Santa Don’t Come Here Anymore
Sample excerpt for album Santa Don’t Come Here Anymore.
Read MoreSOMETHING ABOUT CHRISTMAS TIME
Sample excerpt for album SOMETHING ABOUT CHRISTMAS TIME.
Read MoreWeihnachts Hits 2022
Sample excerpt for album Weihnachts Hits 2022.
Read MoreSanta Claus Is Coming to Town
Sample excerpt for album Santa Claus Is Coming to Town.
Read MoreMerry Christmas & Happy New Year
Sample excerpt for album Merry Christmas & Happy New Year.
Read MoreOne Less Day (Dying Young)
Sample excerpt for One Less Day (Dying Young).
Read MoreHer Diamonds
Sample excerpt for Her Diamonds.
Read MoreLonely No More
Sample excerpt for Lonely No More.
Read MoreLittle Wonders
Sample excerpt for Little Wonders.
Read MoreSmooth
Sample excerpt for Smooth.
Read MoreRob Thomas
As the lead singer for Matchbox Twenty, Rob Thomas was at the forefront of the polished mainstream alt-rock that emerged in the late ’90s. Unlike the grungy Seattleites who defined the first half of the decade, Thomas was clean-cut and not opposed to classicist pop hooks or sophisticated production gloss, a combination that worked to soften the palpable angst at the heart of Matchbox Twenty’s 1996 debut, Yourself or Someone Like You. The band’s first record built into a blockbuster, by which time Thomas stepped outside of the confines of the group to co-write and sing Smooth, a record-breaking smash hit for Santana in 1999. Smooth ruled the airwaves during the Y2K era, helping Thomas become a star on his own. While he never left Matchbox Twenty behind, he did pursue a concurrent solo career beginning with 2005’s Billboard 200-topping …Something to Be. On his solo material, Thomas embraced his adult contemporary inclinations without abandoning the confessional aspects of his earliest work, qualities that helped him remain in the Top 20 with albums like 2009’s Cradlesong, 2015’s The Great Unknown, and 2019’s Chip Tooth Smile. In 2021, he brought his earnest emotionality to the Yuletide season with his first holiday album, Something About Christmas Time.
An army brat, Rob Thomas was born in 1972 in Landstuhl, Germany. When he was two, his parents divorced, with his mother retaining custody. During his childhood, his mom moved Thomas and his sister from town to town through the American South, usually returning to her mother’s home in Lake City, South Carolina. By the time he was ten, the family moved to Florida, initially relocating to Sarasota before setting their anchor in Orlando. During this period, Thomas began to learn how to play keyboards, picking up guitar not long afterward. Personal problems plagued the adolescent Thomas. His mother struggled with addiction and her illness had ramifications in his personal life, contributing to him leaving high school just prior to his scheduled graduation. At the age of 17, he briefly went to jail for stealing a car, and he spent his early adulthood drifting before finally finding a measure of stability with music.
Tabitha’s Secret, a band he founded with bassist Brian Yale, was Thomas’ first serious group. Formed in 1993, the band played the Orlando circuit, eventually earning the attention of Matt Serletic, a record producer who recently scored a hit working with Collective Soul. Not long after this introduction, Tabitha’s Secret split, but Thomas, Yale, and drummer Paul Doucette formed Matchbox Twenty in its wake. Serletic guided them through their demos, then produced their debut, Yourself or Someone Like You. Released on Atlantic’s subsidiary Lava in 1996, Yourself or Someone Like You got off to a slow start, yet the singles Push, 3AM, Real World, and Back 2 Good pushed it up the charts, turning Matchbox Twenty in general and Rob Thomas in particular into rock stars.