|
Jackie Keith
Whitley
Jackie Keith Whitley was
born on July 1, 1954, in Sandy Hook, KY. He learned to
play the guitar at the age of 6 and appeared on Buddy
Starcher’s regional TV show at age 8. In 1969, Whitley
entered a musical contest with his brother in Ezell,
Kentucky, and there he met Ricky Skaggs; they were
instantly great friends. Skaggs and Whitley were later
discovered by Ralph Stanley while playing as an opening
act for the Clinch Mountain Boys Band. Upon hearing
them, Stanley hired them, and for two summers Whitley
and Skaggs played for Stanley until Whitley left to work
with Carl Jackson in 1972. Whitley came back to Stanley
in 1974, this time as the lead vocalist.
Throughout the mid
seventies, Whitley also performed with J.D. Crowe & The
New South. His major influences were Carter Stanley and
Lefty Frizzell. In the early 1980’s, Whitley moved to
Nashville to pursue his country music career. Soon
after, he signed with RCA Records. His first album with
RCA, was titled “A Hard Act To Follow”. During
the next four years, he was able to hone in on his own
sound.
His next album, “L.A. to
Miami”, was released in 1986, and gained him his
first top 20 hit single, “Miami, My Amy”. There were
three more hit singles from the “L.A. to Miami”
album, “Ten Feet Away”, “Homecoming ‘63”, and “Hard
Livin’”. While on tour to promote “L.A. to Miami”,
Whitley met and fell in love with Lorrie Morgan. They
were married in 1986, and in June 1987, their son Jessie
Keith Whitley was born. Whitley also adopted Lorrie’s
daughter Morgan from her first marriage.
In 1987, while in the
middle of recording, Whitley felt that the songs he was
recording were not up to his standard, so he asked to
shelf the 15 songs. He then asked if he could be more
involved with the songs and the production of them. His
next album, “Don’t Close Your Eyes”, was very
well received when released in 1988. The title track as
well as “When You Say Nothing at All” and “I’m No
Stanger To The Rain” charted at #1. “I’m No Stranger To
The Rain” earned Whitley his first CMA award as a solo
artist.
Whitley approached Sony
Music Nashville Chairman Joe Galante and asked him to
release “I Never Go Around Mirrors” as a radio single in
1989. Galante was fond of the flexibility that the song
provided but suggested that Whitley record something
else that was more modern and upbeat. So he recorded “I
Wonder, Do You Think of Me”, which was his next album to
be released.
On May 9, 1989, Keith
Whitley’s voice was silenced; however his influence on
the world of country music has long since survived. His
last album, I Wonder Do You Think of Me produced
two #1 hits. The title track and “It Ain’t Nothin’. Two
new songs written by Whitley were added to a compilation
album called “Greatest Hits”. Lorrie Morgan
re-recorded “Til A Tear Becomes A Rose”, and released it
as duet. It reached #13 and won the CMA for Best Vocal
Collaboration in 1990.
RCA released a compilation
of clips and interviews as well as some previously
unreleased material titled “Kentucky Bluebird”. The duet
with Earl Thomas Conley titled “Brotherly Love” rose to
#2 in late 1991.
In 1994, Morgan organized
Whitley’s friends and big names in country music at the
time and recorded a tribute album to Keith, selling over
500,000 copies.
Keith Whitley continues to impact the
lives of many other country artists and fans alike. His
honest and heartfelt music will forever be one of
Kentucky’s greatest treasures. |