BRIAN COURTNEY WILSON
For Brian Courtney Wilson, the adage rings true: he who has been forgiven much loves much. JUST LOVE, his national debut on Mathew Knowles’ Spirit Rising/Music World Entertainment, is a fitting end-cap to a journey where love has reigned supreme—a natural response to the untold amounts of grace the singer has been bestowed over the years.
For an artist who is driven by faith, Wilson is a rarity among his peers. Stylistically, he falls into the urban inspirational side of the R&B and Gospel spectrums, but one listen to his remarkable debut album, JUST LOVE, reveals he’s not concerned with merely wielding his convictions in the face of those with ears to hear. Produced by Stan “STANtastic” Jones (Yolanda Adams, The Williams Brothers), JUST LOVE reveals Wilson is a man who wants to let his own life’s walk do the talking.
Raised in the Chicagoland area, Wilson got an early taste of love’s inner workings at Rock of Ages Baptist Church, where he sang in the adult male chorus as a young kid. Incidentally, it wasn’t the music that drew him to lend his voice to the group. “It was cool for me because they put a lot of emphasis on the fellowship aspect of doing music,” Wilson says. “The most important thing wasn’t to get the part right. The most important thing was talking through the issues—carrying each other’s burdens.”
That sense of community gave a new dimension to Wilson’s then-young musical mind. Driven by a passion for camaraderie, he went on to join the black chorus at the University of Illinois, where he obtained a degree in liberal arts and sciences with an emphasis on economics.
With a college diploma on his wall, Wilson took a job in sales, a gig that would land him opportunities in both the computer and pharmaceutical industries. “I never thought of doing music as a profession,” Wilson says.
Comfortable in his own skin and his 9-to-5, Wilson let music take a backseat. Singing still played a role in his life, but it was only an aspiration—an afterthought that never really took off because his heart wasn’t entirely in it. “I was kind of chasing the R&B, 106 & Park dream,” Wilson says. “I was dreaming about it, but I wasn’t pursuing it. It was a dream that I had no clue about.”
All along, the faith of the R&B hopeful was suffering. For someone who did most of his formative singing in church, Wilson says he reached a point where he wasn’t looking to be fed spiritually. Instead he was led to feast on things that ran counter God’s vision for his life, eventually falling into a downward spiral of spiritual detachment, ill-advised decisions, and moral recklessness.
“My life was nothing to brag about,” Wilson confesses. “I was a lost soul. I did a lot of things where I missed the mark. God had a plan for my life, but I got off track because I didn’t know that plan.”
Providentially, it wasn’t until Wilson took the fateful step of moving to Houston that he began to comprehend God’s eternal blueprint. Still involved in sales, Wilson set up shop in Space City to work for Johnson & Johnson, but God had a bigger job for him: to visit Windsor Village United Methodist Church.
“I wasn’t even saved when I went,” says Wilson of his first few visits. “I was going because a friend of mine told me it was cool church to be at.”
In time, the curiosity paid off. For the first time ever, Wilson made a decision to believe in Christ for himself. “I felt His presence in my life for real,” he says, “as opposed to just believing what my parents told me.”
As an infant in the faith, he was nourished and taken care of by his Windsor Village family, but did not quite yet know the ropes of mature, Spirit-led living; he took his share of falls. “Even after I accepted Christ and tried to live the right life, I made mistakes,” Wilson says. “Choices I had made in the past created habits that I hadn’t broken. It made me want to run and hide.”