ALBUMLet It Roll (From "The Garfield Movie") - SingleKeith Urban & Snoop Dogg
Albums by Keith Urban
ALBUMTHE SPEED OF NOW, Pt. 1Keith Urban
ALBUMGraffiti UKeith Urban
ALBUMRipcordKeith Urban
ALBUMFuse (Deluxe Version)Keith Urban
ALBUMGet Closer (Deluxe Edition)Keith Urban
ALBUMDefying GravityKeith Urban
ALBUMBe HereKeith Urban
ALBUMGolden RoadKeith Urban
ALBUMKeith UrbanKeith Urban
ALBUMKeith Urban in The RanchKeith Urban & The Ranch
Keith Urban's Popular Music Videos
You'll Think of Me
Keith Urban
Somebody Like You
Keith Urban
Be A Light (feat. Reba McEntire, Hillary Scott, Chris Tomlin & Keith Urban) [Lyric Video]
Thomas Rhett
Making Memories of Us
Keith Urban
Better Life
Keith Urban
I Told You So
Keith Urban
The Fighter (feat. Carrie Underwood)
Keith Urban
Highway Don't Care (feat. Taylor Swift & Keith Urban)
Tim McGraw
God Whispered Your Name
Keith Urban
Once In a Lifetime
Keith Urban
Artist Playlists
Keith Urban Essentials
Lover, fighter, rocker—Keith Urban is a man of many guises.
Keith Urban: Fitness+ Spotlight
Hit the ground runnin’ with the country star's best workout tracks.
Keith Urban: Love Songs
Indulge in the country heartthrob's guide to romance.
Keith Urban: Influences
Discover the artists that inspired one of country's modern icons.
At Home With Keith Urban: The Playlist
“I had to figure my way back to that creative place with confidence.”
Set List: Keith Urban’s Las Vegas Residency
Back in Las Vegas, the country sensation journeys through his vast catalog of hits.
Keith Urban: Deep Cuts
Daring sounds from one of country's sharpest voices.
Artist Biography
In an interview with Apple Music, country-pop songwriter Keith Urban outlined the two forces that came together to influence his songwriting. The first is Johnny Cash. “That was my first concert,” Urban said about The Man in Black. “It was unlike anything I’d seen. It wasn’t country, it wasn’t rock, it wasn’t punk—it was all of them.” The second is Top 40: “hooky songs, man.” Urban’s life is similarly defined by such duality. Born in 1967 in New Zealand and raised in Australia, Urban was a bona fide outsider when he moved to Nashville in the early ‘90s. But by the end of the decade, his self-titled 1999 album had set him on the path to stardom. While the great country music argument tends to pit traditionalism against evolution, Urban embraced both—mixing drum loops and steel guitar, marrying twang and pop—and transcended the conversation, generating a mass appeal that courted fans of both. This crossover combination resulted in a slew of platinum records, hit singles, and stadium tours, and collaborations with artists like Pitbull and Carrie Underwood. In 2012, Urban became a member of storied Nashville institution the Grand Ole Opry upon surprise invitation from fellow country icon Vince Gill, a full-circle moment that recognized his contributions to the genre he helped push into new sonic territory.