During the late '80s,
Al B. Sure! enjoyed a brief run as one of
new jack swing's most popular romantic singers. Born
Al Brown in Boston, he grew up in Mount Vernon, NY, listening to smooth crooners like
Marvin Gaye and
Johnny Mathis; he later became interested in
rap and added that skill to his vocal repertoire. At age ten, he and a friend performed on a song written by Ellie Greenwich for the
soundtrack of Sesame Street, and later he began writing songs with his cousin Kyle West.
While in high school (where he quarterbacked the football team), he became friends with Edward Ferrell, aka DJ Eddie F, who was working with rapper
Heavy D at the time. Eddie F introduced the still-teenaged
Al B. Sure! to
Heavy D's manager/Uptown label head Andre Harrell, who had him sing backing vocals on several
Heavy D tracks and helped him get a deal with Warner Brothers. Featuring production from DJ Eddie F and a number of co-writes with West,
Al B. Sure!'s debut album, In Effect Mode, was released in 1988 and became a platinum-selling sensation thanks to the single "Nite and Day," which reached the Top Ten on the pop charts and topped the
R&B charts for three weeks. The follow-up, "Off on Your Own (Girl)," was also a number one
R&B hit, and he became a bona fide star among
urban audiences, though he didn't remain a presence on the pop charts. His second album, Private Times...and the Whole 9, appeared in 1990 and produced another
R&B number one in "Misunderstanding," as well as a duet with
Diana Ross called "No Matter What." His third album, 1992's
Sexy Versus, wasn't as successful, and he took a hiatus from recording, eventually landing a vice president position at Motown. In 1996, he survived a potentially nasty car accident in New York, and in 2002, he began hosting a
quiet storm-style radio show in the San Francisco Bay Area, although rumors of a new album remained unsubstantiated. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide