Rock
United States
Gary Clark Jr.
On Tour
Shazam Global Chart Top 50 AppearancesAll songs and collaborations from Gary Clark Jr. that have reached the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart
OVERVIEW
Gary Clark Jr. & Junkie XL peaked at No. 10 on the Shazam Global Chart with "Come Together", spending 3 days in the Top 50.
1Top 50 Entries
3Days in Top 50
SONG
PEAK POSITIONDAYS IN TOP 50TOP 50 DEBUT
The highest position a song reached on the Shazam Global Chart.
The total number of days a song spent in the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart. These days may have been non-consecutive.
The date a song first entered the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart.
Gary Clark Jr. & Junkie XL
#103Nov 20, 2017
"Come Together" by Gary Clark Jr. & Junkie XL peaked at No. 10 on the Shazam Global Chart, where the song spent a total of 3 day(s) in the Top 50.
Released
2017Total Shazams
3M
Days in Top 50
3The total number of days a song spent in the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart. These days may have been non-consecutive.
Top 50 Debut
Nov 20, 2017"Come Together" by Gary Clark Jr. & Junkie XL peaked at No. 10 on the Shazam Global Chart, where the song spent a total of 3 day(s) in the Top 50.
Released
2017Total Shazams
3M
Days in Top 50
3The total number of days a song spent in the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart. These days may have been non-consecutive.
Top 50 Debut
Nov 20, 2017Gary Clark Jr.'s Popular Music Videos
About Gary Clark Jr.
A Black guitar hero for the 21st century, Gary Clark Jr. combines the sear and snarl of his Texas-blues roots with increasingly pertinent songwriting. Born in Austin in 1984, Clark forged his slashing, muscular style at the storied club Antone's, until a bust-out appearance at Eric Clapton's 2010 Crossroads Guitar Festival earned him a Warner Bros. contract. Clark's first two studio albums, 2012’s Blak and Blu and 2015’s The Story of Sonny Boy Slim, delivered nasty and noisy improvisations in songwriting bottles both old and—in the vexed neo-R&B grooves of “Numb and “Grinder”—new. Between studio releases, Clark let off steam on Gary Clark Jr. Live and Live North America 2016, where he displayed his blues bona fides to full effect and brought his own work into sharp focus alongside powerfully intimate covers of Jimmy Reed, Elmore James, Albert Collins, and Jimi Hendrix. The anger churning beneath Clark's best work exploded into the open in the title track of 2019's This Land. Responding to racist neighbors' demand that he "go back where you came from," Clark growls, "I'm America's son. This is where I come from." At its splenetic, overdriven best, This Land is a complex studio creation that anticipates 2020's urgent street demonstrations and responds with historical resonance and gritty analogue pride.
Musical InfluencesGary Clark Jr.'s musical influences include James Brown, Curtis Mayfield, Sly & The Family Stone and more.
Influenced by Gary Clark Jr.Gary Clark Jr. has influenced the music of Okan Erin, Southern Avenue, Milo Meskens and more.
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