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TOBY KEITH

BUY TOBY KEITH TICKETS
Toby Keith was born Toby Keith Covel on July 8, 1961, in
Clinton,
Okla. The family moved to
Oklahoma City when Keith was young, and it
was there he became interested in the musicians who worked in his
grandmother's supper club. He got his first guitar
at age 8, but it would be years before Keith would pursue music as a career.
At 6-feet-4 inches, Keith worked in the oil industry and played defensive end
with the Oklahoma City Drillers United States Football League (USFL) team.
In
1984, he turned to music full time, playing the honky-tonk circuit in
Oklahoma and Texas
with the band Easy Money. A demo tape made the rounds in Nashville, but there were no takers. After
catching a show in Oklahoma,
Mercury Records President Harold Shedd signed him to Mercury Records. His
1993 debut single, "Should've Been a Cowboy," went to No. 1 on the
Billboard country singles chart, and his self-titled debut album was
certified platinum.
When
Shedd left Mercury for Polydor Records, Keith went with him. He released a
second album, Boomtown, in 1994. The gold-selling collection produced the No.
1 hit "Who's That Man" and the Top 5 hit "You Ain't Much
Fun." The platinum-selling Blue Moon followed in 1996, featuring
introspective tunes like "Does That Blue Moon Ever Shine on You"
and "Me Too."
When Polydor closed its
Nashville
operation, Keith returned to Mercury Nashville, releasing Dream Walkin' in
1997. The bittersweet ballad, "When We Were in Love," went to No.
2, as did a cover version of rocker Sting's divorce ode "I'm So Happy I
Can't Stop Crying." The duet earned the unlikely pair a Grammy
nomination, and Sting joined Keith for a performance on the 1997 CMA Awards
telecast. Keith's
Greatest Hits, Volume I followed in 1998, although its lead single, "Getcha Some," failed to crack the Top 10. (It has
since sold more than 2 million copies.)
Unable
to see eye to eye with Mercury, Keith moved to the fledgling DreamWorks
Nashville label in 1999. There he worked with label head and producer James
Stroud on the studio album How Do You Like Me Now?! The lead single,
"When Love Fades," was a modest hit, but the title cut was a
five-week No. 1 hit. Another single, "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like
This," also went to the top spot on the singles chart for three weeks.
The double-platinum success
of How Do You Like Me Now?! also earned Keith some long-awaited award
nominations. Keith won two Academy
of Country Music awards
in 2000, for male vocalist and album. In 2001, he won his first CMA award,
for male vocalist. His 2001 album, Pull My Chain, produced three No. 1 hits, "I'm Just Talkin' About Tonight," "I Wanna Talk About Me" and "My List." (The latter two spent five
weeks each at No. 1.) He was also nominated for six
Academy of Country Music
awards in 2001, though he didn't
win any.
On March 24, 2001,
Keith's father, H.K. Covel, was killed in a
traffic accident in Oklahoma.
Covel's truck was sideswiped by another
vehicle, which caused his truck to swerve into another lane, where it
collided with a charter bus. Within six months, the events of 9/11 prompted
Keith to write "Courtesy of the Red, White
and Blue (The Angry American)," a
song about his father's patriotism that pulled no
punches. As the lead single from the 2002 album Unleashed, the song peaked at
No. 1 over the Independence Day weekend.
Keith
had been invited to sing the hit during an ABC special hosted by Peter
Jennings, but the offer was rescinded because the song didn't fit the format of the show, according to
Jennings. Keith's fans were in an uproar. Shortly after that, the
Dixie Chicks' lead singer Natalie
Maines told a Los
Angeles newspaper that she considered the song "ignorant" and that "anybody could
write 'boot in your ass,'" a
memorable lyric from that song. Both events made headlines around
the country, and Keith found himself on several news programs, which
introduced him to a more mainstream audience.
The 2002 album
Unleashed sold 3 million copies, due to the feisty "Who's Your Daddy?", the hugely popular Willie Nelson duet "Beer for My Horses" and relentless touring. He also joined Nelson, one
of Keith's heroes, at Farm Aid 2002
in Pittsburgh.
Nominated for numerous
awards, Keith opened the 2003 ACM ceremony with Nelson, singing "Beer for My Horses." Later, toward the end of
the telecast, the Dixie Chicks were beamed in from an Austin,
Texas, performance, with
Maines wearing a T-shirt with the letters "F.U.T.K." When Keith was absent when his name was called
for entertainer of the year, many figured he'd left in anger. But he later remarked that he was on the bus
writing a song with Nelson. Later in the year, he was nominated for seven CMA
awards, but again, won none.
Keith
released the album Shock 'n Y'all
in 2003, and it debuted at No. 1. As of September 2004, he is
still touring on the monster album and is one of THE top names in country
music. And he has the live show to back that claim up!
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KEITH TICKETS AND TOUR INFORMATION
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