Toby Keith
Toby Keith was born in Clinton, Oklahoma, United States on July 8th, 1961 and is the Country Singer. At the age of 63, Toby Keith biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, and networth are available.
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Toby Keith Covel (born July 8, 1961) is an American country singer, guitarist, actor, and record producer.
Keith's first four studio albums, including 1993's Boomtown and 1997's Dream Walkin', as well as a Greatest Hits package for various divisions of Mercury Records before leaving Mercury in 1998.
These albums all received Gold or higher status, and they produced numerous Top Ten singles, including his debut "Should've Been a Cowboy," which topped the country charts and was the most popular country song of the 1990s, as shown by Mr. Should's debut "Should've Been a Cowboy."
According to Broadcast Music Incorporated, Keith's debut single "How Do You Like Me Now?" debuted on DreamWorks Records Nashville in 1998. In late 1999, I was in late 1999.
This song, which was on his 1999 album of the same name, was the top country song of 2000 and one of several chart-toppers during his time on DreamWorks Nashville.
Pull My Chain, Unleashed, and Shock'n Y'all were his next three albums, and all of them were Platinum.
In 2004, a second Greatest Hits box was launched, and Honkytonk University was the result. Keith founded Show Dog Nashville, which later became Show Dog-Universal Music in December 2009.
He has released ten studio albums, including 2006's That Don't Make Me a Bad Guy, 2007's That Don't Make Me a Bad Guy, 2010's Bullets in the Gun, 2011's Hope on the Rocks, 2015's That Don't Make Me a Bad Guy, 2010's The Busty Town, 2013's Hope on the Rocks, 2009's Hope on the Rocks, 2012's Biggest Hits, and the compilation of The Bus -U's
Keith made his acting debut in 2006, appeared in the film Broken Bridges, and co-starred with comedian Rodney Carrington in the 2008 film Beer for My Horses, influenced by his song of the same name. Keith has released 19 studio albums, two Christmas albums, and five compilation albums; a total of over 40 million albums have been sold around the world.
He has charted 61 singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts, with 20 top ten hits and 21 others.
"Beer for My Horses" (a 2003 duet with Willie Nelson) and "As Good as I Once Was" (2006), respectively, were his longest-lived number one hits.
Early life
Keith was born in Clinton, Oklahoma, to Carolyn Joan (née Ross) and Hubert K. Covel, Jr. He has a sister and a brother. Keith and his family lived in Fort Smith, Arkansas, for a few years, but the family migrated to Moore, Oklahoma (a suburb of Oklahoma City) when he was younger. He visited his grandmother in Fort Smith during the summers before the family moved to Moore. Billie Garner's Supper Club in Fort Smith, where Keith became keen on the musicians who came to play. He held odd jobs around the supper club and joined the bandstand to perform with the band. At the age of eight, he bought his first guitar. Keith attended Highland West Junior High and Moore High School, where he played defensive end on the football team after the family moved to Moore.
Keith graduated from Moore High School and spent his time as a derrick hand in the oil fields. He rose to become an operations manager. Keith Webb, Keith Cory, David "Yogi" Vowell, and Danny Smith, with a few others, formed the Easy Money Band, which performed in local bars as he continued to work in the oil industry when he was 20. He would have to leave in the middle of a concert if he had been paged to work in the oil industry at certain times.
The oil industry in Oklahoma in 1982 began to decline rapidly, and Keith soon found himself unemployed. When continuing to perform with his band, he regressed on his football preparations and played defensive end with the semi-pro Oklahoma City Drillers. 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.) He then shifted his attention away from music to music once more. His family and friends were skeptical that he would succeed, but Mike Barnes, T.A., was the subject of a forensic analysis. Brauer and David Saylors) first played the honky-tonk circuit in Oklahoma and Texas.
Personal life
Keith has an honorary degree from Villanova University, which he attended from 1979 to 1980. He aspired to be a petroleum engineer.
Keith is often seen at Oklahoma Sooners games and practices as an avid University of Oklahoma sports fan. He is also a fan of professional wrestling, appearing in front row of numerous WWE shows in Oklahoma, as well as "Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American)" live at the first ever TNA wrestling show on June 19, 2002. He is also a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers football team. He is a Free Will Baptist.
Keith married Tricia Lucus on March 24, 1984. Shelley Covel Rowland (born 1980, adopted by Keith in 1984) and Krystal Keith LaDawn Covel Sandubrae (born September 30, 1985), and one son (Stelen Keith Covel, born 1997). He also has four grandchildren.
Keith's father was killed in a car crash on Interstate 35 on March 24, 2001. The Covel family received $2.8 million for H.K.'s unlawful death on December 25, 2007. Covel. Elias and Pedro Rodriguez, the operators of Rodriguez Transportes of Tulsa, and Republic Western Insurance Coordination, were found guilty because they failed to provide the charter bus with properly working air brakes.
Keith revealed in June 2022 that he had been diagnosed with stomach cancer at the end of the previous year, having undergone chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery for the first six months.
Keith is a fan of Ally's House, a non-profit group in Oklahoma aimed at children with cancer.Of the charity, Keith said:
Keith filmed a PSA for Little Kids Rock, a nationwide charity that helps to restore and revitalize music education in impoverished U.S. public schools.
Forbes estimated Keith's annual income at $53 million in 2015.
Musical career
Keith went to Nashville, Tennessee, where he hung out and busked on Music Row and at a place called Houndogs in the early 1990s. He gave the many record stores in the area copies of a demo tape that the band had made to the many record shops. Keith returned home feeling sad, and there was no interest by any of the record companies, and no one was interested in it. He had promised himself and God that if he was 30 years old, they'd have a recording deal or give up on music as a hobby. When she was traveling on a flight she was on, a flight attendant and admiral of Keith's demo tape gave Harold Shedd, a Mercury Records executive, a copy of his demo tape. Shedd loved what he heard, went to see Keith perform live on the radio and then signed him to a Mercury contract.
"Should've Been a Cowboy," Keith's debut album, "Should've Been a Cowboy," debuted at number one on the United States. Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart debuted in 1993, and it debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 93. This song was the start of his self-titled debut album. "Should've Been a Cowboy" received more than three million spins on radio by the end of the decade, making it the most well-played country song of the 1990s. The album was rated platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for one million copies (originally the B-side of "Should's Been a Cowboy") and "Wish I Didn't Know Now" (both at #5), which followed three more Top 5 hits on the country charts with "He Ain't Worth Missing" (at #5), "A Little Less Talk and a Lot More Action" (at #5) (both at #5) "It is given a production that's a bit too big, clean, shiny, and cavernous for Keith's good," the album's producer said—but not his outsized talent—but not his outsized talent—but not her outsized talent—but not his outsized talent—but not the songs are particularly strong." It also showed the characteristics of Keith's subsequent albums, which he likes. Keith's success prompted him to tour with then-labelmates Shania Twain and John Brannen. In 1993, Keith and Twain appeared in Tracy Lawrence's "My Second Home" music video.
Keith later signed with Polydor Records Nashville and released his second album, Boomtown, in September 1994. This album was also certified platinum by the number one single "Who's That Man." "You Ain't Much Fun" and "Upstairs Downtown" made the top ten, while "Big Ol' Truck" peaked at number 15, with "Upstairs Downtown" and "You Ain't Much Fun" on the top 10, after that. He released his first Christmas album, Christmas to Christmas, in late-1995, via Mercury. The album, which was entirely composed of original songs, had one chart entry in "Santa I'm Right Here," which reached as high as number 50 on Christmas airplay.
Keith's third album Blue Moon debuted in 1996. He was working with A&M Records' short-lived Nashville division. The album received a platinum award and released three singles. "Does That Blue Moon Ever Shine on You," Keith's first album, debuted at number two in 1987. Following it were "A Woman's Touch" at number 6 and "Me Too," his third top-one hit and appearance in March 1997. Keith appeared on The Beach Boys' now out-of-print 1996 album Stars and Stripes Vol. 1 performs a cover of their 1963 hit "Be True to Your School," with the Beach Boys supplying the harmonies and backing vocals.
Keith returned to Mercury in 1997 as a result of a corporate merger. Dream Walkin', James Stroud's first album, was also his first album and co-producer for Keith until 2005. "We're in Love" and a front of Sting's 1996 album "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying" resulted in two consecutive hits. Sting performed duet vocals and played bass guitar on it, and the pair also performed the song at the 1997 Country Music Association awards. The album's title track debuted at number five, while "Double Wide Paradise" debuted at number 40, the album's debut at number 5.
In October 1998, Keith's last Mercury debut was The Greatest Hits Volume One. Twelve of his previous singles and two new songs were included on the album, including "Getcha Some" and "If a Man Answers." Both were released as singles, with "Getcha Some" debuting at number 20 on the charts, but "If a Man Answers" became his first single to miss the Top 40. These two songs were supposed to be released on a studio album, but Mercury executives, dissatisfied with Keith's work, decided to put them on a greatest hits album and asked him to "go work on another album." He began recording two more songs, which the company also rejected, and he wanted to end his deal with the label. Keith co-wrote Shane Minor's debut single "Slave to the Habit" with Chuck Cannon and Kostas after leaving Mercury.
Keith moved to DreamWorks Records' Nashville division in 1999, of which Stroud served as president. "When Love Fades," the label's first appearance, although it did not make it to the top 40. Keith, after seeing the single's poor results, begged and replaced with "How Do You Like Me Now?" he asked. "This was a song he wrote with Chuck Cannon and that had previously been rejected by Mercury, and was an experimental record." It also served as the title track to his first DreamWorks album, How Do You Like Me Now! The song debuted at number one on the country charts for five weeks, becoming his first top 40 pop hit on the Hot 100. According to the Billboard Year-End chart, it was also the top country song of 2000. The album, which was released as platinum, earned a top-five hit on "Country Comes To Town" and another in "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This," as well as another in "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This." It was also Scotty Emerick's first album to feature songs, who would be a regular collaborator of Keith's for the next several albums. This album, according to Steve Huey, "had a rough, brash attitude that gave Keith a greater identity as a performer." Keith received the Best Male Vocalist and Album of the Year awards at the Academy of Country Music in 2001.
Pull My Chain, which came out in August 2001, was the first album to be released on this record. "I'm Just Talking About Tonight," "I Wanta Talk About Me," and "My List" were among the album's three singles, with the former two artists gaining top-ten charts for five weeks. Bobby Braddock's book "I Wanta Talk About Me" demonstrated a country rap following with its spoken-word lyrics. In 2002, the Country Music Association named "My List" as "United of the Year. "This is a bigger, better record than its predecessor's," Erlewine said on Pull My Chain, "with a richer musicality and a more positive sense of humor."
He released the Unleashed album in 2002, which featured four singles. "Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue," Keith wrote in 20 minutes as a reaction to the September 11, 2001 attacks. Keith's father, a United States Army soldier who died in a car accident in March, is referred to in the song.Both this song and "Who's Your Daddy?"
With "Rock You Baby" debuting at number 13, the nation's number one hits, with "Rock You Baby" debuting at number 13. The last single was "Beer for My Horses," a duet with Willie Nelson that spent six weeks at the top of the country charts. It was also Keith's most popular entry on the Hot 100 at number 22 at the time, at number 22. Keith appeared on Scotty Emerick's debut single "I Can't Take You Anywhere," which was previously released by Keith on Pull My Chain in July 2003. Emerick's version of the song was his only top-40 country hit, landing at number 27.Shock'n Y'all, his eighth studio album, was released in November 2003. The album's name is a play on the military word "shock and awe." It was his second album from which all singles debuted: "I Love This Bar," "American Soldier," and "Whiskey Girl." "The Taliban Song" and "Weed With Willie," two live songs recorded with Emerick were also included on the album. The album was released in late 2004 by Greatest Hits 2, which featured three new songs: "Stays in Mexico," "Go with Her," and a version of Inez and Charlie Foxx's "Mockingbird," which was released as a duet with his daughter, Krystal Keith. On the country charts, "Stays in Mexico" was a number three hit, while "Mockingbird" hit number 27.
In early 2005, Keith's last DreamWorks album was Honkytonk University. "Honkytonk U" the lead-off single, followed by "As Good as I Once Was" for six weeks at number 8, and "Big Blue Note" at number 5. DreamWorks Records also stopped operations after the former's introduction.
Keith established Show Dog Nashville on August 31, 2005. It was his first release, his 2006 album White Trash with Money, and the soundtrack to Broken Bridges. In addition, he relegated Stroud as co-producer in favour of Cannon's wife, Lari White. Three songs were released on the album: "Get Drunk and Be Somebody," "A Little Too Late," and "Crash Here Tonight." In 2007, Big Dog Daddy was introduced, with Keith serving as the sole producer. "High Maintenance Woman," "Love Me If You Can," and "Get My Drink On" were among the singles. Keith's first top-one hit since "As Good as I Ever Was" was released more than two years ago. A Classic Christmas album, a two-disc Christmas album, was released later in 2007. Keith completed his Biggest and Badest Tour in 2008. He recorded 35 Biggest Hits, a two-disc compilation containing most of his singles to date, as well as the new song "She's a Hottie," which peaked at number 13.
Keith's book "She Never Cried in Front of Me," which debuted in 2008, was the most popular version of "She Never Cried in Front of Me." That Don't Make Me a Bad Guy was the predecessor to the one on October 28, 2008. "God Love Her," another top-one hit, and "Lost You Anyway," followed it. American Ride, which was ranked no. 1 in its classification category in 2009, has reached another top-tension. Wayman Tisdale, a basketball player and jazz bassist who died in May 2009, was followed by the Top 10 hit "Cryin' for Me (Wayman's Song). "Every Dog Has Its Day" was the album's final track.
Bullets in the Gun were first published on October 5, 2010. Keith's first album not to have a top ten hit, with "Trailerhood" debuting at number 19, followed by the title track and "Somewhere Else" both at number 12. Keith produced the album with session guitarist Kenny Greenberg and recording engineer Mills Logan.
Clancy's Tavern was first opened on October 25, 2011. Keith wrote "Made in America," which went to number one, as well as Bobby Pinson and Scott Reeves. Following it, it was "Red Solo Cup," which had previously been turned into a hit music video. "Red Solo Cup" became Keith's top-peaking crossover after being released as a single, peaking at #15 on the Hot 100. At number six in 2012, the album's last single, "Beers Ago," debuted at number six. The American Country Awards named Keith "Artist of the Decade" in December 2011.
Hope on the Rocks, Keith's 16th album, was released in late 2012. Its only two singles, both of which are top-20 hits, debuted at number 17: "I Like Girls That Drink Beer" debuted at number 17, and the title track debuted at number 18.
He debuted "Drinks After Work," his first single from his seventeenth album, as well as Drinks After Work in mid-2013. "Shut Up and Hold On" is the album's second single.
Keith unveiled "Drunk Americans," the lead single from his eighteenth studio album, 35 MPH Town, in October 2014. Keith performed "35 MPH Town," the album's title track and second single, in April 2015. Keith was also inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2015.
Keith's compilation album The Bus Songs was released in September 2017. The album features twelve songs: two new, five re-recorded, and five that have never been released. "Shitty Golfer" and "Wacky Tobaccy" are two of the album's new songs. In the United States, the president declared that the country has the highest literacy rate in the country. For 11 weeks, the Bus Songs topped the Billboard Comedy Albums chart. On the Billboard 200 chart, it also ranked at number six on the Top Country Albums chart and 38 on the Billboard 200 chart.
Keith appeared on the Brantley Gilbert album "The Worst Country Song of All Time" with Hardy in 2021.
Acting career
Keith appeared in a series of television commercials for Telecom USA's discount long distance telephone service, 10-10-220. While driving Ford cars, he appeared in Ford commercials, performing original songs such as "Ford Truck Man" and "Field Trip (Look Again).
Keith appeared on the first Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (then NWA-TNA) weekly pay-per-view on June 19, 2002, where Jeff Jartt's playing of "Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue" was interrupted by him. He will qualify for the Gold main event later this year, causing suplexing Jartt and excluding him from the competition. When he goes onstage, he can see a clip of the suplex. He appeared in singles action next week, on June 26. He helped Scott Hall defeat Jarrett in singles action.
Keith appeared in Larry the Cable Guy's Comedian Roast in 2009, which aired on March 14, 2009.
When Keith appeared on Comedy Central's The Colbert Bump" he received the "Colbert Bump." He is the only musical artist to have received a five star rating from Stephen Colbert on iTunes. Keith referred to this relationship when he appeared in Colbert's 2008 Christmas special as a hunter. On the Colbert Report's October 27, 2011, Keith made a return appearance as a musical guest.
On October 29, 2011, Keith appeared on Fox Channel's Huckabee with former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee. He performed "Bullets in the Gun" and performed with Huckabee's house band to perform a song at the end of the performance.
Keith appeared on Darci Lynne: My Hometown Christmas in December 2018.
He filmed Broken Bridges, written by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld and directed by Steven Goldmann in the fall of 2005. On September 8, 2006, Paramount/CMT Films' feature film was released. Keith plays Bo Price, a washed-up country musician, in this contemporary tale set in small-town Tennessee. Kelly Preston, Burt Reynolds, Tess Harper, and Lindsey Haun appear in the film.
Keith wrote and appeared in the 2008 film Beer for My Horses, which is based on Keith and Willie Nelson's 2003 hit song.
He had also intended to appear in the film Bloodworth, but he had to cancel later.