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Keith Forsey

Keith Forsey (born 2 January 1948) is an English pop musician and record producer.[1]

Keith Forsey

(1948-01-02) 2 January 1948
London, England

1960s–present

Early life[edit]

Forsey began his career as a percussionist in the mid-late 1960s as the drummer for The Spectrum[2] and as the drummer in Udo Lindenberg's Panik Orchester until 1976, during which he also played percussion for Amon Düül II.[3] By late 1970s, he was a pioneer of disco, working with artists such as Lipstique, Claudja Barry, La Bionda, the Italo disco pioneers and Boney M. He became Giorgio Moroder's drummer and played on records by Donna Summer, including Bad Girls, and Sparks' "No. 1 in Heaven." Forsey's own band, Trax, a collaboration with Pete Bellotte, was not as popular.[3] Forsey was influenced by Moroder and began experimenting with electronics and European dance rhythms.

Production career[edit]

Like Moroder, Forsey started producing albums himself, and in 1982 produced Billy Idol's solo debut album, Billy Idol and Icehouse's global breakthrough album Primitive Man. Idol's 1983 follow-up, Rebel Yell, went even further, combining Forsey's affection for synthesized pop, Idol's punk grit, and guitarist Steve Stevens' heavy metal sound.[3] 1983 was the year that established Forsey as a producer. He co-wrote "Flashdance... What a Feeling" with Moroder and Irene Cara, who sang the track, for the movie Flashdance. In 1984, the song earned an Academy Award. The popularity of Flashdance led to his co-writing songs featured on the soundtracks of Ghostbusters, Beverly Hills Cop, The NeverEnding Story and The Breakfast Club. The 1985 hit "Don't You (Forget About Me)" from The Breakfast Club was originally offered to Simple Minds, who declined. After Bryan Ferry, Billy Idol and several other artists passed on the song, Simple Minds reconsidered; their recording went on to top the charts in several countries.[4]


In 1985, Forsey produced the debut album for the singer Charlie Sexton.


In 2003, Forsey produced the American guitar pop band Rooney. 2005 saw his return to Billy Idol, producing Devil's Playground.[3]

at IMDb

Keith Forsey

discography at Discogs

Keith Forsey

Official website