Artist's albums
Brown is Blue
1972 · album
Evening
1972 · album
She's Leavin'
1971 · album
Angel's Sunday
1971 · album
Greatest Hits
1982 · compilation
Morning
1971 · album
Uncloudy Day (God Bless America Again)
2022 · single
I Missed Me (Bill Anderson's 50th)
2022 · single
Life's Railway to Heaven (Old Time Gospel)
2021 · single
I Don't Want To Have To Marry You (Nashville Series)
2021 · single
The Old Lamplighter (Nashville Series)
2021 · single
Just For You
1970 · album
In Style Again
2015 · album
In Style Again
2013 · single
Pop a Top / You Can Have Her
2012 · single
The Best of Jim Ed Brown
1973 · compilation
The Best Of Jim Ed Brown
2007 · compilation
Bar-Rooms And Pop-A-Tops
1973 · album
Going Up the Country
1970 · album
Bottle, Bottle
1968 · album
Country's Best On Record
1968 · album
This Is My Beat
1968 · album
Remember Me
1969 · album
Jim Ed Sings the Browns
1969 · album
Alone with You
1966 · album
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Biography
Jim Ed Brown came to fame as a member of the '50s vocal group the Browns, where he was the band's lead male vocalist. In 1965, when the group was still together, he embarked on a solo career that would eventually eclipse the success of the Browns. Brown and his older sister, Maxine, began performing while he was still in high school. In 1954, the duo signed a contract with Fabor, releasing five singles on the label. Later that year, their sister Bonnie joined the duo and they became the Browns. From 1956 until 1967, the Browns were signed to RCA Records, where they had a number of moderately successful hit singles, highlighted by the 1959 number one "The Three Bells." Brown began his solo career in 1965, two years before the Browns disbanded. Initially, he didn't have much success and just scraped the bottom of the country Top 40. Once the Browns disbanded, Brown began to have more substantial hits, beginning with the number 18 single "You Can Have Her," which was a cover of the Roy Hamilton hit. That was followed by the beer-drinking anthem "Pop a Top," which climbed to number three. Although his next single, "Bottle, Bottle," reached number 13, Brown didn't have any major hits for the rest of the '60s. As his chart performance stagnated in 1968, he formed a backing group called the Gems and began a residency at the Sahara Tahoe's Juniper Lounge. In 1969, he hosted the syndicated television show The Country Place, which ran until 1970. As The Country Place was ending its run, Brown had his first major hit since "Pop a Top" with the number four single "Morning." Again, he wasn't able to immediately follow "Morning" with another Top Ten hit, but he began charting more frequently. In 1973, he had two Top Ten hits, "Southern Loving" and "Sometime Sunshine," which were followed by the Top Ten "It's That Time of Night" in early 1974. Jim Ed Brown had his greatest success in the late '70s, when he regularly performed duets with Helen Cornelius. They had six Top Ten hits between 1976 and 1980, including their debut single, "I Don't Want to Have to Marry You," which went to number one in 1976. During this time, he had some solo hits, but only two of them broke the Top 40. Brown and Cornelius ended their partnership in 1981, following the number 13 hit "Don't Bother to Knock." After the breakup of his duo with Helen Cornelius, Jim Ed Brown pretty much retired from recording. He made the occasional appearance on The Grand Ole Opry and he sometimes reunited with Cornelius. Brown also hosted TV game shows and talent contests throughout the '80s. Toward the end of the decade, he opened the Jim Ed Brown Theater near Opryland in Nashville, Tennessee, where he performed regularly for a number of years. He died of cancer on June 11, 2015 at the age of 81. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi