Best known for his role as Captain James T. Kirk of the USS Enterprise in the Star Trek franchise, actor, author, producer, director, screenwriter, philanthropist, and singer
William Shatner embarked on a music career in 1968 with The Transformed Man. The thespian revealed himself to be as startlingly adept in tragedy as in comedy, and his spoken word renderings of pop hits and readings from classic plays quickly became a camp classic. He would spend the next 50 years cultivating that image, releasing a slew of albums like
Has Been (2004),
Seeking Major Tom (2011),
Why Not Me (2018), and
Bill (2021) that covered everything from rock, prog, blues, and country to Christmas songs in his signature style.
Born in Montréal, Québec, Canada in 1931,
Shatner graduated from McGilll University with a degree in Economics in 1952 before training as a Shakespearean actor with Ottawa's Canadian National Repertory Theatre. He launched his professional career appearing in various productions at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Ontario, and made his Broadway debut in a staging of Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine the Great in 1956. From there, he moved into television, starring in a variety of shows and teleplays including roles on The Twilight Zone, The Defenders, and Dr. Kildare, before landing the role of James T. Kirk on creator Gene Roddenberry's landmark sci-fi series Star Trek. The show, which lasted for three seasons from 1966 to 1969, became a pop culture touchstone, marked by its cult fan base. It also cemented
Shatner's image in the public's collective consciousness, forever linking him with his character Kirk's charismatic persona.
This close association between
Shatner the man and Captain Kirk was a fact he cheekily referenced on the cover of The Transformed Man, crediting himself as both
William Shatner and Captain Kirk of Star Trek. Released in 1968, the concept album featured the actor reading classic poems and excerpts by William Shakespeare and others, juxtaposed with him singing contemporary songs with similar themes. Whether originally intended tongue in cheek or not, the album quickly achieved novelty status. Along with acting,
Shatner kept making albums, appearing on
Live (aka Captain of the Starship), a 1977 release from Imperial House Music.
Twenty years later,
MCA issued Spaced Out! The Best of Leonard Nimoy & William Shatner. The recording combined cuts from
Shatner's The Transformed Man with numbers from a pair of
Nimoy's albums, Two Sides of Leonard Nimoy and
Mr. Spock's Music from Outer Space. Starting in the late '80s,
Shatner was featured on the Rhino compilations Golden Throats: The Great Celebrity Sing Off, Golden Throats, Vol. 2: More Celebrity Rock Oddities, and Golden Throats 4: Celebrities Butcher Songs of the Beatles. The trend continued for more than a decade and included an appearance on Celebrities...At Their Worst in 1999.
Not everyone views
Shatner's musical performances solely as camp.
Beck paid tribute to
Shatner's cover of
Elton John's "Rocket Man" in the video he shot for the single "Where It's At." Also,
Shatner and
Ben Folds traded musical favors, with
Folds collaborating with the former Star Trek captain on the 2004 studio effort
Has Been, while the pop star agreed to appear in a TV commercial with the singing
Shatner. In 2011,
Shatner released the double-disc studio album
Seeking Major Tom, featuring a newly recorded version of his classic interpretation of "Rocket Man," and two years later he issued a sci-fi prog rock concept record called Ponder the Mystery.
In 2018, he paired with
Alabama's
Jeff Cook for the country album
Why Not Me. Also that year, he issued the holiday-themed Shatner Claus.
Shatner surprised everyone when his 2020 album
The Blues -- which featured guest spots from
Jeff "Skunk" Baxter,
Steve Cropper,
James Burton,
Ritchie Blackmore,
Pat Travers,
Sonny Landreth,
Brad Paisley, and
Albert Lee -- soared to the top of Billboard's Blues Chart. In 2021, just months after his 90th birthday,
Shatner released the star-studded, genre-spanning
Bill, which included features from
Paisley,
Joe Walsh,
Joe Jonas,
Dave Koz, and more. ~ Linda Seida & James Christopher Monger