Keith Hampshire

For the Australian pilot, see Keith Hampshire (RAAF officer).
Keith Hampshire
Born (1945-11-23) 23 November 1945
Dulwich, London, England, United Kingdom
Occupation Singer
Actor
Years active 1970s–present

Keith Hampshire (born 23 November 1945 in Dulwich, London) is an English-born popular singer of the 1970s, famous in Canada for three top ten hits (including his #1 version of "The First Cut Is The Deepest", which topped the RPM 100 national singles chart on 12 May 1973),[1] and the successful CBC Television show Keith Hampshire's Music Machine. Though his voice resembles David Clayton-Thomas', especially on "Daytime Night-time", Hampshire was not as successful in the United States, where that highest charting single only reached number 51.[2]

Between July 1966 and mid-August 1967, he was a DJ for the offshore pirate radio station Radio Caroline South. His show was called "Keefer's Commotions", and later "Keefer's Uprising".

In 1983, Hampshire released a song (as 'Bat Boys') entitled "OK Blue Jays", which became an anthem for the Toronto Blue Jays Major League Baseball team. Blue Jays fans sing it during the seventh-inning stretch of home games. The song was written by Alan Smith, Pat Arbour, Jack Lenz and Tony Kosinec. The song was remixed by Rob Wells and Chris Anderson of Big Honkin' Spaceship Inc. in 2003, and still plays during the seventh-inning stretch.

On 18 June 2005 Hampshire was hired by Darren Stevens to host a 1960s-1970s based oldies radio show on CHAY-FM in Barrie, Ontario.

Discography

Singles

Albums

External links

References

  1. http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?brws_s=1&file_num=nlc008388.4836&type=1&interval=24&PHPSESSID=ccntousk30frf6h4jsn237nm12
  2. Gary Lessard-album notes The Best of Keith Hampshire 2005 Universal Music Inc
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