[3] Though the band's style has been compared to that of Mylon LeFevre and Broken Heart, their most commercially successful work came in the 1960s with a sound, augmented by The Muscle Shoals Horns, that closely resembled that of Jay & the Techniques.
[4][5] The band released its first single, a cover version of "Rockin' Robin" around 1964, under the name of Little David & the Giants.
In 1969, they achieved regional success in the southeastern US with singles of that genre entitled "Superlove" and "Ten Miles High".
[9][10][11][12][13] "Superlove", "Ten Miles High" and some of the band's other late sixties singles have appeared on various genre compilations.
[14][15] In the early 1970s, the band performed in concert with Styx, Black Oak Arkansas, Cheech and Chong and Chuck Berry.
[citation needed] The band concluded the 1980s with Strangers to the Night and R-U Gonna Stand Up.
[17][20] David Huff continued to perform as a solo act and operates a recording studio near Atlanta, Georgia.
[21] He released a series of solo albums, including Really in 2000 and Proclaim in 2003[22] (which was re-released by Christian Records in 2004).
On December 9, 2007, they joined former drummer Keith Thibodeaux for a reunion concert at Emmanuel Praise Church in Monroe, Georgia.
They also performed at the 2011 Nashville Amp Expo with guitarist Phil Keaggy, who joined them during their set.
[citation needed] In August 2017, a live concert album and video was recorded in St. Louis, Missouri, celebrating 40 years of David and the Giants music.