Academy of Country Music's top vocal group for
the year 1996. The band also has taken home six consecutive
TNN/Music City News Awards top vocal band prizes.
Sawyer
Brown were one of the first country acts to use music videos
to full advantage. From the start, their videos were built
around concepts, rather than on straight performances. The
videos also involved famous guest stars, among them the
comedian Gallagher and wiseguy weatherman Willard Scott.
The videos showcased frontman Mark Miller's boundless stage
energy and demonstrated that the other members were having
great fun playing together. Some took on a serious tone.
"The Walk" chronicled the relentless march of
aging. "Cafe on the Corner" focused on the agony
of people dispossessed and out of work. "All These
Years" examined without sentimentality a marriage crumbling
into desperation and despair. With "The Other Side,"
the band used a Civil War scenario to illustrate that blood
is thicker than politics. Four of Sawyer Brown's videos
-- including the rollicking "Some Girls Do" and
"Six Days on the Road" -- have earned CMT video
of the year awards.
Remarkably
stable in a notoriously unstable business, the band has
lost and added only one member in its more than 17 years
of recording and touring. Original members include lead
vocalist Miller, keyboardist Gregg (Hobie) Hubbard, drummer
Joe Smyth and bassist Jim Scholten. Guitarist Bobby Randall
left the band in 1991 and was replaced by Duncan Cameron,
formerly of the Amazing Rhythm Aces.
Sawyer
Brown have released 17 albums, among them two studio greatest
hits packages and a Christmas album. A third best of collection,
The Hits Live, was released in 2000 and included a remake
of the 1980 Johnny Lee hit "Lookin' for Love."
The
band signed to Lyric Street Records in 2003, but did not
release an album on that label. However, Miller has found
success in the Christian market by producing an album from
the band Casting Crowns, released on Miller's label.