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Toby Keith
Toby Keith Covel (born July 8, 1961) is an American
country music singer-songwriter who has enjoyed commercial success
throughout the 1990s and 2000s. Five of his albums have reached
number one on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, and he has
had sixteen Number One singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs
charts. In addition, he starred in the 2006 film Broken Bridges.
Toby Keith Covel was born in Clinton, Oklahoma to H.K. Covel and
Joan Covel. He has a sister, Tonni, and a brother, Tracy. His family
moved to Moore, Oklahoma (a suburb of Oklahoma City) when Keith
was young. His grandmother owned a supper club and Keith became
interested in the musicians who came there to play. He got his first
guitar at the age of eight. Keith attended Highland West Junior
High and Moore High School where he played on the football team.
Keith graduated from Moore High School and, in 1979, went to
work as a derrick hand in the booming oil fields of Oklahoma.
He worked his way up to become an operation manager. At the age
of 20, he formed the Easy Money band and they played local bars
as he continued to work in the oil industry. At times, he would
have to leave in the middle of a gig if he was paged to work in
the oil field.
In 1982, the oil industry in Oklahoma began a rapid decline and
Keith soon found himself unemployed. He fell back on his football
training and played defensive end with the semi-pro Oklahoma City
Drillers while continuing to perform with his band. (The Drillers
were an unofficial farm club of the United States Football League's
Oklahoma Outlaws; Keith tried out for the Outlaws but did not
make the team.) After two years with the Drillers, Keith decided
to try music full time. His family and friends were doubtful he
would succeed, but in 1984, Easy Money began playing the honky
tonk circuit in Oklahoma and Texas. The band cut a single titled
Blue Moon and the song received some airplay on local radio stations
in Oklahoma.
Also in 1984, Keith married his wife, Tricia. He is the father
of three children; Shelley (born 1981; adopted stepdaughter),
Krystal (born 1984), and Stelen (born 1997). An avid University
of Oklahoma football fan, Keith is often seen at Oklahoma Sooners
games and practices.
On 24 March 2001 Keith's father was killed in a car accident
on interstate 35. On 25 December 2007 the Covel family was awarded
$2.8 million for the wrongful death of H.K.Covel. Elias and Pedro
Rodriguez, operators of Rodriguez Transportes of Tulsa, and the
Republic Western Insurance Co were found liable as they failed
to properly equip the truck with properly working air brakes.
[edit] Career
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In 1993, Keith went to Nashville, Tennessee. Keith hung out and
busked on Music Row and at a place called Houndogs. He distributed
copies of a demo tape the band had made to the many record companies
in the city. There was no interest by any of the record labels
and Keith returned home feeling depressed. Keith had promised
himself to have a recording contract by the time he was 30 years
old or give up on music as a career. He had already passed that
age without any prospects for a recording contract.
Fortunately for Keith, a flight attendant and fan of his gave
a copy of Keith's demo tape to Harold Shedd, a Mercury Records
executive, while he was traveling on a flight she was working.
Shedd enjoyed what he heard, went to see Keith perform live and
then signed him to a recording contract with Mercury. His debut
single, "Should've Been a Cowboy" (1993), went to number
1 on the Billboard country singles chart, and his self-titled
debut album was certified platinum. Other hit singles included
"A Little Less Talk And A Lot More Action" and "Wish
I Didn't Know Now".
Keith moved briefly to Polydor Records and released his next
two albums, Boomtown (1994) and Blue Moon (1996). The albums went
gold and platinum respectively. In 1996, Keith was also featured
on the Beach Boys' now out-of-print 1996 album Stars and Stripes
Vol. 1 performing a cover of their 1963 hit Be True to Your School
with the Beach Boys themselves providing the harmonies and backing
vocals.
Polydor folded and Keith moved back to Mercury Records (now called
Mercury Nashville), and released his fourth album, Dream Walkin'
(1997). The album featured a duet with Sting, "I'm So Happy
I Can't Stop Crying", which had previously been a hit for
Sting himself.
Toby KeithKeith began work on his next album How Do You Like Me
Now (1999) at Mercury but purchased the rights to the album and
moved to DreamWorks Nashville because of creative differences
with Mercury.[citation needed] The first single off How Do You
Like Me Now failed to make the Top 40 on the country charts. However,
the follow-up single, which was the album's title track, went
on to spend five weeks at number one, helping boost the album's
sales to double platinum.
Keith also began doing a series of television advertisements
for Telecom USA for their discount long distance telephone service
10-10-220. Because of the ads and his latest hit album, Keith
became a superstar and household name. He also starred in Ford
commercials, singing original songs such as "Ford Truck Man"
and "Field Trip (Look Again)" while driving Ford trucks.
Keith made an appearance at the very first Total Nonstop Action
Wrestling (then NWA-TNA) weekly pay-per-view on June 19, 2002,
where his playing of Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue was interrupted
by Jeff Jarrett. He would later enter the Gauntlet for the Gold
main event specifically to eliminate Jarrett from the match. He
would appear the next week, on June 26, and help Scott Hall defeat
Jarrett in singles action.
Keith was the subject of the January, 2005 issue of Playboy Magazine's
Playboy Interview. That year, Keith toured with rock guitarist
Ted Nugent, whom Keith met in Iraq while they were both performing
in USO-sponsored shows for the coalition troops.
On August 31, 2005, Keith parted ways with Universal Music Group-
which had since bought DreamWorks- and launched his own record
label called Show Dog Nashville. Its first release was Keith's
album White Trash With Money, followed by the soundtrack to Broken
Bridges. Big Dog Daddy, the album that birthed his single High
Maintenance Woman, was released on June 12th, 2007. The album
debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 charts, his third album
to reach this feat, after "Unleashed" and "Shock'n
Y'all"
In the Autumn of 2005, he filmed Broken Bridges, written by Cherie
Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld, and directed by Steven Goldmann.
This feature film from Paramount/CMT Films was released on September
8, 2006. A contemporary story set in small-town Tennessee, Keith
plays Bo Price, a country musician whose career has seen better
times. The movie also stars Kelly Preston, Burt Reynolds, and
Tess Harper.
In 2005, Keith opened Toby Keith's I Love This Bar & Grill
in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and another location in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[citation
needed]
Keith is continuing his Hookin' Up & Hangin' Out Tour, sponsored
by Ford trucks, in Albany, New York, with guests Flynnville Train,
Lindsey Haun, and Miranda Lambert, which wraps up in Hartford,
Connecticut
Keith is currently writing a script for a movie based on his
and Willie Nelson's 2003 hit Beer for My Horses[1].
Toby Keith was given a boost when he appeared on Comedy Central's
The Colbert Report. Mr. Keith holds the distinction of being the
only musical artist to have received a five star rating from Stephen
Colbert on I-Tunes.
It has been announced that Toby Keith will release a third Greatest
Hits collection including all his hits from 1993-2005, along with
the soundtrack to his new film and a new studio album in 2008.
No release dates have been announced.[1]
[edit] Personal convictions and controversies
Keith considers himself "a Conservative Democrat who is sometimes
embarrassed for his party." He endorsed the re-election of
President George W. Bush in 2004 and performed at a Dallas, Texas
rally on the night before the election. Keith also endorsed Democrat
Dan Boren in his successful run in Oklahoma's 2nd Congressional
district and is good friends with Democratic New Mexico Governor
Bill Richardson.
In a January 2007 interview with Newsday, Keith was asked whether
or not he supported the Iraq War. He responded with "Never
did." He favors setting a time limit on the campaign. He
also said, "I don't apologize for being patriotic... If there
is something socially incorrect about being patriotic and supporting
your troops, then they can kiss my [ass] on that, because I'm
not going to budge on that at all. And that has nothing to do
with politics. Politics is what's killing America." [2]
[edit] The Angry American song
On March 24, 2001, Keiths father, H.K. Covel, was killed
in a car accident. That event and the September 11, 2001 attacks
prompted Keith to write the song "Courtesy of the Red, White,
& Blue (The Angry American)", a song about his fathers
patriotism and faith in the USA. At first, Keith refused to record
the song and sang it only live at his concerts for military personnel.
The reaction was so strong that the Commandant of the Marine Corps
James L. Jones told Keith it was his duty as an American citizen
to record the song.[2] As the lead single from the album Unleashed
(2002), "Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue" peaked
at number 1 over the weekend of July 4.
Toby Keith visits with fans during brief breaks in filming the
music video "American Soldier" in hangar 1600 at Edwards
Air Force Base, November 17, 2003.ABC invited Keith to sing "Courtesy
of the Red, White, & Blue" on a patriotic special it
was producing. However, the host of the show, newsman Peter Jennings,
requested that Keith soften the lyrics of the song or choose another
song to sing.[citation needed] Keith refused both of the requests
and did not appear on the special. The rift gave the song a considerable
amount of publicity, which led to many national interviews and
public performances of the song.
[edit] Feud with the Dixie Chicks
Keith had a public feud with the Dixie Chicks over the song "Courtesy
of the Red, White, & Blue", as well as over comments
they made about President George W. Bush on stage during a concert
in London. The lead singer of the Dixie Chicks, Natalie Maines,
publicly stated that Keith's song was "ignorant, and it makes
country music sound ignorant."[3] Keith responded by belittling
Maines' songwriting skills, and by displaying a backdrop at his
concerts showing a doctored photo of Maines with Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein. On May 21, 2003, Maines wore a T-shirt with the
letters FUTK on the front at the Academy of Country Music Awards.
[4] While a spokesperson for the Dixie Chicks said that the acronym
stood for "Friends United in Truth and Kindness," many
including host Vince Gill took it to be a shot at Keith ("Fuck
You Toby Keith"). In August 2003, Keith publicly declared
he was done feuding with Maines 'because he's realized there are
far more important things to concentrate on'.[5] However, he continues
to refuse to say Maines' name, and claims that the doctored photo
was intended to express his feeling that Maines' criticism was
tyrannical and a dictator-like attempt to squelch Keith's free
speech.[6]
In the 2006 film Shut Up and Sing, Maines admitted that the FUTK
shirt was in fact a shot at Toby Keith, after once claiming that
it meant Freedom Understanding Truth and Kindness. In an October
2004 appearance on Real Time with Bill Maher, Maines finally confessed
that it was indeed an obscene shot at Toby Keith, and that she
"thought that nobody would get it."[3]
Toby
Keith
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