Skip Konte
Frank "Skip" Konte (born October 2, 1947) is an American keyboardist, songwriter, record producer, director, and filmmaker.[1] Best known for his contributions to rock music in the late 1960s and 1970s, Konte co-wrote the Blues Image's million-selling hit single "Ride Captain Ride," which reached number four on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1970.[2][3] Konte joined the Florida-based rock band Blues Image in 1967 as their keyboardist, contributing to their albums Red White & Blues Image (1970) and Open (1970), the latter featuring "Ride Captain Ride," co-written with guitarist Mike Pinera.[1] The band earned a gold record for the single, which has since become a classic rock staple performed on shows like American Bandstand.[4] After Blues Image disbanded in 1971, Konte served as second keyboardist for Three Dog Night from 1973 to 1976, appearing on albums such as Hard Labor (1974) and earning additional gold records with the group.[1][2] During this period, he was nicknamed "The Wizard" for his keyboard expertise.[5] Transitioning from performing, Konte built a prolific career in music production and visual media, founding Konte Media and producing hundreds of television programs, commercials, and corporate videos over four decades.[4] His production credits include a Grammy nomination for Best Soul Gospel Performance for Leon Patillo's album Cornerstone (1982) and a Dove Award for Gospel Album of the Year.[4] Konte has worked with notable talents like William Shatner and Tim Allen, supervised the construction of major post-production facilities, and produced events such as nine years of National Hot Rod Association Awards for ESPN and seven BlizzCon broadcasts.[4] In film, he has directed and produced features including the Western The Outsider (1994), the sci-fi thriller Meridian, and the fantasy Highland End, and the romantic dramedy A Joint Custody Christmas (2022).[4][6]Early life
Childhood and family background
Frank "Skip" Konte was born on October 2, 1947, with conflicting reports on his birthplace: some sources place it in Oklahoma, while others indicate Cañon City, Colorado.[5][1] Little is documented about Konte's immediate family or parental background, though his early years suggest a modest upbringing. As a child, he first encountered television in a neighbor's trailer, where the fuzzy picture nonetheless captivated him and sparked an early fascination with media.[4] No specific details on relocations during his childhood are available, but he spent his teenage years in Anchorage, Alaska.[7][8] The circumstances of his initial media exposure point to simple, resource-limited origins that influenced his foundational experiences.[4]Initial interests in music and media
Konte's lifelong fascination with media originated in his childhood, when he first viewed television at a neighbor's trailer. Despite the extremely fuzzy picture quality, this early exposure immediately captivated him and sparked an enduring interest in the medium.[4] His initial forays into music centered on keyboard performance, leading him to join local bands as a teenager. In the mid-1960s, Konte played keyboards and provided vocals for the Pulsating Heartbeats, a garage rock group formed by the Apostol brothers in Anchorage, which rehearsed in a local garage and performed regionally before evolving into the Hartbeet Band and recording a single in the Bay Area.[7][8] While attending college in Anchorage during his first year, Konte deepened his media engagement by working at KTVA, the local television station. There, he handled technical roles such as setting lights and scenery, operating large RCA cameras for live afternoon broadcasts of news, sports, weather, and other programs, and editing 16mm film reels, which provided foundational hands-on experience in television production.[4][7]Musical career
Time with Blues Image
Frank "Skip" Konte joined Blues Image as the band's keyboardist in 1967, shortly after the group's formation in Tampa, Florida, in 1966 by guitarist Mike Pinera, drummer Manny Bertematti, percussionist Joe Lala, and bassist Malcolm Jones.[9] The band initially featured keyboardist Emilio Garcia, who departed to pursue a career as a pilot, creating the opening for Konte's addition.[3] With Konte on board, Blues Image relocated to Miami in 1968, where they became instrumental in establishing the psychedelic rock venue Thee Image in Sunny Isles Beach, serving as its house band and hosting major acts like the Doors and Grateful Dead.[3] As keyboardist and co-songwriter, Konte contributed significantly to the band's sound, blending Latin-tinged rock with psychedelic elements during their active years from 1967 to 1971.[10] The group signed with Atco Records and released their self-titled debut album in 1969, produced by Bill Halverson, which showcased extended jams and improvisational tracks reflective of their live performances.[9] Their second album, Open, followed in April 1970, produced by Richard Podolor, and marked a shift toward more accessible material while retaining psychedelic influences.[9] A third release, Red White & Blues Image (1970), compiled outtakes and live recordings, capturing the band's evolving style.[3] During this period, Blues Image toured extensively, including a successful European stint in early 1967, regular gigs as Tampa's house band starting in March 1967, and U.S. shows such as appearances in Phoenix and Sacramento in 1969, building a reputation for energetic live sets featuring double drums and improvisational flair.[9] Konte's most notable contribution was co-writing "Ride Captain Ride" with Pinera, a track born spontaneously in the studio during sessions for Open when the band needed an additional song to fill the album and avoid losing booked time.[11] The song's opening lyric—"Seventy-three men sailed up from the San Francisco Bay"—drew inspiration from the 73 keys on Pinera's Fender Rhodes electric piano, which Konte played prominently, marking one of the instrument's early prominent uses in rock music.[11] Lyrically, it depicts a fantasy narrative of a captain and his crew embarking on a mystery ship voyage into an uncharted world in pursuit of laughter, freedom, and escape from societal constraints, blending psychedelic themes with an anthemic chorus.[11] Released as a single in spring 1970, "Ride Captain Ride" propelled Blues Image to national prominence, debuting on the Billboard Hot 100 on May 9 and peaking at No. 4 on July 18, while also reaching No. 4 in Canada; it was certified Gold on August 4, 1970, for sales exceeding one million copies, establishing the band as a one-hit wonder with lasting cultural resonance in classic rock.[9] Following the success of "Ride Captain Ride," internal changes led to the band's decline, with Pinera departing in 1970 to join Iron Butterfly, prompting a brief continuation before Blues Image dissolved in 1971.[3] Konte left the group at that time, marking the end of his tenure with the band.[9]Tenure with Three Dog Night
Skip Konte joined Three Dog Night in 1973 as the band's second keyboardist, expanding the group's instrumental lineup to an eight-piece ensemble following the departure of bassist Joe Schermie and the addition of bassist Jack Ryland.[12] This move came two years after the dissolution of Konte's prior band, Blues Image, allowing him to integrate into a established pop-rock outfit known for its string of hits.[5] Konte's primary contributions during his tenure were on keyboards, where he collaborated closely with longtime band member Jimmy Greenspoon, providing organ, ARP synthesizer, clavinet, and Chamberlin on studio recordings. He is credited on key albums such as Hard Labor (1974), where his keyboard work supported tracks like "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here" and "The Show Must Go On," and Coming Down Your Way (1975), including on the instrumental "Midnight Flyer (Eli Wheeler)," which he also wrote.[13][14] His arrangements often incorporated synthesizers and layered textures, enhancing the band's shift toward more experimental pop elements amid their commercial peak. Additionally, Konte appeared on the 1976 release American Pastime, playing keyboards, clavinet, and Oberheim synthesizer, though this came shortly before his exit.[15] In live settings, Konte played a prominent role in performances, frequently delivering extended keyboard improvisations and solos that showcased his technical skill. Dubbed "The Wizard" by the band, he performed organ solos during tours supporting these albums, adding dynamic energy to sets that drew large audiences across the U.S. and contributing to the group's reputation for high-energy shows.[5] These live efforts helped maintain Three Dog Night's momentum, with recordings from the era capturing the expanded keyboard sound in concert footage from 1974-1975.[12] Konte departed Three Dog Night in early 1976 amid the band's internal challenges and declining chart success, preceding the group's final performance at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on July 26, 1976.[12] His time with the band coincided with notable commercial achievements, including the RIAA gold certification for Hard Labor, which sold over 500,000 copies and peaked at No. 20 on the Billboard 200, underscoring the period's impact despite the group's eventual disbandment.Later songwriting and collaborations
After departing from Three Dog Night in 1976, Skip Konte transitioned into songwriting and collaborations within the emerging Christian rock genre, leveraging his keyboard expertise to infuse blues and rock elements with themes of faith, redemption, and spiritual devotion. His contributions often blended psychedelic influences from his earlier band days with gospel messages, marking a shift toward independent creative output focused on inspirational content.[16] A key collaboration came with harmonica player and vocalist Darrell Mansfield on the 1979 album Higher Power, where Konte served as producer, arranger, and songwriter, co-creating tracks like "The Prize" that explored devotion and overcoming personal struggles through a blues-rock lens. This project highlighted Konte's role in early Christian rock.[17][4] Konte's songwriting extended to other Christian artists, including credits on Denny Correll's 1979 album Standin' in the Light, where he contributed original compositions emphasizing light-versus-darkness motifs rooted in evangelical themes. Similarly, on Paul D. Davis's 1980 release Energizin' Love, Konte provided keyboards on several tracks, supporting arrangements that promoted themes of divine love and renewal in contemporary gospel style.[16] Further independent efforts culminated in his production and songwriting for Leon Patillo's 1982 album I'll Never Stop Lovin' You, which included the hit "Cornerstone"; the song earned a 1983 Grammy nomination for Best Soul Gospel Performance, Male, as well as a Dove Award for the album in Contemporary Black Gospel Album of the Year. These works underscored Konte's post-band focus on spiritually uplifting narratives, though details on unreleased tracks from this period remain limited in public records.[18][19]Production career
Music production and engineering
Following his departure from Three Dog Night in 1976, Skip Konte shifted focus from performing to music production and engineering, beginning in the late 1970s with credits on albums like Denny Correll's Standin' in the Light (1979), where he served as producer, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist.[16] This transition leveraged his extensive experience as a keyboardist, allowing him to contribute to recordings in both rock and contemporary Christian genres.[5] Konte's production efforts gained prominence in the 1980s within Christian music, yielding key successes such as his work on Leon Patillo's Cornerstone (1982), which earned a Grammy nomination for Best Soul Gospel Performance, Male at the 26th Annual Grammy Awards.[20] He also produced select tracks on David Meece's 7 (1985), an album that produced five charting singles on Christian radio, including "Forgiven" and "The Ladder," highlighting his ability to craft accessible, radio-friendly tracks.[16] Other notable productions included The Archers' All Systems Are Go (1984) and Silverwind's By His Spirit (1985), the latter of which he also engineered and mixed, contributing to its polished sound in the contemporary Christian market.[16] In engineering roles, Konte collaborated with high-profile artists at his Irvine, California studio, including sessions with Stevie Wonder and Kenny Loggins, where his technical expertise supported their recordings alongside other established acts.[4] His keyboard background informed a hands-on approach to production, emphasizing layered synthesizers and organ arrangements, as seen in his multi-role contributions to Darrell Mansfield's Higher Power (1979).[16] By the mid-1980s, Konte's work had established him as a key figure in Christian music production, with credits spanning over a dozen albums through the 1990s.[1]Studio development and facilities
In the 1980s, Skip Konte supervised the design, construction, engineering, and staffing of IAM (International Automated Media), a 25,000-square-foot state-of-the-art recording and video production studio that integrated audio and visual capabilities for comprehensive media projects.[4] Konte later founded The Edit Bay, a dedicated film and video post-production facility featuring three editing suites, which he designed with engineering support from David A. Canning to handle broadcast-quality editing needs.[4] Building on this expertise, Konte oversaw the development of an advanced digital post-production facility equipped with three AVID and Discrete Logic digital editing suites, also engineered by Dave Canning, enabling seamless video and audio integration for professional workflows; this space ultimately served as the headquarters for Konte Media before its closure to prioritize private studio operations.[4]Filmmaking and media work
Television production and commercials
During his first year of college, Skip Konte worked at a local television station, where he set lights and sets, operated large RCA cameras for live broadcasts including news, sports, and weather segments, and edited 16mm program reels for commercials following the news broadcasts.[4] Konte went on to produce and direct hundreds of broadcast television programs, commercials, and corporate video productions over his career.[4][6] His projects featured collaborations with notable talents ranging from William Shatner to Tim Allen.[4][6] Among his key clients were ESPN, for which he produced nine years of National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) Awards Ceremonies; Walt Disney Productions; and corporate entities including Lexus, Toshiba, and Toyota.[4] Additionally, Konte served as broadcast producer for seven BlizzCon events organized by Blizzard Entertainment.[4]Feature films and directing projects
Skip Konte's entry into feature films marked a significant expansion from his television work, leveraging over 40 years of experience in writing, producing, and directing to explore longer-form cinematic narratives across genres including Western, sci-fi, fantasy, and dramedy.[4] A key early production was the 1994 period Western The Outsider, which Konte produced and which achieved worldwide distribution, highlighting his ability to handle genre-specific storytelling with broad appeal.[21][4] In 2025, Konte made his directorial debut with A Joint Custody Christmas, a romantic dramedy examining family dynamics amid divorce during the holiday season, starring Eric Roberts and available on major streaming platforms.[22] As of 2025, Konte is developing two ambitious projects: Meridian, a sci-fi thriller, and Highland End, a medieval fantasy, further demonstrating his versatility in speculative and historical genres.[4]Discography
Albums with bands
Skip Konte served as the keyboardist for Blues Image, contributing piano, organ, and backing vocals to the band's three studio albums released during his tenure from 1967 to 1971. On the debut album Blues Image, released in 1969 by ATCO Records, Konte's keyboard work provided the foundational blues-rock texture across all tracks, with additional backing vocals on "Outside Was Night." The album's track listing is as follows:- "Take Me to the Sunrise" (4:10)
- "Leaving My Troubles Behind" (3:45)
- "Outside Was Night" (3:44)
- "In Front Behind You" (3:10)
- "Lay Your Sweet Love On Me" (2:12)
- "(Do You Have) Somethin' to Say" (3:55)
- "Lazy Day Blues" (4:50)
- "Yesterday Could Be Today" (2:08)
- "Reality Does Not Inspire" (9:08)
- "Love Is the Answer" (2:30)
- "Running the Water" (2:37)
- "Clean Love" (2:52)
- "La Bamba" (2:30) [traditional; arranged by Blues Image]
- "Consuélate" (1:00)
- "Ride Captain Ride" (3:25)
- "Pay My Dues" (2:42)
- "Fugue U" (3:25)
- "Soothe My Soul" (1:00)
- "Rise Up" (4:15)
- "Behind Every Man" (3:16)
- "Gas Lamps and Clay" (2:38)
- "Take Me Back" (3:32)
- "It Happens All the Time" (4:00)
- "Good Life" (3:34)
- "It's the Truth" (3:32)
- "So Hard to Say" (3:20)
- "Pay My Way" (3:12)[23]
- "Happy Song" (3:37)
- "Play Children Play" (4:10)
- "Storybook Feeling" (4:20)
- "Ridin' Thumb" (4:22)
- "Shambala" (3:25)
- "Singer Man" (3:28)
- "Let Me Serenade You" (3:35)
- "One" (3:06)
- "Pieces of April" (4:16)
- "Lay Me Down Easy" (3:35))
- "Prelude" (1:01)
- "Sure As I'm Sittin' Here" (4:46)
- "Anytime Babe" (3:23)
- "Interlude" (1:19)
- "Put Out the Light" (3:06)
- "Sitting in Limbo" (5:03)
- "I'd Be So Happy" (4:48)
- "Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)" (4:48)
- "On the Way Back Home" (4:19)
- "The Show Must Go On" (3:40)
- "'Til the World Ends" (3:32)
- "You Can Leave Your Hat On" (3:06)
- "Good Old Feeling" (3:10)
- "Mind Over Matter" (2:56)
- "Midnight Flyer" (3:14)
- "The Writing's on the Wall" (3:30)
- "Freedom for the Stallion" (3:38)
- "Long Way Down" (3:35)
- "The Factory Song" (2:56)
- "Coming Down Your Way" (3:16)