White Heart In 1984 Kennedy joined the Christian rock band
White Heart. The six-member group was formed two years earlier by
Billy Smiley and
Mark Gersmehl who were members of
Bill Gaither and the
New Gaither Vocal Band. Other original members included Kennedy's high school friend, Dann Huff and Dann's brother, drummer
David Huff. Dann Huff left the group in 1984 and recommended that Kennedy should be his replacement. Kennedy was in the band for six years. White Heart remained in existence for a total of 17 years and released 13 studio albums with many personnel changes over that time. Music historian
Don Cusic said, "The group had great musicians; many of them played studio sessions in Nashville, and the talent of the individual members is evident from their post-White Heart success". Dann Huff became an award-winning guitarist and producer;
Tommy Sims joined
Bruce Springsteen's touring band; Kennedy founded the group
Dogs of Peace Dogs of Peace Kennedy recalled that songwriting began to click for him about 1991 when he began co-writing with his friend,
Wayne Kirkpatrick. Their first album,
Speak, was released in 1996. Twenty years later, in 2016, Kennedy, Sloas, Masters, Hammond and Balding reunited for a second album called
Heel. Brooks subsequently recorded ten more of Kennedy's songs on his alter-ego album,
The Life of Chris Gaines which reached No. 2 on the
Billboard 200 chart. As of 2018, Kennedy has written or co-written 15 songs recorded by Brooks. In 2010,
Ricky Skaggs, trying a new sound and a new source of material, recorded
Mosaic, an album with all 13 songs written or co-written by Kennedy. NPR reviewer Ken Tucker stated, "Something in the chemistry that occurs in mixing Gordon Kennedy's melodies, the Christian imagery of the lyrics and the surging vocals results in music that is both vivid and thoughtful." It was a break from the past for Skaggs who has said that he felt something of
the Beatles influence in Kennedy's music. Peter Frampton made a guest appearance on the album with the song, "My Cup Runneth Over". Their collaboration continued, leading to Kennedy's co-producing, composing, and performing on Frampton's album,
Fingerprints which won a Grammy for
Best Pop Instrumental Album. (Kennedy's Grammy was for co-producing.) The album featured guest artists including members of
the Rolling Stones,
Pearl Jam, and the
Allman Brothers. On the album, Kennedy was featured on the song "Float". In nearly 20 years of friendship, Kennedy remains Frampton's collaborator and performs with him often on tour.
Reba McEntire,
Tim McGraw,
Wynonna,
Charlie Daniels,
Trisha Yearwood,
George Strait,
Faith Hill ("
It Will Be Me"),
Carrie Underwood ("The More Boys I Meet"), and others.
"Change the World" The enduring worldwide hit song, "Change the World", earned Kennedy a Grammy for "Song of the Year" in 1996. The song was first recorded in 1995 by
Wynonna Judd and later
Eric Clapton through the release of the
John Travolta film,
Phenomenon, in mid-1996. Clapton's version, produced by
Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds, spent 81 weeks on
Billboards adult contemporary chart, with 13 weeks at 1. Clapton and Edmonds performed the song at the
39th Annual Grammy Awards Show in 1996, where the song won "Record of the Year", "Song of the Year", and "Best Male Pop Vocal Performance". Kennedy wrote the song with two collaborators: the first was
Tommy Sims, bassist, songwriter, producer and former White Heart bandmate who later recorded and sang with
Bruce Springsteen on "
Streets of Philadelphia" which won an
Academy Award for "Best Song"; the second was
Wayne Kirkpatrick, a prolific Nashville songwriter who was nominated for a
Tony Award for Best Original Score for the
Broadway musical Something Rotten! In a recorded interview with
Songcraft, Kennedy gave his recollection of how the three men worked together to create the song: in 1991, during some downtime at a recording session,
Tommy Sims gave a title and played a
riff for Kennedy and
Wayne Kirkpatrick and asked if they thought it was something their group could use for a pending record contract. About a month later, Kirkpatrick asked Sims to restate that idea on tape; Kirkpatrick then created the lyric for the chorus and all but one line of the second verse. The song lay dormant for several months, until Kennedy asked for a tape of the song's current state, then finished the tune to the extent he thought was enough to make a demo. Kennedy then drove from Nashville to Columbus, Ohio, to see Sims, who was recording there. They made a tape on a
Shure 57 microphone, creating drum sounds by using mouth and breath noises. On Kennedy's drive back to Nashville he listened to it and finished the first verse and Kirkpatrick's missing line of the second verse, dictating into a hand-held recorder. Once home, he remade the demo singing all the vocals over an acoustic guitar part — this about one year after the original riff, and that was the demo that Clapton heard. Clapton told
Mojo Magazine in May 2003, "When I heard Tommy Sims' demo, I could hear
McCartney doing that [song]..." Clapton later learned that it was Kennedy who sang the demo. ==Personal life==