$20.00

Karliski, Steve - Gotta Keep Movin'

Format: LP
Label: Double M Records DMR 1001
Year: 1972
Origin: Winnipeg, Manitoba → New York, New York, 🇺🇸 → Niagara Falls, Ontario, 🇨🇦
Genre: folk
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: $20.00
Inquiries Email: ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Buy directly from Artist:  N/A
Playlist: Manitoba, Ontario, Folk, Ukrainian Power, 1970's

Tracks

Side 1

Track Name
Gotta Keep Movin'
Takes a Woman Like You
Ask Me Anything
Home Comes the Hero
And Then Came the Bad Years

Side 2

Track Name
Molly
For Loving You
Not the Way That They Used to
At Least One Time
Think of the Good Times

Photos

Steve Karliski - Gotta Keep Movin'

Gotta Keep Movin'

Videos

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Information/Write-up

Steve J. Karliski (March 10, 1940 – October 2007) was a Canadian songwriter and singer whose career bridged the Tin Pan Alley–style publishing world of 1960s New York and the Nashville country market, while also producing a small but distinctive body of recordings under his own name. Known primarily for his songwriting successes, Karliski was also a performing artist whose recordings reveal a more personal, reflective side of his work.

Born in Winnipeg to Ukrainian immigrant parents, Karliski began writing both lyrics and melodies in his teens. Drawn to the professional songwriting world, he relocated to New York in the early 1960s, where he quickly became part of a circle of working writers and publishers. During this period, he worked alongside figures such as Carole King, Neil Sedaka, Barry Mann, and Larry Kolber, placing material with major artists and developing a reputation as a writer with a strong melodic sense and emotionally direct storytelling.

Karliski’s most widely known success came with ‘Yes, Mr. Peters,’ co-written with Larry Kolber and recorded by Roy Drusky and Priscilla Mitchell. The song reached number one on the U.S. country charts in 1965 and became a defining entry in his catalogue. His work was subsequently recorded by a number of leading country artists of the era, including Bill Anderson and Jan Howard, Waylon Jennings, and Faron Young, placing Karliski among a small group of Canadian-born writers whose songs became part of the core Nashville repertoire.

Other notable placements included ‘For Loving You,’ recorded by Bill Anderson and Jan Howard; ‘Christina,’ recorded by Waylon Jennings; ‘Yellow Bandana,’ recorded by Faron Young; and ‘Then Came the Bad Years,’ also recorded by Bill Anderson. His song ‘Molly’ became another signature title, widely recorded and later frequently cited by Karliski himself as one of his most meaningful works. Together, these recordings established Karliski primarily as a behind-the-scenes hit songwriter, even as his own recordings remained comparatively rare.

Although best known for his songwriting, Karliski also recorded as a solo artist. His album Gotta Keep Movin’, issued on Ralph Murphy’s Double M label, features Karliski performing his own compositions, including several titles already familiar through hit recordings by Roy Drusky and Priscilla Mitchell, Bill Anderson and Jan Howard, Waylon Jennings, and Faron Young. The album presents a more intimate view of his writing, allowing listeners to hear his songs as he originally conceived them, rather than solely through the interpretations of Nashville performers.

The album also reflects themes that recur throughout Karliski’s catalogue: sensitivity balanced with realism, emotional directness, and a focus on life’s quieter turning points rather than overt spectacle. The liner notes emphasize his preference for letting the songs speak for themselves, describing him as an “ultimate realist” who believed the music carried more truth than biography.

In his later years, Karliski returned to Canada and settled in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where he continued writing actively until his death in 2007. Local arts sources and colleagues recall him as a prolific craftsman whose output extended far beyond his best-known titles, with numerous unpublished or lesser-known works circulating privately. Even in this later period, songwriting remained central to his life, reflecting a career defined less by celebrity than by long-term dedication to the craft.
-Robert Williston

Production
Produced by Steve Karliski
Engineered by Art Polhemus
Recorded at Coordinated Sound Studios, New York City for Double M Productions
Double M Productions, 16 West 61st Street, New York, New York 10023

In Canada:
Double M Productions
1396 St. Catherine Street West
Suite 307/08
Montreal 107, Quebec, Canada

Artwork
Photography and design by Sam Alexander

Liner notes
Karliski. What does a name mean? What can one tell about the nature of a person from his name? Obviously, nothing at all.

We ordinary people only reveal ourselves privately, to our families, friends and others, but especially to those we love most. How fortunate a person must be, like Steve Karliski, to be born a musical poet; to be able to express ideas, emotions and random thoughts about life to the world through a song; to communicate with the world through the medium of one of mankind’s oldest blessings . . . music!

Those who are familiar with Steve’s hit songs know his unusual sensitivity. Stark reality is usually there also, sometimes sweet, often not. But always you’ll find the Karliski trademark, the punch-lines that underscore the punch-thoughts. Two of Steve’s number one songs are included in this album, MOLLY and FOR LOVING YOU. Both have been recorded by top artists, and their recordings are well known. But one pleasant surprise in this album is to hear the way Steve sings them. The other pleasant surprises in store for the listener are the other songs in this album . . . the way Steve wrote them and the way he sings them.

Steve was born in Canada after his parents emigrated from the Ukraine. It’s Canada that’s home for Steve, it’s where he grew up, it’s his heritage and tradition.

Incidentally, Steve requested there be no liner notes on his album. The ultimate realist, all that matters from his viewpoint are the songs inside. However, Steve’s a very interesting fellow, a perfect gentleman also. It would be a shame not to mention this on the outside of his album . . . because after all, inside the songs speak to you, the listener . . . and there are some things about Steve you’d never know, just by listening.
-Leon Brettler

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