Krystal Keith
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No matter how compelling Krystal Keith's voice, songwriting, self-titled EP and debutalbum Whiskey & Lace may be, there's no getting around the shadow of a musical superstarin the room. Not that she'd want to, of course.
Krystal's father Toby contributed several songsand co-produced the project with Mark Wright. "You can't have a better mentor," she says."As a songwriter, as a vocalist – and he's also my dad, so I get the best of all worlds wrappedup in one person.
"The concern, however, is that the uncommon opportunity and access afforded thedaughter of a music icon could obscure the emergence of a truly remarkable new artist. Becausewhat's most noteworthy about Krystal isn't the artist's lineage, but her range.
Vocally, to be sure,but it's much more than that. Put simply, her music’s breadth reveals her to be incredibly adeptin ways rarely seen on debut efforts. And that speaks to an amazing amount of passion,preparation and patience – traits that define Krystal Keith as a viable artist in her own right.
In its earliest days, Krystal's desire to be a performer exceeded her ability. "I don’tremember a time when I didn’t sing," she says. "My sister likes to tell stories about me singingat the top of my lungs and points out, 'That was before you could sing good.
' She had to learnhow to sing harmony just so she could hear herself over me. But I was always a little ham andsang pretty much everywhere I went."There are pictures of me as a three-year-old throwing a fit because my mom wouldn’tlet me onstage with my dad, who was doing a Fourth of July BBQ show near our home inOklahoma," she continues.
"So they got me onstage and I was immediately freaked out whenI saw all the people. I think I just wanted to sing with my dad, more than getting in front of anaudience. But music was such a big thing in our household, always a part of my life and alwaysthe path I was on.
"More than a general direction, however, music was a diligently pursued focus. "I startedwriting music when I was nine because I was taught that not everyone can perform and makeit as a singer," she says.
"I started singing in competitions when I was 13 and did a lot of localand regional competitions. And I recorded my first demo when I was 17, just to get used to beingin the studio, working with studio musicians and working in a vocal booth.
"Krystal made her national television debut in prime time as a teenager, singing"Mockingbird" with her father on a 2004 awards show. Despite widespread acclaim forher vocal abilities, she delayed the artist career she'd been working toward her whole life.
"My parents really wanted me to graduate college, and my dad said he'd help me get startedat that point," she explains. "So I went to the University of Oklahoma and got a degreein Communications with a Business emphasis.
After graduation, I went full-time into workingon my album."The process only furthered her musical growth. "I’ve been songwriting for a long time,but only in the last couple years have I started co-writing," she says.
"It's a new challenge I'menjoying, and I've gotten a song out of every session I've done, which is rare. I’ve been writingwith some of the most amazing, prolific songwriters in Nashville – Rodney Clawson, ChrisTompkins, Craig Wiseman, Bobby Pinson, Nathan Chapman and more.
After writing solo forso long, having another creative soul to bounce ideas off of is a great experience."Working with producers Mark Wright (Gary Allan, Lee Ann Womack) and her fathermay have actually advanced her individuality.
"As a new artist, I might have been intimidatedby another producer," she says. "It might have kept me from being as vocal about what I wanted.But my dad gave me the creative freedom to see my vision through.
We actually had similarviews on what we wanted to do."And I love working with Mark Wright. He brings another perspective, and he and mydad work hand-in-hand. They bring the best out in each other, which in turn brings the best outin me.
Mark has so much experience and knowledge to share and gets so excited about hisprojects – I turn into a sponge around him."Revealing a musical maturity rarely seen, her debut EP (as well as her upcoming albumWhiskey & Lace), shows Krystal to be equally at home on the sunny, grooving celebration "Doin'It" and the organ-accented shuffle of "Can't Buy You Money," and she easily carries the surgingand ebullient "What Did You Think I'd Do.
"On the EP, she also includes one of the co-written songs – a number that also revealssome artistic maturity – with "Daddy Dance With Me." A surprise gift for her father on herwedding day, the song gives a bride's-eye-view of the reception tradition.
"It was a complete surprise," Krystal says of the song she wrote with Mica Roberts andSonya Rutledge for her own wedding. "I wanted a song that honored my dad and was somethingspecial on my wedding day.
So I wrote and recorded it behind his back. The idea was to havea song that no bride and father had ever danced to before; it was my gift to him."Krystal's comfort with such a wide range of material comes from an appreciation of theclassics.
"I grew up on Patsy Cline, Skeeter Davis, KT Oslin and Willie Nelson," she says."I'm not sure I heard much current music until I got old enough to have my own car and radio.We had a vinyl player and every day I listened to the Big Bopper’s 'Chantilly Lace' probablyseven times.
I listened to every Patsy Cline song at least every other day. I spent a ton of timeat my grandmother’s house listening to her old 8-track player long after those were a thing."The application of those influences, her experience, and undeniable talent have resultedin an EP and album that are impossible to dismiss as vanity projects.
"I know there are goingto be people who only see me as Toby’s daughter, and I’m prepared for those criticisms becauseI’m really confident that the album and my work ethic will speak louder," she says.
"ObviouslyI have an amazing opportunity to be on a great label and work with amazing people. I don't takethat for granted or apologize for it, but I also hope people will be open-minded enough to listenand base their judgments on the music.
I have faith that most people will be pleasantlysurprised."
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