Kenny Siegal is a two-time Grammy-nominated American music producer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and recording engineer. In 2010, Siegal's only solo record, Eleccentricity, was nominated for IMA Eclectic Album of the Year.[1]
Career
Siegal has produced (and/or co-produced) many albums including Langhorne Slim and The Law's The Spirit Moves, The Way We Move (prominently featured on numerous films, television shows and national commercials), and Lost at Last Volumes 1 and 2, Chris Whitley's final record Reiter In, The WiyosTwist,Spottiswoode & His Enemies 2011 Independent Music Award-winning Wild Goosechase Expedition and This is The Town: A Tribute to Nilsson featuring Langhorne Slim, Marco Benevento, Willy Mason, and many more.[citation needed]
Siegal co-produced, engineered, performed on, and added some co-writing to Lucky Diaz and The Family Jam Band’sCrayon Kids album which was nominated for Best Children’s Music Album at the 64th annual Grammys (2022), and again was nominated for the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards (2025) as co-producer of Lucky Diaz and The Family Jam Band's "Brillo, Brillo!" in the Best Children's Music Album category.
In 1995, Siegal started Johnny Society,[6][7] Johnny Society's first live performance was a showcase for Ray Davies of The Kinks who heard Siegal's basement recordings and requested to see the band live. All Music said about their first record: "It Don't Matter hits with the sonic force of a tidal wave, or to use a more appropriate analogy, like a one-band, end-of-the-20th-century rock & roll beacon the likes of which hasn't been experienced since the Beatles."[8] Johnny Society's second record Wood was on music critic Ben Ratliff of The New York Times' top ten list of favorite records of 1999, praising Siegal's "unpretentious, utilitarian imagination," and "perfect little agonized rock songs."[9] Siegal won The Independent Music Award for Best Producer (along with co-producers Bryce Goggin and Brian Geltner) for Johnny Society's 2012 release Free Society[10] and Clairvoyance won Album of the Year at the Independent Music Awards in 2002. All of the Johnny Society records have been critically hailed, earning Siegal comparisons to John Lennon, David Bowie, Cheap Trick and The Lovin' Spoonful.