Deep Album Cuts Vol. 345: Toby Keith

 








Toby Keith died earlier this week at the age of 62, which caught me a little off guard. Apparently he'd announced that he'd been diagnosed with stomach cancer in 2022, but I either didn't hear about it or didn't realize it was serious, I didn't mention it last year when I praised "Oklahoma Breakdown," his last charting single in his lifetime. 

Toby Keith album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Under The Fall
2. Valentine
3. Life Was A Play (The World A Stage)
4. The Lonely
5. I Don't Understand My Girlfriend
6. She Only Gets That Way With Me
7. Die With Your Boots On
8. I Can't Take You Anywhere
9. Forever Hasn't Got Here Yet
10. Huckleberry
11. Weed With Willie (live) with Scotty Emerick
12. The Critic
13. You Ain't Leavin' (Thank God Are Ya)
14. She Ain't Hooked On Me No More with Merle Haggard
15. Grain Of Salt
16. Wouldn't Wanna Be Ya
17. That Don't Make Me A Bad Guy
18. Ballad Of Balad
19. Get Out Of My Car
20. Tryin' To Fall In Love
21. Haven't Had A Drink All Day
22. Before We Knew They Were Good
23. Good Gets Here
24. Take A Look At My Heart

Tracks 1 and 2 from Toby Keith (1993)
Track 3 from Boomtown (1994)
Track 4 from Blue Moon (1996)
Track 5 from Dream Walkin' (1997)
Tracks 6 and 7 from How Do You Like Me Now?! (1999)
Tracks 8 and 9 from Pull My Chain (2001)
Track 10 from Unleashed (2002)
Track 11 and 12 from Shock'n Y'all (2003)
Tracks 13 and 14 from Honkytonk University (2005)
Track 15 from White Trash With Money (2006)
Track 16 from Big Dog Daddy (2007)
Track 17 from That Don't Make Me A Bad Guy (2008)
Track 18 from American Ride (2009)
Track 19 from Bullets In The Gun (2010)
Track 20 from Clancy's Tavern (2011)
Track 21 from Hope On The Rocks (2012)
Track 22 from Drinks After Work (2013)
Track 23 from 35MPH Town (2015)
Track 24 from Pesos In My Pocket (2021)

I've made lists of my favorite country singles of the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s, and Toby Keith is the artist who has the most significant presence across all three of those lists. He had a really impressive hitmaking run, 20 #1s over 20 years with a long tail of minor hits, and unlike a lot of his contemporaries, wrote most of his hits (the only one he didn't that I'd really put among his very best is "My List"). He was pretty successful in the '90s, but he didn't really become a superstar with crossover recognition until, as I wrote in one of those lists, "How Do You Like Me Now?!" and some other songs with a bigger personality "transformed him from a normal macho country singer to some kind of strutting Johnny Bravo-style caricature of raging id." 

Of course, what really propelled Toby Keith to mainstream fame was the jingoistic post-9/11 anthem "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American)," which turned him into a flag-waving mascot for the George W. Bush administration and the general right wing ugliness of the George W. Bush era. And that's the complicated legacy that a lot of people have focused on this week, but that was really a very small part of his catalog. he had dozens of hits and only one or two others remotely as political. I heard "Courtesy" twice on the radio and a third time from a passing car on Tuesday after the new of Keith's passing broke, but I can barely remember the last time I'd heard the song before that. Usually when I hear Toby Keith on the radio, it's "As Good As I Once Was" or "God Love Her" or "I Love This Bar," and I crank those songs up every time. 

Keith's willingness to play the pro-war heel made him a pretty divisive figure, and he got plenty of bad press. He responded to that on Shock'n Y'all with "The Critic." And as a music critic, I don't really take offense at him stereotyping us as underpaid losers and failed musicians (guilty as charged), he was just joking around. Shock'n Y'All also featuring two live bonus tracks, labeled "bus songs" on the back cover of the album, because they were more playful 'adult' songs that Keith and his band enjoyed playing on the tour bus that weren't necessarily ready for commercial radio. One of those tracks, "Weed With Willie," was the most significant non-single in Keith's live repertoire, and it was one of the songs reprised when he released The Bus Songs in 2017, along with "The Critic" and "The Ballad Of Balad" and "Get Out Of My Car." 

I tried to pick songs that really showed Keith's range, though. The guitar leads on "She Only Gets That Way With Me," the tempo changes on "You Ain't Leavin' (Thank God Are Ya)," the wit of "I Can't Take You Anywhere," the vulnerability of "The Lonely." Several of these songs could have been huge hits if they were released as singles, especially "Grain Of Salt." And Keith's final album featured a cover of one of my favorite John Prine deep cuts after Prine's death. 

On Tuesday, I tweeted a story from Marc Eliot's Merle Haggard bio The Hag from about a decade after Keith and Haggard recorded "She Ain't Hooked On Me No More" together. Two months before Haggard died in 2016, he was still trying to soldier on and play concerts, and at his second-to-last show in Vegas, Toby Keith stopped by to say hello. Haggard asked him to be ready to step in, and after four songs he couldn't continue, so Toby Keith came out and sang Haggard's songs for him for the rest of the show. I think that's a great testament to Keith's real legacy, his talent and his knowledge of country history and his willingness to step up at a moment's notice, that's how I wanna remember him. 
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