Keith Whitley

Singer

Birthday July 1, 1955

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Ashland, Kentucky, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1989-5-9, Goodlettsville, Tennessee, U.S. (33 years old)

Nationality United States

#8118 Most Popular

1840

The Whitley family is of English and Scots-Irish descent and has lived in the Elliott County area since the 1840s.

While Whitley was a teenager in Sandy Hook, he and his friends would pass the time drinking bootleg bourbon and racing their cars down mountain roads at dangerous speeds.

Whitley was once in a car whose driver attempted to round a curve at 120 mph. The car wrecked, killing his friend and almost breaking Whitley's neck.

In another incident, he drove his car off a 120 ft cliff into a frozen river, escaping with only a broken collar bone.

1954

Jackie Keith Whitley (July 1, 1954 – May 9, 1989) was an American country music singer and songwriter.

During his career, he released only two albums but charted 12 singles on the Billboard country charts, and 7 more after his death.

Born in Ashland, Kentucky, Whitley grew up in nearby Sandy Hook, Kentucky.

1969

In 1969, he performed in a musical contest in Ezel, Kentucky, with brother Dwight on five-string banjo.

Ricky Skaggs was also in the contest.

Skaggs and Whitley instantly bonded and subsequently became close friends.

Whitley and Skaggs, both sixteen years old, were discovered in Ft. Gay, West Virginia, by Ralph Stanley, who was 45 minutes late for a gig due to a flat tire.

Stanley opened the door of the club and heard what he thought was the Stanley Brothers playing on a jukebox.

However, it was Whitley and Skaggs, who "sounded just like me and Carter in the early days".

The two soon joined Stanley's band.

1970

He began his career there in 1970, performing in Ralph Stanley's band.

Whitley also played with J.D. Crowe & the New South in the mid-1970s.

During this period, he established himself as one of the most versatile and talented lead singers in bluegrass.

His singing was heavily influenced by Carter Stanley and Lefty Frizzell.

1974

Whitley became lead singer for Stanley in 1974.

1983

Establishing himself as a lead singer in bluegrass music, Whitley moved to Nashville in 1983 and began his recording career there.

Whitley lost his brother Randy in an October 1983 motorcycle accident.

Whitley is known for his neotraditional brand of country popularized by hit artists such as George Strait and Randy Travis.

He moved to Nashville in 1983 to pursue a country music career and soon signed a record deal with RCA Records.

1984

Whitley's first solo album, A Hard Act to Follow, was released in 1984, and featured a more mainstream country style.

While Whitley was working hard to achieve his own style, the songs he produced were inconsistent.

Critics regarded the album as too erratic.

Whitley honed his sound within the next few years for his next album, L.A. to Miami.

1985

L.A. to Miami, released in 1985, would give him his first Top 20 country hit single, "Miami, My Amy".

The song was followed by three more hit songs: "Ten Feet Away", "Homecoming '63", and "Hard Livin'", The album also included "On the Other Hand" and "Nobody in His Right Mind Would've Left Her".

1986

His first Top 20 Country Hit single, "Miami, My Amy", was released in 1986.

"On the Other Hand" was pitched to Whitley before Randy Travis released the song as a single and when Whitley's version wasn't released as a single, Travis released his in 1986, as did George Strait with "Nobody in His Right Mind Would've Left Her".

During his tour to promote L.A. to Miami, he met and began a romantic relationship with country singer Lorrie Morgan.

They were married in November 1986 and had their only child, a son, Jesse Keith Whitley in June 1987.

Whitley also adopted Lorrie's daughter, Morgan, from her first marriage.

1988

In 1988, his first three singles from his studio album Don't Close Your Eyes, the title song, "When You Say Nothing at All" and "I'm No Stranger to the Rain" were number one hits.

1989

Years of alcoholism severely compromised his health and he died of alcohol intoxication in 1989 at his Goodlettsville home at the age of 34.

His later singles, "I Wonder Do You Think of Me", "It Ain't Nothin'", and "I'm Over You", were released after his death.

In 2022, Whitley was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Whitley was born to Faye Ferguson (editor of The Elliott County News) and Elmer Whitley (an electrician) in Ashland, Kentucky, but was raised 46 miles away in Sandy Hook, and attended Sandy Hook High School.

He had two brothers, Randy and Dwight, and a sister, Mary.