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Braille (rapper)

Bryan Winchester (born September 27, 1981), better known by his stage name Braille, is an American rapper.

Career

The concept behind the name Braille relates to "Helping People Understand the things they can't see."[1] He has worked with a host of premier hip hop recording acts including his group Lightheaded, with rapper-producer Ohmega Watts and rapper Othello. Braille was also a part of a group called Acts 29 consisting of himself, Ohmega Watts, and Soul Plasma. Acts 29 has only released one album and is not planning on releasing any more material.[2] Braille was signed to Syntax Records in 1999 and continues to record for the label.[3] The majority of his recordings are credited to his own label imprint "Hip-hop Is Music."[4] Influenced by the positive vibe of the group A Tribe Called Quest,[5] Braille started recording Christian hip hop music. His first album called Lifefirst: Half the Battle was released when he was 17 years old.[6]

Beautiful Eulogy

His fourth album The IV Edition released in 2008, and was a collaboration with Speech from Arrested Development. The song is included on the video game NBA Live 09.[7] Braille toured internationally including in Europe and Japan. His most recent projects include Cloud Nineteen,[8] an album release and interactive DVD. He is also planning a special concert tour and youth presentation aimed at students of the arts, emphasizing the importance of education to all children.

In 2012, Braille collaborated with Odd Thomas and Courtland Urbano to form the group Beautiful Eulogy. David Kincannon of Rapzilla stated, "This musical triumvirate is responsible for some of the most creative hip hop of the last few years, and Satellite Kite does nothing but add to that resume. From the concepts to the beats to the lyrics to the delivery, everything about this album is on point. There is a working relationship between these three men that is obvious by listening to this album. There is also a shared creative spirit that is obvious, and it's that creativity that makes Satellite Kite great."[9]

Honors

In 2004, Braille collaborated with his group Lightheaded (consisting of himself, Ohmega Watts, and Othello), Manchild of Mars Ill, Sharlock Poems of LA Symphony, Tony Stone, Celph Titled, Kno of Cunninlynguists, the Masterminds, 9th Wonder and Rob Swift to produce the album and accompanying video for "Shades of Grey".[10] That year the national publication URB Magazine recognized him as an up-and-coming "Artist to Watch". He was also named "Lyricist of the Year" with Shades of Grey and awarded "Album of the Year" honors by Sphereofhiphop. The following year Braille was selected to open for the Godfather of Soul James Brown's World Tour in 2005 -2006.[11]

The publication R&B Showcase Magazine recognized Braille as "Hip-Hop's New Force" and honored him with a feature and cover story in the fall of 2006. He joined hip hop group De La Soul touring throughout the summer of 2007. The same year Braille added speaking engagements to his tour dates and spoke at a South Jersey benefit for Hold on to Education Foundation Inc. A youth motivational speaker, Braille was chosen by the organization as an honorary board member.

The spiritual collection called Box of Rhymes was Braille's third full-length album, released exclusively in Japan on the Universal/Handcuts record label.[12]

Discography

Studio albums

Other releases

[13]

With Lightheaded

[14]

With Acts 29

With Beautiful Eulogy

References

  1. ^ Name Reference at Jedidiah Community Project Archived August 21, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Acts 29 at HHHDB". HHHDB (the Holy Hip Hop DataBASE).
  3. ^ Braille and Syntax Records Join Forces – CCM Magazine Article Archived May 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Rap Review Interview with Braille by Adam Bernard (April 8, 2008)". Rapreviews.com. April 8, 2008. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
  5. ^ Interview 4 (May 26, 2008). "UGS Magazine Interview with Braille by Jon B (2008)". Ugsmag.com. Retrieved November 18, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ "Christian Music Reference at The Source Weekly Page". Tsweekly.com. Archived from the original on May 12, 2009. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
  7. ^ "Braille interview at "The Very Good Agency" Australia & New Zealand". Verygood.com.au. October 2, 2008. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
  8. ^ Braille's Cloud Nineteen Project at Ropzilla Archived May 11, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ David Kincannon. "Review – Beautiful Eulogy 'Satellite Kite'". Rapzilla. Retrieved May 2, 2016.
  10. ^ Reference to first album from Rahul Reddy KUCI FM Archived May 19, 2009, at archive.today
  11. ^ "Braille named Urb Magazine's "Next 100 Artist to Watch" and James Brown tour noted at Christian Music Today.com". Christianitytoday.com. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
  12. ^ "Box of Rhymes" in Japan reference at Sphere of Hip hop
  13. ^ "Braille at HHHDB". HHHDB (the Holy Hip Hop DataBASE).
  14. ^ "Lightheaded at HHHDB". HHHDB (the Holy Hip Hop DataBASE).

External links