"Darryl Worley is country through and through. The son of a Methodist preacher and the grandson of a moonshiner from Pyburn, Tennessee, the rebellious singer simultaneously earned a degree in biology from the University of North Alabama while partying at honky tonks before signing with Fame Publishing in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Worley moved to Nashville in 1994 after inking a songwriting deal with EMI Publishing and met Frank Rogers, the producer behind artists like Brad Paisley and Phil Vassar. In 1999 Worley signed with DreamWorks Nashville, which released his single ""When You Need Love"" and his debut album Hard Rain Don't Last the following year. Two years later Worley issued his sophomore album, I Miss My Friend, which earned him a nomination for the Top New Male Vocalist from the Academy of Country Music. I Miss My Friend also snagged the number one spot on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and climbed to number 21 on the Billboard 200 chart. Also in 2002, Worley embarked upon a tour of Afghanistan, Kuwait and Uzbekistan which resulted in Have You Forgotten?, an emotional album that paid tribute to the U.S. troops fighting in Iraq and peaked at number one on Billboard's Top Country Albums chart as well as number four on the Billboard 200 chart.In 2006 Worley released his fourth studio album, Here and Now, the follow-up to his post-9/11 tribute to soldiers Have You Forgotten?, which spawned controversy with Republican favorite (and Democrat-scorned) single ""Do You Remember."" Here and Now features Worley's well-groomed country music and solidifies his spot in the country music world thanks to his signature brand of moving vocals, American pride, and charismatic stage presence. Worley burst into the country music scene in the ‘90s with his raw country sound, and has remained the same honest country boy that he started as."