| ROBERT EARL KEEN Biography:
Among the large contingent of talented songwriters who emerged in
Texas in the 1980s and 1990s, Robert Earl Keen struck an unusual
balance between sensitive story-portraits ("Corpus Christi Bay") and
raucous barroom fun ("That Buckin' Song"). These two song types in
Keen's output were unified by a mordant sense of humor that strongly
influenced the early practitioners of what would become known as
alternative country music. Keen, the son of an oil executive father and
an attorney mother, is a native of Houston. His parents enjoyed both
folk and country music, and his own style would land between those
genres. Keen wrote poetry while he was in high school, but it wasn't
until he went to journalism school at musically fertile Texas A&M that
he learned to play the guitar. He and Lyle Lovett became friends and
co-wrote a song, "This Old Porch," which both later recorded.
Keen made a splash in Austin with his debut album, No Kinda Dancer,
self-financed in 1984 for $4500. He moved to Nashville during the heady
experimentalism of the 1980s that saw Lovett and k.d. lang hit the
country scene, but he soon returned to Austin. Texas landscapes and
residents provided him with creative inspiration, as his second album,
West Textures, made clear. That album yielded one of Keen's
signature numbers, an ambitious crime-spree song called "The Road Goes
on Forever."
By then signed to Sugar Hill, Keen recorded a live album shortly
after West Textures but waited several years to release a studio
follow-up, 1993's A Bigger Piece of Sky. After that album (which
contained "Corpus Christi Bay") came Gringo Honeymoon (1994), which
merged Keen's story songs with the emerging sounds of alt-country. Gurf
Morlix, who later produced albums for both Keen and Lucinda Williams,
played guitar. A young Gillian Welch provided harmony vocals.
Once again, after taking his career to a new stage, Keen recorded a
live album No. 2 Live Dinner, (1996) and took time to accumulate new
material. The 1997 album Picnic, his first for the Arista Texas
label, again moved in the direction of alternative country, featuring
Keen in a duet with the Cowboy Junkies' Margo Timmins, while 1998's
Walking Distance featured sparer textures. Whatever production style
surrounded his songs, Keen's musical personality seemed consistent, and
his live shows, widely known thanks to a touring schedule that often
approached 200 dates a year in the 1990s, grew organically, in depth and
control.
In the early 2000s Keen signed with the Lost Highway label and
released the album Gravitational Forces (2001). He also devoted time to
his influential annual concert series and talent festival, Texas
Uprising, which took place at several venues around Texas and the Far
West. Farm Fresh Onions (2003) and What I Really Mean (2005) were
released on Koch.
The Rose Hotel was released in 2009, followed by Ready for
Confetti in 2011.
website:
www.RobertEarlKeen.com |

Robert Earl Keen: "What I Really Mean":
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