Keith Sykes (born October 24, 1948) is an American singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer. More than 100 of Sykes' songs have been recorded by John Prine, Rosanne Cash, The Judds, Jerry Jeff Walker, and George Thorogood, although he may be best known for co-writing "Volcano", the title track of Jimmy Buffett's 1979 album.[1]
Keith Sykes | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Murray, Kentucky, U.S. | October 24, 1948
Genres | Folk, Americana |
Occupation(s) | Singer, songwriter |
Years active | 1968–present |
Labels | Vanguard, Midland, Backstreet, Memphis, Oh Boy, Syren, Aimless |
Website | keithsykes |
Sykes has released at least fifteen albums including I'm Not Strange, I'm Just Like You, and It Don't Hurt to Flirt, His television debut was performing "B.I.G.T.I.M.E" as a musical guest on Saturday Night Live in 1980. He owns and operates a recording studio, The Woodshed, as well as a production company and several publishing companies. The RIAA has certified that recordings of his songs have sold more than 25 million copies worldwide.[2]
Career
edit1960s–1970s and Jimmy Buffett
editAfter hitchhiking to the Newport Folk Festival in 1967, Sykes saw Arlo Guthrie perform "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" and was inspired to pursue music as a full-time career.[3] Sykes' first job in music was performing at a Holiday Inn in downtown Charleston, South Carolina after auditioning with "Alice's Restaurant Massacre".[4] He continued to perform at Holiday Inns until August 1968, when he learned about the College Coffee House Circuit in New York. He auditioned, was accepted to perform, and moved to New York City. He toured colleges and coffeehouses across the U.S., playing about 75 dates a year. In New York Sykes met and befriended songwriters Jerry Jeff Walker, Emmylou Harris, John Prine, Kris Kristofferson, Gary White, and Loudon Wainwright III. Sykes signed with Vanguard Records, which released his first two albums, his debut self-titled album in 1970, and his second album 1-2-3 in 1972.
Occasionally visiting his management's office in Coconut Grove a neighborhood in Miami bordering Biscayne Bay. Sykes traveled from Coconut Grove to Key West in 1972. There he met singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett and developed a friendship and career with him. Buffett recorded two songs from Sykes' third album The Way That I Feel for his 1978 certified-platinum album Son of a Son of a Sailor.[5] In January 1979, Kris Kristofferson and Rita Coolidge asked Sykes to attend an event for UNICEF in New York City. It was there that Buffett asked Sykes to join his touring and recording band, The Coral Reefers. Sykes became the utility guitar player in The Coral Reefer Band for Buffett's 1979 tours, which included the Volcano Tour.[6]
1980s and Saturday Night Live
editAfter recording the Volcano album in Montserrat in the Caribbean, Sykes recorded I'm Not Strange, I'm Just Like You, his third studio album, which was released by the independent label Memphis Records. After the album became a hit locally in 1980, Tom Petty's Backstreet Records released it. The song was on the Billboard charts for 11 weeks.[7] Recorded at Ardent Studios[6] in Memphis, I'm Not Strange includes "B.I.G.T.I.M.E.," which Sykes performed as the musical guest on Saturday Night Live[7] and was recorded by George Thorogood.
In 1982 Backstreet Records released It Don't Hurt To Flirt, which featured the single "In Between Lies". The single did not hit and Sykes left the label.[8] Sykes recorded two more albums on his own independent label Memphis Records, Play X Play (1983) and Fun Rockin' (1984).
Sykes stopped touring in 1986 in order to focus on writing, publishing, and producing. During that time, Sykes signed Memphis songwriter John Kilzer to his publishing company Keith Sykes Music. He was the driving force behind Kilzer's deal with Geffen Records. Sykes is also credited with the discovery of renowned singer-songwriter Todd Snider. After receiving a cassette tape from the young, then-unknown Snider in the mail, Sykes invited him to Memphis and was solely responsible for landing Snider his first recording contract on Margaritaville Records.[9]
1990s and Beale Street Songwriters Series
editIt's About Time was released in1992. It was Sykes' first solo album in close to a decade and became known as a "songwriter's record." The album was released on John Prine's independent record label Oh Boy Records and was followed by another year on the road. During the tour Sykes played Mountain Stage, Nashville Now, and many more shows with Prine.
In the fall of 1993, Sykes made a deal with the renowned publisher Carlin International and built The Woodshed Recording Studio. He recorded all his publishing company's demos there in addition to numerous indy albums and tracks. From 1993 to 2003, he hosted a popular songwriting series on Memphis' iconic Beale Street. The series showcased numerous acclaimed songwriters including folk icons Steve Earle and Guy Clark, Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame writers Richard Leigh and Roger Cook, and then-newcomers Rivers Rutherford and Jimmy Davis.[10]
Teaming up with Dallas businessman and investor Kelcy Warren in 1997, Sykes began to expand the work of his Woodshed recording studio and opened new publishing companies. The two formed a new label, Syren Records, which released Sykes' next two albums, rocker Advanced Medication for the Blues in 1998 and Americana-friendly Don't Count Us Out in 2001 which features duets with friends like Iris DeMent, John Prine, Rodney Crowell, and Susan Marshall.
2000s – present
editAfter opening a tour for Todd Snider in late 2000, Sykes was inspired to return to performing full-time, a move he has described as "the right move at the right time." He continued to write and record, releasing All I Know for MadJack Records' in 2004 and Let It Roll for Fat Pete Records in 2006. In 2008 Sykes released the album Country Morning Music, produced by Todd Snider and Peter Cooper. In 2011, Sykes' blues album, Bucksnort Blues, was released on KSM Entertainment. KSME released a "best-of" album in 2012 called 20 Most Requested featuring songs like a Prine co-write "You Got Gold," a heartfelt autobiographical ballad "Broken Home," and Jimmy Buffett hit "Volcano."
Known as a "troubadour of Trop Rock,"[3] Sykes released a six-song EP called Songs From A Little Beach Town in 2016; it is inspired by time that Sykes was in Port Aransas, Texas. The album was recorded in Nashville by engineer and producer Brent Maher (The Judds, Kenny Rogers, and Willie Nelson) and released in 2016. The single "Come As You Are Beach Bar" hit No. 1 on Radio A1A's TropRock Top 40 for seven weeks,[11] and "The Best Day" was first on the charts in August 2016. It reached No. 3. "Coast of Marseilles" hit No. 1 on the Trop Rock Chart in February 2018.[12]
Two of Sykes' co-writes, "Volcano" and "Coast of Marseilles," are featured in the 2018 Broadway musical "Escape to Margaritaville."[13] The Tree of Forgiveness, John Prine's first album in 13 years, was released in 2018. The album contained "No Ordinary Blue", a song by Prine and Sykes written in the mold of "You Got Gold" and "Long Monday".[14]
Personal life
editBorn in Murray, Kentucky, Sykes grew up in Memphis, Tennessee. At 17 years old, he purchased his first guitar for $20 at a pawn shop on Memphis' famed Beale Street. After years of traveling, he eventually returned to Memphis and reconnect with his childhood crush, Jerene Rowe. They married in 1976 and currently live in Fayette County outside of Memphis.
Filmography
editSykes made his acting debut as the lead character in the 1972 cult film Summer Soldiers,[15] directed by Japanese avant-garde filmmaker Hiroshi Teshigahara (Woman in the Dunes). Set during the Vietnam War, the film depicts a Vietnam veteran (Sykes) who deserts from the US Army and is living on the fringe of Japanese society.[16] Sykes filmed for nine weeks in Tokyo, Kyoto, Hiroshima, and other surrounding cities. The original Japanese title of the film is Samâ sorujâ.
In 2017, Sykes announced that he was writing a screenplay titled Horses & Me.[3]
Awards
editSykes was honored with a Brass Note on the Beale Street Walk of Fame in 2016.
Discography
editStudio albums
editYear | Album | Chart Peak | Label | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Billboard 200 | Trop Rock 40 | |||
1969 | Keith Sykes | Vanguard Records | ||
1970 | 1-2-3 | |||
1977 | The Way That I Feel | Midland International Records | ||
1980 | I’m Not Strange, I’m Just Like You | 147 | Backstreet Records | |
1982 | It Don't Hurt to Flirt | |||
1983 | Play X Play | Memphis Records | ||
1984 | Fun Rockin’ | |||
1992 | It's About Time | Oh Boy Records | ||
1998 | Advanced Medication for the Blues | Syren Records | ||
2001 | Don't Count Us Out | |||
2004 | All I Know | Madjack Records | ||
2006 | Let It Roll | Fat Pete Records | ||
2008 | Country Morning Music | Aimless Records | ||
2011 | Bucksnort Blues | KSM Entertainment | ||
2016 | Songs From A Little Beach Town | 1 |
Compilation albums
editYear | Album | Chart Peak | Label |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Retrospective Vol. 1 | Syren Records | |
2012 | 20 Most Requested | KSM Entertainment |
Songwriting credits
editYear | Artist | Title | Chart Peak | Album | Co-writer(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hot 100 | Adult
Contemporary | |||||
1969 | Jerry Jeff Walker | "About Her Eyes" | Five Years Gone | |||
1971 | The Wilburn Brothers | "I Wish I Could See You" | Sing Your Heart Out Country Boy | |||
1972 | McKendree Spring | "Hobo Lady" | 3 | |||
"Train To Dixie" | Tracks | |||||
"Shoot Me" | ||||||
1976 | "Clown" | Too Young To Feel This Old | ||||
"Oh, What A Feeling" | ||||||
Jerry Jeff Walker | "Some Day I'll Get Out of These Bars | It's A Good Night For Singin' | Richard Gardner | |||
"Very Short Time" | ||||||
1978 | "I'm Not Strange" | Jerry Jeff | ||||
Jimmy Buffett | "Coast of Marseilles" | Son of a Son of a Sailor | ||||
"The Last Line" | ||||||
1979 | "Volcano" | 66 | 43 | Volcano | Jimmy Buffett, Harry Daily | |
1980 | Rodney Crowell | "Oh, What A Feeling" | But What Will the Neighbors Think | |||
Rosanne Cash | "Right Or Wrong" | Right Or Wrong | ||||
"Take Me, Take Me" | ||||||
1981 | "Rainin'" | Seven Year Ache | ||||
"Only Human" | ||||||
Guy Clark | "Country Morning Music" | Heartworn Highways soundtrack | ||||
Rodney Crowell | "Just Wanna Dance" | Rodney Crowell | ||||
1983 | Mitch Ryder | "B.I.G.T.I.M.E." | Never Kick a Sleeping Dog | |||
1984 | Sissy Spacek | "If You Could Only See Me Now" | Hangin' Up My Heart | |||
1986 | Rodney Crowell | "Let Freedom Ring" | Street Language | Rodney Crowell | ||
"Stay (Don't Be Cruel)" | ||||||
John Prine | "Love, Love, Love" | German Afternoons | John Prine | |||
1990 | Rosanne Cash | "Portrait" | Interiors, The Full Sessions | Rosanne Cash | ||
The Judds | "This Country's Rockin'" | Love Can Build a Bridge | Naomi Judd, Robert Johnson | |||
1991 | John Prine | "You Got Gold" | The Missing Years | John Prine | ||
"Everybody Wants to Feel Like You" | ||||||
1992 | Chris Bell | "Stay With Me" | I Am the Cosmos | |||
1993 | Rodney Crowell | "Talking to A Stranger" | Greatest Hits | Rodney Crowell | ||
1995 | "Just Say Yes" | Jewel of the South | ||||
Guy Clark | "Shut Up and Talk to Me" | Dublin Blues | Guy Clark, Susanna Clark | |||
1998 | Jerry Jeff Walker | "Those Were The Days" | Cowboy Boots & Bathin' Suits | |||
1999 | George Thorogood | "B.I.G.T.I.M.E." | Half a Boy/Half a Man | |||
Guy Clark | "Be Gone Forever" | Cold Dog Soup | Anna McGarrigle | |||
2001 | Jerry Jeff Walker | "It Don't Matter" | Gonzo Stew | Jerry Jeff Walker, John Inmon | ||
2002 | Guy Clark | "She Loves to Ride Horses" | The Dark | Guy Clark | ||
2005 | John Prine | "Long Monday" | Fair & Square | John Prine | ||
Jed and Kelley | "Lavender Blue" | Lose To Win | ||||
2007 | Eric Gales | "Honey in the Comb | The Psychedelic Underground | Eric Gales | ||
Sunny Sweeney | "Lavender Blue" | Heartbreaker's Hall of Fame | ||||
2013 | Jed Zimmerman | "Back Home Down in Memphis" | Shedlight | Jed Zimmerman | ||
2017 | Max Gomez | "Make It Me" | Me & Joe | Max Gomez | ||
2018 | John Prine | "No Ordinary Blue" | The Tree of Forgiveness | John Prine |
Producer credits
editYear | Artist | Album |
---|---|---|
1988 | John Kilzer | Memory in the Making
|
1996 | Tommy Tutone | Nervous Love
|
1999 | Mason Ruffner | You Can't Win
|
2001 | Nancy Apple | Outside The Lines
|
2003 | Nancy Apple | Shoulda Lied About That
|
2005 | Jed And Kelly | Lose To Win
|
2009 | Nancy Apple | Shine
|
2014 | Matt Hoggett | Workaholic in Recovery
|
2016 | Double Dee | Adjust The Sails
|
2021 | Konner James | Konner James Radio
|
References
edit- ^ "Keith Sykes Interview – A Songwriting Icon". ourkindofmusic.com. Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ "Keith Sykes " MADJACK Records". madjackrecords.com. Retrieved February 5, 2018.
- ^ a b c Davis, Jesse. "Tramp-Rock Troubador". Memphis Flyer. Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ "RSVP Magazine July 2015". Issuu. Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ Eng, Steve (October 15, 1997). Jimmy Buffett: The Man from Margaritaville Revealed. St. Martin's Press. pp. 300–. ISBN 978-0-312-16875-9. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
- ^ Inc, Nielsen Business Media (December 26, 1981). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.
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has generic name (help) - ^ "SNL Season 06 Episode 03 - Ellen Burstyn, Aretha Franklin, Keith Sykes". NBC. Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ Audio. Radio Magazine. 1982.
- ^ Snider, Todd (April 22, 2014). I Never Met a Story I Didn't Like: Mostly True Tall Tales. Hachette Books. pp. 85–. ISBN 978-0-306-82260-5. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
- ^ "Music". memphisflyer.com. Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ "Radio A1A 'Trop Rock Music for the Road To Paradise'". Radio A1A "Trop Rock Music for the Road To Paradise". Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ "Radio A1A 'Trop Rock Music for the Road To Paradise'". Radio A1A "Trop Rock Music for the Road To Paradise". Retrieved February 12, 2018.
- ^ Green, Jesse (March 15, 2018). "Review: 'Escape to Margaritaville,' Where Work Is a Dirty Word". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
- ^ "Listen to John Prine's New Song, "Summer's End," From Upcoming Album, "The Tree of Forgiveness"". Nash Country Daily. February 8, 2018. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
- ^ Teshigahara, Hiroshi (March 25, 1972), Summer Soldiers, Keith Sykes, Reisen Ri, Kazuo Kitamura, retrieved March 26, 2018
- ^ "Summer Soldiers". Time Out London. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
- ^ "John Kilzer Memory in the Making Chart History". Billboard. Archived from the original on January 17, 2019. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
- ^ "John Kilzer Red Blue Jeans Chart History". Billboard. Archived from the original on January 17, 2019. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
- ^ "John Kilzer Green, Yellow, Red Chart History". Billboard. Archived from the original on January 17, 2019. Retrieved January 28, 2018.