Jully Black
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jully Black | |
|---|---|
Black at The Heart Truth celebrity fashion show in February 2012 | |
| Background information | |
| Born | Jullyann Inderia Gordon November 8, 1977 |
| Genres | R&B |
| Occupations |
|
| Years active | 1995–present |
| Labels |
|
| Website | jullyblack |
Jullyann Inderia Gordon Black (born November 8, 1977) is a Canadian singer, songwriter, actress and wellness leader. She has released four studio albums, two mixtapes, two remix EPs and several singles and has collaborated with and written for artists including Nas, Saukrates, Choclair, Kardinal Offishall, Destiny's Child, and Sean Paul.
Black was chosen by CBC Music as one of "The 25 Greatest Canadian Singers Ever"[1] and has been dubbed the "Canada's Queen of R&B" by fans and industry peers.[2][3][4]
Jullyann Inderia Gordon Black was born to Jamaican immigrants. She is the youngest of nine children and grew up in the North York district in the neighbourhood of Jane and Finch in Toronto, Ontario.[5] After her parents divorced, she was raised in a strict Pentecostal household by her single mother.[citation needed]
Musical career

At age 19, Black was discovered by Warner/Chappell Music who signed her. Shortly after, she was courted by Universal Music Canada where she was offered a deal. Black received her first Juno Award nomination in 1997 and was nominated almost every year thereafter as well as having opportunities to collaborate with and/or write for Nas, Destiny's Child, Sean Paul and Kardinal Offishall.[6]
Black had a Top 40 hit on the Canadian charts with 1998's "Rally'n".[citation needed] Subsequent singles "You Changed" and "Between Me and U" also charted.[citation needed] In the same year, she was invited to contribute to Rascalz' hip hop single, "Northern Touch", but was unable to participate due to other commitments.[7] In 1999, she appeared on 2Rude's single "Dissin Us", which won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best R&B/Soul Video in 2000.[8]
Black's debut album was originally scheduled for release in 2003 on MCA Records, under the title I Traveled,[9] but was shelved after MCA folded that same year.
In summer 2005, a newly recorded album, This Is Me, was released by Universal Music Canada. The album included singles "Sweat of Your Brow" and "5x Love".[citation needed] Also in the same year, Black played the Preacher in the theatre production of "Da Kink in My Hair" at the Princess of Wales Theatre in Downtown Toronto. This led to the weekly TV series on the Global Television Network, with Black singing the opening theme and being featured in two episodes.[citation needed]
In summer 2007, her single, "Seven Day Fool", was released, becoming Black's first Top 10 hit in Canada.[citation needed] Her second album, Revival, was released on October 16, 2007, and was awarded the Juno for R&B/Soul Recording of the Year.[citation needed]
Black was a correspondent on the sixth season of the CTV reality competition show Canadian Idol and hosted the 2008 Canadian Radio Music Awards. She has also been a celebrity reporter for the CTV daily entertainment news magazine program, etalk.[10]
In 2008, Black lost her manager of four years, Bonnie O'Donnell, who passed away suddenly at age 32. [11] Black stated that the loss of O'Donnell was a low point in her personal and professional life. [12]
In 2009, Black, alongside YoungPete Alexander and Kellis E. Parker, wrote and released her third studio album, The Black Book. Following its release, Black kicked off a country-wide tour in Vancouver at the 2010 Winter Olympics.[13] In 2011, Black and YoungPete created a production team known as "The Officials".[citation needed]
In 2010, a song by Black, "At the Roncies" (about the Roncesvalles Avenue neighbourhood of Toronto), was chosen by listeners[14] to represent the province of Ontario in CBC Radio 2's Great Canadian Song Quest.
Black was selected to perform and open for Celine Dion at the 2012 Jamaica Jazz and Blues Festival honouring Jamaica's 50th Anniversary of Independence in 2012.[15]
In 2012, Black was nominated for a Juno Award for 'Best R&B/Soul Recording' for her song "Set It Off" featuring Kardinal Offishall.[16] In the same year, Black released an EP, Dropping W(8).[citation needed]
In 2020, Black performed on FreeUp! The Emancipation Day Special.[17]
In 2022, Black was announced as a competitor in the eighth season of The Amazing Race Canada and was eliminated on the first leg after she and her partner Kathy missed the entrance to the Rialto theater.[18]
In 2023, she sang the Canadian national anthem at the 2023 NBA All-Star Game. Black changed the lyrics from “our home and native land" to "our home on native land" as a mark of respect to Indigenous groups within Canada.[19] She was later honoured by the Assembly of First Nations for this action.[20][21] In the same year she participated in an all-star recording of Serena Ryder's single "What I Wouldn't Do", which was released as a charity single to benefit Kids Help Phone's Feel Out Loud campaign for youth mental health.[22]
In 2024 she narrated the television documentary series Paid in Full: The Battle for Black Music.[23]
In 2025, with Jason "Redz" Reynolds as her manager, Jully embarked on a 14 date across Canada headlining tour, her first in 17 years, called "The Jully Black Live Experience"[24][25]
Discography
Albums
- 2005: This Is Me
- 2007: Revival
- 2009: The Black Book
- 2022: Three Rocks and a Slingshot
Official mixtapes
- 2012: Dropping W(8)
- 2026: The LP
Singles
| Year | Single | Chart Positions | Album |
|---|---|---|---|
| CAN [26] | |||
| 1998 | "Rally'n" (with Saukrates) | 12 | I Travelled |
| 2000 | "Say No More" | — | |
| 2002 | "Between Me and You" (featuring Saukrates) | — | |
| 2005 | "Stay the Night" | — | |
| "Sweat of Your Brow" (featuring Demarco) | 16 | This Is Me | |
| "5x Love"/"Material Things" (featuring Nas) | 30 | ||
| 2006 | "I Travelled" | 66 | |
| "Gotta Let You Know (Scream)" | — | ||
| 2007 | "Seven Day Fool" | 9 | Revival |
| "DJ Play My Song" | — | ||
| 2008 | "Until I Stay" | 33 | |
| "Queen" | — | ||
| 2009 | "Running" | 40 | The Black Book |
| 2010 | "Need You" | — | |
| "Can U Feel It?" | — | DROPPING W(8) | |
| "Pushin'" | — | ||
| 2011 | "Set It Off'" (featuring Kardinal Offishall) | — | |
| 2012 | "Fugitive" | — | Non-album single |
| 2014 | "Here 2 Love U" | — | |
| 2015 | "Fever" | — | |
| 2019 | "Follow Your Love (Remix)" | — | |
| 2020 | "Mi No Fraid" | — |
Soundtracks
- 2010: George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight – Episode 7.24 (performer: "At The Roncies")
- 2008: Saving God (performer: "I Travelled")
- 2007: Da Kink in My Hair (composer: theme music - 5 episodes)
- 2006: Words to Music: The Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame (TV film) (performer: "Put Your Hand in the Hand")
- 2004: You Got Served (performer: "Heaven")
- 2003: The Fighting Temptations (writer: "I Know")
- 2002: Brown Sugar (performer: "You Changed")