Singer/songwriter
David Ryan Harris has been challenging mainstream notions of black performers since fronting the Atlanta-based rock group
Follow for Now in the late '80s. Once tabbed as the next
Living Colour, the band actually drew from an even wider stylistic palette -- everything from
Stevie Wonder-style soul to
Bad Brains thrash to bluebeat bounce -- but didn't enjoy similar success and broke up after releasing one eponymous album on Chrysalis in 1991.
Harris then played a huge role in the success of another black artist bucking pigeonholes: ex-
Arrested Development vocalist
Dionne Farris, whose 1995 debut,
Wild Seed -- Wild Flower, featured
Harris' production and guitar work.
Harris also served as musical director of
Farris' live band before starting his own solo career in 1997, signing to producer
Brendan O'Brien's 57 imprint (
O'Brien was an old friend who'd produced some
Follow for Now demos in his pre-
Pearl Jam and
Rage Against the Machine days) at Columbia Records and releasing his first, self-titled solo outing. The album, which featured contributions from
O'Brien and
Harris on a variety of instruments, was as hard to classify as
Harris' previous work and proved as difficult a sell, despite much critical praise. But rather than make a solo follow-up,
Harris instead joined forces with former
Black Crowes bassist
Johnny Colt and drummer Kenny Cresswell to form the
Brand New Immortals, a power trio that generated substantial buzz with a six-song EP, once again produced by
O'Brien, before signing with Elektra. The group released its full-length debut,
Tragic Show, in 2001, but once again, commercial success proved elusive. The band believed Elektra hadn't properly promoted the album and in early 2002,
Harris announced
Brand New Immortals had broken up and that he was returning to solo work.
–
Dan LeRoy, Rovi