New at Noon – Randall King “She Gone”

randall-king

Humble beginnings, a cultivated work ethic and the influences of classic country legends, synchronized together in perfect harmony, make up singer-songwriter from the West Texas Plains, Randall King.
Growing up a fourth generation hay-hauler, many of King’s songs are written and inspired by his deep southern heritage and family roots.
King was raised listening to the rich and soulful, classic country voices of Keith Whitley, Garth Brooks, George Strait and Alan Jackson, to name a few, which helped create King’s musical style into what many have described as neo-traditional country. “Randall King remains to the heart and soul of country music, but no doubt brings his own unique brand to the genre,” says hit songwriter Mark Nesler.
“Ever since I was little I wanted to sing – I would never shut up – My dad one day finally kicked me to the back of the suburban because I wouldn’t stop,” recalls King of his younger days. “He said, ‘son we love you singing, but just be quiet for a minute and listen to the song’ and I said okay. After a little bit of doing that he told my mom, ‘if he doesn’t shut up we might as well get him a guitar and put him in some lessons.’ And that what’s dad did. I was 7 when I got my first guitar.”
He soon began taking lessons from Western Swing Music Society of the Southwest Hall of Famer, Rick Sudduth, who was involved in a tragic accident at the cotton gin where he worked nearly 51 years earlier that severed his middle and ring fingers. The now retired musician, whose injury prevents him from teaching by example, used charts to explain finger placement and technique during King’s lessons. King attributes being exposed to Sudduth’s determination and persistence as the reason why he started and continued to pursue a career as a musician.
Starting his college career at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas as a business major and a music minor, King quickly learned that to be successful you need to study what you’re passionate about. “I was talking to someone and they said, ‘if you’re going to minor in something in college, you might as well make it your major, because if you’re not going to go all in on your major that you think you need a backup plan, that needs to be your major.’ I majored in business and minored in music at Tech for about a year and a half and then I said, ‘I’m done,’ and I just went all in on music.”
Shortly following his enrollment at Tech, King transferred to South Plains College, one of the most prestigious audio engineering schools, where he changed his major to Sound Engineering. King’s self-titled new album, which he wrote and produced almost entirely himself, stands as a testament to the craft he has honed since college.
“It’s really stressful [producing your own record], because you have to keep so much in mind when you go into the studio. As an artist you want to express yourself – you wanna let loose – do some creative fun things, but if you’re not careful you’ll get too artsy and you’ll steer away from what you really do. So when you go in, you have to keep an open mind, but you also have to keep a closed mind at the same time. Whereas when you’re just an artist going in, and you have a producer there to tell you what to do it’s different . So I have to be very cautious and strict when I go and really stick to what I do,” explains King of being self-produced.
While most country bands consist of guitars, bass, drums and a fiddle, King’s live set features the cryin’ of the steel guitar; one of country music’s original instruments. King has recently performed with artists such as Lee Brice, William Michael Morgan, Tracy Byrd, Cody Johnson, Robert Earl Keen and more.
Unlike the west Texas wind, King is a grounded and talented singer-songwriter who is sure to stay. “There’s a lot of people that want country music to come back around, and there’s a lot of people that will say you have to sell out and play radio hits to make it. I think for me I want to make my stamp as an artist with this record, that I can be me and still make an impact across the country. Not sellin’ out, just bein’ me. Just country.”