The earnest work of boyish Canadian singer/songwriter
Ron Sexsmith won acclaim not from only critics but from fellow performers like
Paul McCartney,
Elvis Costello, and
John Hiatt -- some of the same artists, ironically enough, who initially inspired
Sexsmith himself to become a musician. Born in 1964 and raised in the Niagara Falls area, he started his first band at the age of 14, and within a few years earned his first regular gig at an area club. Influenced by
Pete Seeger, he began making the rounds on the folk circuit, but soon decided to focus his attentions on becoming a songwriter. After moving to the Toronto area,
Sexsmith formed
the Uncool and began issuing his own material in 1985 with the cassette Out of the Duff, followed a year later by There's a Way. He continued performing while maintaining a day job as a courier but did not release anything more until 1991's
Grand Opera Lane, recorded by
Blue Rodeo's
Bob Wiseman. The collection of songs helped earn
Sexsmith a songwriting contract and eventually a recording deal with Interscope Records; teamed with producer
Mitchell Froom, he released his self-titled debut in 1995. A follow-up,
Other Songs, appeared two years later. In 1999,
Sexsmith returned with
Whereabouts, again produced by
Froom. Three years later,
Sexsmith inked a deal with Nettwerk and released
Cobblestone Runway in October 2002. His seventh album,
Retriever, followed two years later. In 2005,
Sexsmith shifted creative gears with
Destination Unknown, a primarily acoustic album recorded in collaboration with longtime bandmate
Don Kerr.
Time Being arrived in 2006. Two years later,
Sexsmith released his ninth studio album,
Exit Strategy of the Soul, which was produced by
Martin Terefe. His tenth album, Long Player Late Bloomer, produced by Bob Rock and recorded at Sage and Sound Recording (Hollywood), The Orange Lounge (Toronto), and The Warehouse Studio (Vancouver), appeared early in 2011.
Sexsmith returned to producer
Mitchell Froom for his next release, Forever Endeavour, which arrived early in 2013.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi