Raised in Hannah, South Carolina, Josh Turner started singing in church, taking the bass part in the Thankful Hearts quartet. Following his graduation from Hannah-Pamplico High School, he enrolled in Francis Marion University in nearby Florence, South Carolina. After a short spell at FMU, he decamped to Nashville, where he attended Belmont University and began to make inroads into country music, particularly after discovering Hank Williams' music through the school's library.
Turner's career gained momentum after his college graduation. He worked his way to a debut at the Grand Ole Opry on December 21, 2001, where he performed "Long Black Train," an original inspired by Hank. Soon, Turner signed with MCA Nashville, who released "She'll Go on You" in 2002. That single didn't crack the Country Top 40, but "Long Black Train" broke through, peaking at 13 and eventually earning a Platinum certification. The full-length debut, also entitled Long Black Train, appeared in October 2003; it peaked at number three on Billboard's country charts -- and 39 on their Top 200 -- while generating one further modest hit in "What It Ain't."
Your Man, Turner's second album, provided him with his first two number one hits when its title track reached that position in 2005, and "Would You Go with Me" following it to the pole position in 2006. Upon its January 2006 release, Turner's sophomore set debuted at number one on Billboard Country charts and number three on the Top 200; it was certified Platinum within six months. Just as significantly, Your Man contained "Me and God," a duet with Ralph Stanley that marked Turner's first explicit articulation of his Christian faith; it peaked at 16 on Billboard's Country charts, but also received Christian radio play. Your Man garnered Turner Grammy nominations for Best Country Album and Best Male Country Vocal Performance and its success helped him gain an induction to the Grand Ole Opry in 2007.
Turner returned in 2007 with Everything Is Fine. "Firecracker," the album's lead single, went to number two, but its Trisha Yearwood eu35, "Another Try," went no further than 15, and "Everything Is Fine" stalled at 20. "Why Don't We Just Dance," the first single from his fourth album Haywire, reversed this trajectory in 2009, reaching number one. "All Over Me" also peaked at the same position around the 2010 release of Haywire. The album also generated the number 18 single "I Wouldn't Be a Man."
Turner received a mainstream boost in 2011 when Scotty McCreery proclaimed him as an idol during his run at American Idol. This helped set up the 2012 release of Punching Bag, whose lead single "Time Is Love" peaked at number two. Turner published his first book, Man Stuff: Thoughts on Faith, Family and Fatherhood, in 2014.
"Lay Low," the first taste from his sixth album, arrived in 2014, but after peaking at 25 on Country Airplay, it was put on the backburner. Turner returned in the summer of 2016 with "Hometown Girl," which went to number two on Country Airplay, setting up the release of Deep South in March of 2017. Turner delivered on his long-standing dream to cut a gospel album in 2018. Called I Serve a Savior, the record appeared in October 2018, debuting at two on Billboard's Country and Christian charts. Turner returned in 2020 with Country State of Mind, a covers album featuring cameos by Kris Kristofferson, John Anderson, Allison Moorer, and Chris Janson. Turner released the seasonal album King Size Manger, an album produced by Kenny Greenberg, in October 2021. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi