Contemporary gospel artist
Deitrick Haddon was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, where he served as pastor and music director at Detroit's Unity Cathedral of Faith. As the son of Bishop Clarence Haddon and Prophetess Joyce Haddon, he grew up in the church and preached his first sermon at the age of 11.
Deitrick Haddon and his
Voices of Unity drew upon both secular and spiritual influences to create a sound they dubbed "gospel soul." Signed to the Tyscot label, the group debuted in 1995 with
Come Into This House. Two years later,
Haddon and company issued
Live the Life, which scored Gospel Music Workshop of America Excellence Awards in the categories of New Artist of the Year: Urban Contemporary and Album of the Year: Urban Contemporary. After
This Is My Story (1998),
Chain Breaker (1999), and
Nu Hymnz: Live from the Motor City (2001),
Haddon went solo and signed to the Verity label. Through releases such as
Lost and Found (2002), the
Tim & Bob collaboration
7 Days (2006), Church on the Moon (2011),
A Beautiful Soul (2012), and
R.E.D. (2013),
Haddon maintained his reputation for pushing the boundaries of contemporary gospel. During the mid-2010s, he became even more visible through the reality series Preachers of LA and continued to release albums that topped Billboard's gospel chart, including
Deitrick Haddon's LXW (2014) and
Masterpiece (2015). In 2017,
Haddon released a live LP,
Deitrick Haddon & Hill City Worship Camp, led by the single "A Billion People." He then teamed with Grammy-winning producer
Zaytoven to release the collaborative 2018 Christmas EP
Greatest Gift. In June 2020,
Haddon released the politically charged standalone track "I Can't Breathe," which referenced the death of George Floyd and spotlighted the Black Lives Matter movement. ~ Jason Ankeny