Gary Stewart was born May 28, 1945, in Jenkins, Ky. His family moved to Florida when he was 12, where he made his first
record for the local Cory label and played in a beat group called the Amps. Teaming up with a policeman, Bill Eldridge, he
wrote Stonewall Jackson's 1965 US country hit, "Poor Red Georgia Dirt". Several songwriting
successes followed including chart entries for Billy Walker ("She Goes Walking Through My
Mind", "When A Man Loves A Woman (The Way I Love You)", "Traces Of A Woman", "It's Time To Love Her"), Cal
Smith ("You Can't Housebreak A Tomcat", "It Takes Me All Night Long") and Nat Stuckey
("Sweet Thang And Cisco"). Stewart recorded an album for Kapp Records, You're
Not The Woman You Used To Be, and then moved to RCA Records. He had his first US country
hit with a country version of the Allman Brothers' "Ramblin' Man" and then made the Top 10
with "Drinkin' Thing". For some years Stewart worked as the pianist in Charley Pride's road
band and he can be heard on Pride's In Concert double album. He established himself as a hard-driving,
honky-tonk performer with Out Of Hand and a US country number 1, "She's Actin' Single (I'm Drinkin'
Doubles)", although his vibrato annoyed some. His 1977 Your Place Or Mine included guest appearances
from Nicolette Larson, Emmylou Harris and Rodney
Crowell. His two albums with songwriter Dean Dillon were not commercial successes, and Stewart returned to working
in honky-tonk clubs. However, drug addiction got the better of him and his life collapsed when his wife left him and his son
committed suicide. In the late 80s, he returned to performing, carrying on in the same style as before with albums such as
Brand New and I'm A Texan. He was found dead in his Florida home
from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on Dec. 16, 2003.