Steve Fox (musician)
Canadian singer-songwriter / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Steve Fox is a Canadian country music singer-songwriter based in Nashville.[1][2] He is best known for writing Montgomery Gentry's hit song "Daddy Won't Sell the Farm", which went Platinum and Gold in the United States[2] and "Moving to a Small Town".[3] As an independent performing artist in Canada, he has toured with Kenny Rogers, opened for country stars including Dwight Yoakum and Michelle Wright, and headlined at festivals including the Calgary Stampede.[3][2] He is credited as a songwriter on many albums[3][2] and has worked with producer and publisher Joe Scaife, as well as Cal IV Entertainment.[4][5]
Steve Fox (musician) | |
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Birth name | Steve Fox |
Origin | Brampton, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | Country |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter |
Years active | 1991–present |
Labels | Quantum Records(1991) True North Records (1993) Dead Reckoning (1998) Page Records(1999–2001) Royalty Records (2004–present) |
In 2001, Fox won the Canadian Country Music Association's Songwriter of the Year Award.[6] He was nominated for CD of the Year for his album Small World[2] and nominated for a Juno Award for Best Male Vocalist for his 1993 album, The Days of My Youth (True North/Sony).[2]