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Ridin’ with Toby: Toby Keith’s American Ride

Jul 07, 2016

“Country music was predictable – Toby changed that”: On Toby Keith’s 55th birthday, we’ve revisited his #1 Billboard hit “American Ride” with the song's co-writer Joe West.

With 20 number-one hits on Billboard’s Hot Country chart and 20 albums selling over 40 million units in total, Toby Keith is one of the biggest stars of modern country. We’ve asked producer, songwriter and mixing engineer Joe West to talk about the singer’s place in the evolution of country music, and how he co-wrote one of Toby’s greatest hits, “American Ride.”

Waves: How would you describe Toby Keith’s uniqueness and contribution to modern country music?

Joe West: “Country music was pretty predictable when Toby showed up... He changed all that with his huge persona and in-your-face songs. He had everyone's attention and didn't waste it by not having something to say! I can remember watching my Toby song climb up the charts. They would play ‘American Ride’ every other hour on most country stations – but what I remember most is that in the off-hour they played another one of Toby's hits. So anywhere you went, you would hear a Toby Keith song every hour on every country station! Now that tells you a little bit about his huge place in the format. Huge.

What memories do you have working with Toby in 2009?

“I can kind of remember going to the BMI Awards getting wasted and cornering Toby to pitch him a song at a private after-party at a record executive’s house around 3 a.m. – but that's a story for another time!

“The best memory I have about Toby cutting ‘American Ride’ was him wanting to change the song’s name. Originally it was titled after the NPR radio program ‘This American Life,’ because it memorialized the struggles of growing up in modern America with all of our first-world problems. Toby had put the song on hold for a long time, about two years. (A ‘hold’ is a gentleman's agreement to save a song for a period of time till they decide whether or not they want to record it.) He owns a record label, and at the time he was also producing and starring in movies like Beer for My Horses. I assumed that maybe he wanted to place it on a soundtrack or have one of his artists cut it.

“But he ended up calling and asking if he could cut it himself, and wanted to know if it would be okay to retitle the song ‘American Ride’ due to his relationship with Harley Davidson and affinity for motorcycles. My response was, ‘You can call it “Cotton Candy Surprise” as long as you record it and put it on the radio!’ He did, and it ended up being my fastest-rising Billboard #1 – 15 weeks! I remember the day I found out that it would be his first single off the record. I was writing with an artist on Warner Bros., and then 15 weeks later when I got the call to tell me that it went to #1 I was back writing the follow up appointment with the same artist! It was surreal…

What was it like to collaborate with Toby on “American Ride”? Can you tell us about the songwriting and recording process?

“I actually fought with my co-writer Dave Pahanish about demoing that song. I thought it was a waste of time and effort, because it was so out there that ‘no one would ever cut it.’ I was wrong. I remember really going for it with the demo. It has crazy backwards electric guitars, reverse reverbs, and drastically out-of-tune group vocals on the ‘can’t even sing a note’ part. It was definitely over the top... I remember feeling like it wasn’t very good and I should go back and work on it. I didn’t. Funny enough, some of those hooks made it onto the final version.

Producer/songwriter Joe West: “It was ironic to see my song become part of the circus that it was documenting.”

“From a songwriting perspective, we wrote the song right when YouTube was exploding. There was this one video of a group of girls beating up another girl and one of the bully girls taped the whole thing on her phone. It was horrible, but I couldn't turn away. Such a strange feeling. It was that feeling that eventually became ‘American Ride.’ Those girls were one example of many in a culture that had fallen off the deep end and pulled the silent majority along with it. Voyeurs, not judging... Just watching… Consuming… Not good... Not bad... Not Democrat or Republican... Just a statement of accounts.”

When the song became such a hit, how did you experience its success and the reactions it got?

“I remember being up late one night watching CNN, and they were running a segment on the ‘spill a cup of coffee, make a million dollars’ lady from my song. In the background they were playing ‘American Ride,’ and over that the anchor was talking about the song and how it made that lady a celebrity for all the wrong reasons. It was ironic to see my song become part of the circus that it was documenting. ‘American Ride’ was already a multi-week Billboard #1, but it was at that moment that it really hit me how big the song was!”

Toby Keith’s “American Ride” tour bus

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