In 1986, Grayson Hugh was commuting from Hartford, CT. to suburban New Jersey to co-write with songwriter Sandy Linzer. One day while searching through his old tapes, Linzer played Grayson a song that Smokey Robinson had rejected called "Talk It Over". Grayson heard a classic soul hit in that song and asked Linzer if he could arrange it. Hugh took the song home , with Sandy Linzer"s permission, slowed it way down, added a couple chords and recorded a demo of it. RCA records heard it in 1987, along with other songs written by Grayson, and signed him in that year as … read more
In 1986, Grayson Hugh was commuting from Hartford, CT. to suburban New Jersey to co-write with songwriter Sandy Linzer. One day while searching thro… read more
In 1986, Grayson Hugh was commuting from Hartford, CT. to suburban New Jersey to co-write with songwriter Sandy Linzer. One day while searching through his old tapes, Linzer played Gray… read more
In May of 2010, after a silence of fifteen years, Grayson Hugh released "An American Record". This long-awaited recording heralds the return of this internationally acclaimed singer/ songwriter and masterful pianist. In the words of one music journalist: "Grayson Hugh has been there and back again. His story - our story - has to be heard". This Connecticut-born artist released his 1988 RCA Debut “Blind To Reason”, that spawned several radio hits in the States, U.K. and in Europe. The record went gold in the United States and Australia, and his music videos were i… read more
In May of 2010, after a silence of fifteen years, Grayson Hugh released "An American Record". This long-awaited recording heralds the return of this internationally acclaimed sing… read more
In May of 2010, after a silence of fifteen years, Grayson Hugh released "An American Record". This long-awaited recording heralds the return of this internationally acclaimed singer/ songwriter and masterful pianist. In the w… read more