Michael English was a native of North Carolina, born on April 12, 1962 in Kenansville and raised in North East. When he turned ten, he started singing with the Singing Samaritans, and after graduating high school he joined the Singing Americans. English appeared on a few records by the Singing Americans before joining the Goodmans in 1982. He returned to the Singing Americans in 1984, where he had his breakthrough singing "I Bowed on My Knees (And Cried Holy)." After appearing on the group's 1985 album, Black and White, he joined the Gaither Vocal Band as their lead singer.
English stayed with the Gaither Vocal Band through 1994, leading the group toward greater fame. He began a solo career in 1991, signing with Warner Alliance and releasing an eponymous solo album that year. An instant CCM smash, it wound up helping English win Dove Awards for Best Male Vocalist and New Artist, but it was eclipsed by the success of 1993's Hope, which wound up earning English four Dove Awards.
The day after these 1994 Dove Awards, English announced that he and Marabeth Jordan of First Call conceived a child while they were both married to other people. English suffered serious professional blowback, with CCM stations shunning his recordings and Warner Alliance dropping the singer. He made a public apology and signed with Curb late in 1994 with the intention of making secular pop music. "Healing," a duet with Wynonna Judd, appeared in 1995 and the full-length Freedom, his first mainstream pop album, arrived in September 1996, generating a Top Ten Billboard adult contemporary cover of John Berry's ballad "Your Love Amazes Me." He may have been performing secular music but he worked behind the scenes in gospel music, producing records by the Martins, the Gaither Vocal Band, and the Stamps Quartet.
English made his first public foray back into gospel in August 1996, when he performed with a reunited Singing Americans at the Grand Ole Gospel Reunion. Over the next year he worked his way back into the Christian music spotlight, culminating with the 1998 release of Gospel. Another record, Heaven to Earth, followed in 2000. A seasonal record, appropriately entitled A Michael English Christmas, arrived in 2003, followed by a a greatest-hits album in 2006. English published an autobiography called The Prodigal Comes Home in 2007, which was accompanied by an album of the same name in 2008.
English rejoined the Gaither Vocal Band as their lead vocalist in 2009, and he stayed with them until 2013. He revived his solo career that year with Some People Change, his last album for Curb. He switched labels to Daywind in 2015, releasing Worship that year. Daywind released a live Michael English set in 2016, and then the singer departed to New Day Entertainment for 2017's Love Is the Golden Rule. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi