Kim Carnes

American singer-songwriter
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Quick Facts
Born:
July 20, 1945, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (age 79)

Kim Carnes (born July 20, 1945, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) is an American pop rock and country singer-songwriter known for her raspy, husky voice and her prolific songwriting career. Carnes wrote several hit songs and was recognized with multiple Grammy Award nominations. She won Grammy Awards for record of the year (1982), for “Bette Davis Eyes,” and best album of original score written for a motion picture or a television special (1983), for Flashdance: Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture.

Carnes grew up in the suburbs of Los Angeles. She knew at an early age that she wanted a career in show business. She took lessons in classical piano, though she was drawn to pop and rock. Her singing career began with songwriting and performing with local groups. By the late 1960s Carnes was working at clubs around Los Angeles, occasionally as an opening act for touring groups. She subsequently met musician Dave Ellingson, who became her husband and songwriting partner.

Demo tapes that Carnes and Ellingson put together led to a deal with a small label that released Carnes’s solo debut album, Rest on Me (1972). Shortly thereafter, A&M Records signed Carnes and brought out her next two albums, Kim Carnes (1975) and Sailin’ (1976). Several singles from Sailin’—“Love Comes from Unexpected Places”, the title track, and “Warm Love”—were hits. While neither album broke any sales records, both were well received by critics.

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Carnes felt she could do better at another record company and switched to EMI America. Her first EMI release, St. Vincent’s Court (1979), consisted primarily of songs she wrote with Ellingson. She and Ellingson went on to write Gideon (1980) for American country music artist Kenny Rogers; the album included the hit single “Don’t Fall in Love with a Dreamer,” which Carnes and Rogers performed as a duet. Romance Dance (1980) followed; it featured Carnes’s rendition of Smokey Robinson’s hit single “More Love.” The song became her first top-10 single as a soloist. The next album, Mistaken Identity (1981), featured the pop hit “Bette Davis Eyes,” which elevated Carnes’s career and brought her a Grammy Award for record of the year; the record hit platinum on the charts.

As the 1980s progressed, Carnes continued to produce albums, though none had the mass popular appeal of Mistaken Identity. Most of the albums—Voyeur (1982), Café Racers (1983), Barking at Airplanes (1985), Light House (1986), and A View from the House (1988)—included at least one charted single. As one of the contributors to the score for the 1983 movie Flashdance, Carnes shared an award with 14 other cowriters when the album won a Grammy that year. Her single “What About Me?”, recorded with Rogers and American rhythm and blues artist James Ingram, became a hit in 1984. Nearly a decade later Carnes released Gypsy Honeymoon: The Best of Kim Carnes (1993), a compilation of her greatest hits.

Carnes continued to write songs for other artists throughout the 1990s, including “The Heart Won’t Lie” (1993) for American country singers Reba McEntire and Vince Gill; the song reached number one on the country music charts. In the early 2000s Carnes provided backing vocals for multiple artists, including singer-songwriter Tim McGraw on Live Like You Were Dying, released in 2004. That same year, Carnes released her final full-length album, Chasin’ Wild Trains.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.