Mark Otis Selby (born in Enid, Oklahoma, died September 18, 2017 in Nashville, Tennessee, aged 56) was an American blues rock singer-songwriter, guitarist, multi-instrumentalist and producer. He is a solo artist, signed to ZYX Records in Europe, and one half of performing duo with his wife, songwriter Tia Sillers. He also plays guitar in recording sessions for musical artists such as Kenny Rogers, Johnny Reid, Keni Thomas, Jimmy Hall and Wynonna Judd. Selby is perhaps best known for the number...
Mark Otis Selby (born in Enid, Oklahoma, died September 18, 2017 in Nashville, Tennessee, aged 56) was an American blues rock singer-songwriter, guitarist, multi-instrumentalist and producer. He is a solo artist, signed to ZYX Records in Europe, and one half of performing duo with his wife, songwriter Tia Sillers. He also plays guitar in recording sessions for musical artists such as Kenny Rogers, Johnny Reid, Keni Thomas, Jimmy Hall and Wynonna Judd.
Selby is perhaps best known for the number of songs that he co-wrote with the blues-rock artist Kenny Wayne Shepherd which includes the number one single "Blue On Black." This song was also Billboard Magazine rock track of the year in 1998. Selby also collaborated on the number one song "There's Your Trouble" which was recorded by the Dixie Chicks and won the band their first Grammy for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal in 1999.
Selby has released four solo albums thus far. The first two projects, More Storms Comin' and Dirt were on Vanguard Records. After signing with ZYX in Merenberg, Germany, he released his third CD, "And The Horse You Rode In On". This CD, which is all acoustic, features Selby's 1974 Winfield, Kansas made, Mossman guitar and spurred a broad audience in Germany and Switzerland. His most recent project, Nine Pound Hammer, was released in 2008. He has worked with the Grammy winning record producer Brent Maher on all of his projects.
Besides the Mossman, he plays a modified 1990s Fender Relic Nocaster, a Fender Rory Gallagher Strat, and a 1944 Gibson J-45. As for amplifiers, he describes himself as "a Fender guy."
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