Bryson Gray

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bryson Gray
Born (1991-05-24) May 24, 1991 (age 32)
Other names
  • B.Surius
  • KingVodka
OccupationRapper
Years active2000–present
Known for

Bryson Gray (born May 24, 1991) is an American rapper, known for his work in the Christian hip hop and political hip hop genres.[1][2] In 2021, his song "Let's Go Brandon", a diss track against President Joe Biden, reached the number one slot on iTunes.[3][4][5][6]

Career[edit]

Prior to becoming a conservative Christian rapper, Gray had made snap rap music under the stage name B.Surius, as well as electropop under the alias KingVodka. He first began his music career at 9 years old when he started going to his father's recording studio as a way to become proficient in rapping and producing beats. During high school, he started the snap group 336 Boyz with the assistance of his dad, his cousin and his six friends which included future rap superstar DJ Luke Nasty. Gray was gaining traction in his home state of North Carolina by getting his music played on local radio stations and was even featured on the BET series 106 & Park's Wild Out Wednesday segment with his group on a couple occasions.[7][8][9] In 2020, he explained he began putting his political beliefs in his songs after he “redpilled [himself] after going on conservative platforms and trying to debate them."[10]

In October 2021, Gray's upload of his song, "Let's Go Brandon" was removed from YouTube for allegedly sharing "false medical information", although the song is still available through numerous reuploads.[11] His Twitter account was temporarily suspended in December 2022 after making comments about Elton John's sexuality. His account was subsequently reinstated after complaints by notable figures such as Jake Shields.[12]

Gray was invited to an interview on the BBC Scotland on a segment in November 2022. The question asked to him was in regards to Kanye West and allegations of West's antisemitism, Gray claimed that he thought the allegations were "without foundation". When asked about Kanye's comments on Jewish people, he began discussing Jewish businessmen Lucian Grainge of Sony Music Entertainment and Michael Lynton of Warner Music Group as proof that Jews controlled the music industry, leading to the host of the radio show ending the call and issuing an apology to viewers.[13]

In 2023, Gray released a song with singer Jimmy Levy and rapper Shemeka Michelle, "Reclaim the Rainbow", which debuted at the top of both R&B/Hip-Hop Digital Song Sales and Rap Digital Song Sales charts for Billboard,[14] as well as number 3 on the iTunes charts.[15]

He was set to perform at the 2023 Lee County, Florida GOP Lincoln Reagan Dinner, but his performance was allegedly cancelled due to complaints by members that he had been critical of former President Donald Trump in the recent past. In response, he asserted that "only trumpers" are "ruining their own agenda" by engaging in cancel culture.[16]

On Christmas Eve of that year, Gray tweeted that the use of Christian imagery in the pin-up-style pictures of young conservative women, some clad in swimwear or lingerie, in "Conservative Dad's Real Conservative Women of America 2024 Calendar" was "demonic".[17] This started Calendargate, a controversy among conservatives online that continued into 2024.[18]

Personal life[edit]

Gray has stated that his grandmother was a Black Panther. His father is an English teacher.[19]

Following the storming of the Capitol, Gray's father, Gary Gray, took to social media to share that his son, Bryson, had been questioned by the FBI. Bryson retweeted him alleging that they questioned him as a result of people reporting him as a "terrorist".[20] In an April 2023 documentary short from Vice, he claimed to have been celibate for more than a decade.[21]

Discography[edit]

Studio Albums[edit]

  • 2018: My Life is a Mess: Season 1
  • 2018: Genre: No Genre
  • 2018: Album About Mariah
  • 2020: Maga Ain't Got No Color
  • 2020: Maga Szn
  • 2020: Can't Cancel God
  • 2020: Maga Christmas
  • 2021: 1776
  • 2021: God Wins
  • 2021: Bold as a Lion: Season 1
  • 2021: Letters to the Church
  • 2022: Us VS The Industry
  • 2021: BARS 4 CHRIST, Vol. 1
  • 2022: LION MUSIC
  • 2023: Letters to the Church 2
  • 2023: Super Bigot
  • 2024: Bryson, The Demon Slayer

Collaborative Albums[edit]

  • 2007: 2 The Point (with 336 Boyz)
  • 2008: Club 336 (with 336 Boyz)
  • 2010: I Told You So (with 336 Boyz)
  • 2012: Full Cups & Empty Bottles (with 336 Boyz)
  • 2020: Line in the Sand (with Tyson James)
  • 2022: Jan6ers (with Forgiato Blow)
  • 2023: BIBLE RAP (with Don Trochez)
  • 2023: Black & White (with Tyson James)

EPs[edit]

  • 2014: My Team EP (with 336 Boyz)
  • 2018: Album About Fortnite - EP
  • 2018: Random Freestyles to Youtube Beats Lol
  • 2018: Album About Fortnite, Pt. 2 - EP
  • 2019: Big Surius
Title Details
Singles
Shake 4 Da Money (ft. P-Wonda) (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 1 June 2008
Twerk Time (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 24 December 2011
Heartbreak & Tequila (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 8 January 2012
One More Time (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 3 December 2012
My Team (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 27 January 2013
Role Model (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 9 June 2013
Matter (with 336 Boyz)
  • Released 12 August 2014
Crazy (ft. LilZa)
  • Released 9 September 2014
Stranger (ft. Jay Hayden)
  • Released 10 February 2015
Go Harder (ft. FurchesTwins)
  • Released 5 May 2015
Feeling Sounds (ft. Will Gittens)
  • Released 13 November 2015
Everything Is OK (ft. FurchesTwins, B-Wall, Jordan Hunter)
  • Released 14 October 2016
Slow Down (ft. DJ Luke Nasty)
  • Released 3 February 2017
Snakes
  • Released 27 October 2017
Savage (ft. Jay Hayden and DJ Luke Nasty)
  • Released 27 October 2017
Fuck Alorica
  • Released 16 February 2018
Maga Boy
  • Released 19 November 2019
Dog Cage
  • Released 10 July 2020
Hate Speech
  • Released 2 October 2020
Maga Party
  • Released 30 October 2020
Patriots vs Everybody
  • Released 6 November 2020
Ain't Over Yet
  • Released 27 November 2020
Bringing God Back
  • Released 27 November 2020
Game Over
  • Released 27 November 2020
Maga Forever
  • Released 27 November 2020
False Teachers
  • Released 18 December 2020
Menace 2 Society
  • Released 26 March 2021
I Do Not Comply
  • Released 24 August 2021
Let's Go Brandon (Joe Biden Diss)
  • Released 15 October 2021
Thanks, Youtube.
  • Released 12 November 2021
Maga Icons
  • Released 19 November 2021
Like Kyle
  • Released 22 November 2021
Elon Musk
  • Released 16 April 2022
Ultra Maga (ft. Forgiato Blow, Topher, Tyson James)
  • Released 13 May 2022
Kanye Was Right
  • Released 20 May 2022
Run
  • Released 27 May 2022
Happy
  • Released 10 June 2022
Kingdom At Hand
  • Released 17 June 2022
Drag Queens (ft. Alex Stein #99)
  • Released 24 June 2022
God Save America
  • Released 1 July 2022
Patriot Anthem (ft. Forgiato Blow)
  • Released 8 July 2022
Overturned (ft. DC Capital)
  • Released 10 July 2022
Hunter Biden Hacked (Hunter Biden Diss)
  • Released 13 July 2022
Gun Control Questions
  • Released 15 July 2022
Woman of the Year
  • Released 22 July 2022
Biden Blame Putin
  • Released 29 July 2022
Liberal World Order
  • Released 5 August 2022
FBI Raid (ft. Tyson James)
  • Released 10 August 2022
Jesus (ft. Tyson James)
  • Released 19 August 2022
Brittney Griner (Brittney Griner Diss)
  • Released 26 August 2022
Jesus Take the Wheel
  • Released 2 September 2022
Soul of the Nation
  • Released 4 September 2022
Ashley's Diary
  • Released 9 September 2022
Bars for Christ
  • Released 16 September 2022
Martha's Vineyard
  • Released 20 September 2022
Evil Rulers
  • Released 30 September 2022
Remnant Coming (ft. Isaiah Robin & Kieran the Light)
  • Released 7 October 2022
Alex & Ye
  • Released 19 October 2022
Fed Up (ft. Forgiato Blow)
  • Released 28 October 2022
Shut Up and Dribble (LeBron James Diss)
  • Released 11 November 2022
Bryson 2028
  • Released 18 November 2022
Burn Balenciaga (Balenciaga Diss)
  • Released 28 November 2022
Maga Party 24
  • Released 7 December 2022
Feature with Ye
  • Released 15 December 2022
Slaying Demons
  • Released 23 December 2022
Kevin McCarthy (Kevin McCarthy Diss)
  • Released 6 January 2023
Homemakers
  • Released 17 March 2023
All of Me
  • Released 17 March 2023
Cinco de Mayo
  • Released 21 April 2023
Message to CHH
  • Released 7 June 2023
Reclaim the Rainbow (ft. Jimmy Levy, Shemeka Michelle)
  • Released 16 June 2023
All the Way
  • Released 6 October 2023
Just Got Married
  • Released 27 October 2023
Fruit
  • Released 31 October 2023
Way Truth Life
  • Released 9 November 2023
Gay Demon
  • Released 7 December 2023
Everybody Get Exposed
  • Released 12 January 2024
Features
Title Main Artist Details
Twenty in the Tank DJ Luke Nasty
  • Released 13 May 2016
Fall In Love Jordan Hunter
  • Released 12 May 2017
  • Also featuring LiveLikeDavis
Mt. Rushmore Rocky Luciano
  • Released 11 August 2020
Keep on Truckin' KillWill
  • Released 18 February 2022
2 Maga DANRYZ1
  • Released 27 May 2022
  • Also featuring Gri!ff The GOP and CarlosRossiMC
Save America Playboy the Beast
  • Released 29 June 2022
Votes Overnight Stoney Dudebro
All My Friends are Shadowbanned An0maly
  • Released 14 October 2022
Kyrie Mode Forgiato Blow
  • Released 7 November 2022
  • Also featuring Stoney Dudebro
Gun Totin Bible Thumper Tyson James
  • Released 19 May 2023
Cancel Pride Tyson James
  • Released 29 June 2023
  • Also featuring ASAP Preach
Conservative Bezz Believe
  • Released 3 July 2023
  • Also features Forgiato Blow

References[edit]

  1. ^ Elliards, Xander (November 26, 2022). "MAGA rapper Bryson Gray fumes at BBC Scotland amid antisemitism row". The National. Retrieved May 13, 2023.
  2. ^ Witkowski, D'Anne (March 20, 2023). "So About Christian Conservative 'Rapper' Bryson Gray's Anti-LGBTQ+ Diss Track: I Don't Know Her". Between the Lines. Retrieved May 13, 2023.
  3. ^ Stieb, Matt (October 29, 2021). "How the Anti-Biden Song 'Let's Go Brandon' Became a Shadow Smash". New York. Retrieved May 13, 2023.
  4. ^ Evon, Dan (October 29, 2021). "How Popular Are 'Let's Go Brandon' Songs, Really?". Snopes. Retrieved May 13, 2023.
  5. ^ Richardson, Valerie (October 29, 2021). "Not one, not two: Four anti-Biden 'Let's Go Brandon' songs reach iTunes top 10". The Washington Times. Retrieved May 13, 2023.
  6. ^ Unterberger, Andrew; Denis, Kyle; Lipshutz, Jason (2023-08-16). "Oliver Anthony's Viral Success Has Already Spread to His Whole Catalog". Billboard. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  7. ^ Tim Clodfelter (2009-08-21). "TV Tidbits Rap group from High Point to compete on BET's 106 & Park". www.journalnow.com. Retrieved 2023-10-22.
  8. ^ Tim Clodfelter (2009-08-27). "Rap group from High Point will return to BET program for an 'All-Star Week'". www.journalnow.com. Retrieved 2023-10-22.
  9. ^ Digital Production Group (2010-07-30). "336 Boyz Commercial". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2023-10-22.
  10. ^ 97.1 FM Talk (2020-07-10). "Youtuber Bryson Gray became an outcast in the North Carolina". www.audacy.com. Retrieved 2023-08-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Nath, Sayantani (21 October 2021). "'Let's Go Brandon': YouTube deletes Bryson Gray's MAGA hit for 'false medical info'". MEAWW. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  12. ^ Soni, Mayur (2022-12-12). ""Considering the Fact Elton John Is Gay" – Bryson Gray's Permanent Twitter Suspension by Elon Musk Questioned by UFC Veteran". EssentiallySports. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  13. ^ "US rapper fumes at BBC Scotland after interview cut off amid antisemitism row". The National Scot. 2022-11-26. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  14. ^ McIntyre, Hugh. "This Anti-LGBTQ+ Song Blocked BTS's Jimin From Billboard's No. 1 Spot". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  15. ^ Chamberlain, Dale (2023-07-13). "Christian Singer Denies He Is Homophobic After Anti-LGBTQ+ Pride Songs Chart on iTunes, Billboard". ChurchLeaders. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  16. ^ Cooper, Amber (2023-03-20). "Bryson Gray canceled from Lee County GOP performance: 'You can't cancel me'". Florida’s Voice. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  17. ^ @RealBrysonGray (December 24, 2023). "The fact that conservatives made a calendar with half naked women then decided to put Christian imagery on the photos is demonic" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  18. ^ Beauchamp, Zack (January 10, 2024). "How a horny beer calendar sparked a conservative civil war". Vox. Retrieved February 12, 2024.
  19. ^ Bethea, Charles (2019-12-16). "His Grandma Was a Black Panther, but Bryson Gray Is Pro-Life and Pro-Trump". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  20. ^ "MAGA Rapper Bryson Gray Questioned by FEDS After Capitol Riots". SC Herald. 2021-01-14. Retrieved 2023-08-20.
  21. ^ "Yes, MAGA Rap Is Real And Trump Supporters Love It". YouTube. Vice Media. April 23, 2023. Retrieved May 12, 2023.

External links[edit]