Best remembered for his crossover hit "Sunshine,"
country and
folk singer/songwriter
Jonathan Edwards was born July 28, 1946, in Aitkin, MN, and grew up in Virginia. While attending military school, he began playing guitar and composing his own songs. After moving to Ohio to study art, he became a fixture on local club stages, playing with a variety of
rock,
folk, and
blues outfits, often in tandem with fellow students Malcolm McKinney and Joe Dolce.
In 1967,
Edwards and his bandmates relocated to Boston, where they permanently changed their name to Sugar Creek and became a full-time
blues act, issuing the 1969 LP Please Tell a Friend. Wanting to return to acoustic performing, he left the group to record a solo album.
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Best remembered for his crossover hit "Sunshine,"
country and
folk singer/songwriter
Jonathan Edwards was born July 28, 1946, in Aitkin, MN, and grew up in Virginia. While attending military school, he began playing guitar and composing his own songs. After moving to Ohio to study art, he became a fixture on local club stages, playing with a variety of
rock,
folk, and
blues outfits, often in tandem with fellow students Malcolm McKinney and Joe Dolce.
In 1967,
Edwards and his bandmates relocated to Boston, where they permanently changed their name to Sugar Creek and became a full-time
blues act, issuing the 1969 LP Please Tell a Friend.
Wanting to return to acoustic performing, he left the group to record a solo album. Near the end of the 1970 sessions, one of the finished tracks, "Please Find Me," was accidentally erased, forcing
Edwards to instead record a brand new composition. The song was "Sunshine," and when it was released as a single the following year, it quickly became a Top Five pop hit.
With the release of 1972's
Honky-Tonk Stardust Cowboy,
Edwards' music began gravitating toward straight-ahead
country; his label was at a loss as to how to market the record, however, and over the course of two more albums, 1973's Have a Good Time for Me and the following year's live Lucky Day, his sales sharply declined. Soon,
Edwards dropped out of music, buying a farm in Nova Scotia.
In 1976,
Edwards' friend
Emmylou Harris enlisted him to sing backup on her sophomore record,
Elite Hotel; the cameo resulted in a new record deal and the LP Rockin' Chair, recorded with
Harris' Hot Band. Sail Boat, cut with most of the same personnel, appeared a year later. Another layoff followed, however, and when
Edwards resurfaced -- with an eponymous 1982 live record -- it was on his own label, Chronic.
After touring the nation with a production of the musical Pumping Boys and Dinettes,
Edwards joined the
bluegrass group
the Seldom Scene, issuing the 1983 LP Blue Ridge. After a 1987 solo
children's record, Little Hands,
Edwards moved to Nashville; his 1989 album
The Natural Thing generated his biggest
country hit, "We Need to Be Locked Away." A follow-up, One Day Closer, appeared in 1994. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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