Damon Little – No Stressing Feat. Angie Stone

Damon Little - No Stressing feat. Annie Stone
Damon Little - No Stressing feat. Annie Stone
Damon Little || Ghpraise.com

Damon Little (DLittle) is back with another song titled, “No Stressing” feat. Angie Stone

 

DLittle is back after coming off a number one record and receiving the prestigious BMI award for the longest running song on the Billboard Gospel Chart. He has returned with a new look, new sound, and a new beginning which has the whole industry buzzing about the new song, “NO STRESSING”.

The song opens with the platinum selling queen of neo soul, Ms. Angie Stone.

DAMON LITTLE BIOGRAPHY

Grammy Award winning songwriter, inspirational independent recording artist, record executive, activist, and humanitarian Damon Little invites you to “STAND UP” with his recent Billboard chart-topping gospel radio hit – his first Gospel Airplay leader.

The emotionally charged song reached the Gospel Airplay list in its 44th week, completing the longest running top 30 gospel AirPlay single in 2021 and the fourth-longest trip to No. 1 since the chart launched in March 2005. On Billboard’s Year-End 2021 Gospel AirPlay chart “Stand Up” landed at No. 8 and Little ranked No. 10 on the Year-End 2021 Gospel AirPlay Artists chart.

Released on February 5, 2021, via his independent record label Little World Music in association with Partners Music Company, the Baltimore native wrote “Stand Up” solo and co-produced it along with Bubby Fann.

Landing four prior top 10s on Billboard’s Gospel AirPlay and Hot Gospel Songs charts, “Stand Up” is the follow-up to “Be Alright,” which reached No.18 on Hot Gospel Songs in 2019, followed by “I Won’t Be Defeated,” (No. 2, February 2017), “Because of You” (No. 9, January 2015); and his debut entry, “Do Right” (No. 7, April 2005). His other notable songs include “You Can’t Straddle The Fence,” and “Make A Way.”

On October 19, 2021, Little premiered the concept music video for “Stand Up” in an attempt to bring a visual presence to the song in hopes that is exudes the message of spreading unconditional love, harmony, peace, and to unite all to take a stand no matter how challenging the circumstance with racial unity, hatred and racially motivated violence.

In the the seven-and-a-half-minute-long music video Damon Little took his audience straight to one of the most famous sites in Civil Rights history: the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, where, in March 1965, peaceful protesters were attacked by police engaged in the enforcement of segregation. Half a century later, Little takes to the Bridge with a group of marchers and throws a celebration of his own and reminds us all of how far we still have to go.

He’s also provided us with plenty of footage. of Selma, including night-time shots of the disused Washington Street Supermarket, the imposing Dallas County Courthouse, and the moving plaques in the Civil Rights Memorial Park. When Little stands up before a judge and defends a client beaten by the cops, his call for justice echoes across the entire storied city..

Little began his singing ministry at the age of five, when he and his brothers and cousins formed a family group.

His first studio recording was with his uncle, who just happened to be the great Clarence Fountain of the Five Blind Boys of Alabama.

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Little spent a portion of his childhood years in Pensacola, Florida, where he developed a resonant singing style reminiscent at times of Al Green or Philippe Wynne, former lead singer of the Spinners.

In 2000, and began producing a string of gospel chart hits with a strong urban R&B feel, including the title track of his debut album, “You Can’t Straddle the Fence” (the album appeared in 2002 from Worldwide), “Long as I Got Shoes,” and “Do Right (How You Gonna Do Right with a Do Wrong Mind),” the title tune of his second album, Do Right, which Worldwide released in 2004.

Listen and download 

 

 

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