American musician (born 1962)
Jon Gibson
Also known as J.G., The White Stevie Wonder Born (1962-01-03 ) January 3, 1962 (age 62) San Francisco , California, U.S.Genres Occupations Instruments Vocals guitars drums keyboards percussion synthesizers congas[ 4] organ piano[ 5] bass[ 6] Years active 1982–present Labels Website jongibson .com
Musical artist
Jon Robert Gibson (born January 3, 1962)[ 12] is an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumental musician, and record producer . Originally a blue-eyed soul singer, he switched from secular music to contemporary Christian music in the late-1980s.[ 13]
Gibson scored a number of hit singles, including "Jesus Loves Ya" (which spent a then-record 11 weeks at No. 1 on the CCM charts in 1991),[ 14] "Love Come Down" (1990),[ 15] "Friend in You" (1988)[ 16] and "God Loves a Broken Heart" (1986).[ 17]
Gibson ranked No. 59 out of all Christian artists in the 1980s.[ 18] His album Jesus Loves Ya was ranked No. 90 on CCM Magazine ' s The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music ,[ 19] while the title track charted at No. 52 on the Top 100 Christian AC in 1991.[ 20] According to Frontline Records and Gibson's website,[ 21] he has at least 22 chart-topping CCM hits with 9 No. 1 songs.[ 22] [ 23] [ 24] [ 25]
Gibson has recorded with Bill Wolfer (the keyboardist for the Jacksons ), Michael Jackson , Stevie Wonder , MC Hammer , MC Peace , Crystal Lewis , Soup the Chemist , Avery Stafford , John P. Kee , Scott Blackwell and others. He has also performed with Carman and for Prince , collaborating with Justin Timberlake , Herbie Hancock , Maroon 5 and Matthew McConaughey .
^ "Jon Gibson records and CDs" . Musicstack .
^ Inc., Broadjam. "Jon Gibson AKA - The Story Teller Song: Love Come Down - ..." Broadjam . Retrieved March 1, 2018 .
^ "Jon Gibson - Soulful Hymns review" . Gospelflava .
^ "Avery and Jon: Jon Gibson guests on new Avery Stafford single" .
^ "Jon Gibson | Credits" . AllMusic .
^ "The Phantom Tollbooth - Gibson, Jon - the Storyteller" . Archived from the original on May 22, 2022. Retrieved May 5, 2022 .
^ "Jon Gibson Albums and Discography" . AllMusic .
^ "Jon Gibson - Artist Profile" . Broadjam .
^ "Jon Gibson Artist Profile - Biography And Discography - NewReleaseToday" . newreleasetoday.com . Retrieved March 1, 2018 .
^ "REWIND 43: Jon Gibson invites the Frontline crew into his home" . January 29, 2015.
^ Maultsby, Portia K.; Burnim, Mellonee V. (October 26, 2016). Issues in African American Music: Power, Gender, Race, Representation . Routledge. ISBN 9781315472072 .
^ "Jon Gibson - BIO" . jongibson.com . Retrieved July 3, 2022 .
^ Cite error: The named reference Bogdanov
was invoked but never defined (see the help page ).
^ Cite error: The named reference topchristianhits.org
was invoked but never defined (see the help page ).
^ Brothers, Jeffrey Lee (July 1, 2003). Hot Hits: Ac Charts 1978-2001 . AuthorHouse. ISBN 9781410732941 . Retrieved March 1, 2018 – via Google Books.
^ "Top 100 Christian Songs 1988" .
^ "Top 100 Christian Songs 1987" .
^ "Top Artists of the 1980's" .
^ Granger, Greg, ed. (January 15, 2001). CCM Presents: The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music . Eugene, Oregon: Harvest House. p. 226. ISBN 0736902813 .
^ "Top 50 Christian AC Songs 1991" . topchristianhits.org . Retrieved March 8, 2018 .
^ Inc., Darren Beckett -- Threemagination. "Jon Gibson - Frontline Records" . frontlinerecords.us . Retrieved March 1, 2018 .
^ "Jon Gibson - DISCOGRAPHY" .
^ "Top Christian Albums" . Billboard .
^ "Top Christian Albums" . Billboard .
^ "Top Christian Albums" . Billboard .