Scott Krippayne

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Scott Krippayne
Also known asScott Krippayne, Krippayne, S. Krippayne, Scott Kripayne, Scott Krippaehne, Scott Krippaene
Born
Scott A. Krippaehne

(1970-07-23) July 23, 1970 (age 55)
OriginSeattle, Washington, U.S.
Genres
InstrumentsPiano, guitar
Years active1992–present
Labels
  • Word
  • Spring Hill
  • Purple Honda
  • Pirk
  • Burning Bush
Websitewww.scottkrippayne.com

Scott Krippayne (born July 23, 1970) is an American singer and songwriter. He is better known for his contributions towards other artists, as over 150 of his songs have been recorded by others including Point of Grace, John Tesh,[2] Avalon, Jaci Velasquez, FFH, True Vibe and Sandi Patty.[3]

In 2007, he wrote the song "This Is My Now", which was chosen as the coronation song for the final of American Idol Season Six, and sung by the Top 2 Jordin Sparks and Blake Lewis.[4] In 2014, Krippayne received a Daytime Emmy nomination for writing the theme music for Paw Patrol.[5][6] He has also authored two books: Hugs for Teens[7] and More Than a Story.[8]

Discography

[edit]

Albums

[edit]
Albums
AlbumReleasedLabelRemarks
What Matters1992Independent release
Wild Imagination1995Word RecordsFirst release on a music label
More1997Word Records
Bright Star, Blue Sky1999Spring Hill MusicFirst release on Spring Hill music; the album produced three No. 1 singles[9]
All of Me2001Spring Hill Music
It Goes Like This2003Spring Hill Music
Gentle Revolution2005Spring Hill Music/Word Entertainment Group
Autobiography2006Spring Hill Music/Word Entertainment GroupCompilation album
Christmas [EP]2006Purple Honda MusicEP release containing seven songs
Crying for a ChristmasA song co-written by Krippayne and Jeff Peabody
Simple Worship2008Pirk Music
Exalted Worship2009Burning Bush Communications
Fight for Love2012Pirk Music
Not So Silent Night2012Pirk Music
Hymns2013Pirk Music

Singles

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Scott Krippayne's Gentle Revolution". Billboard Magazine.
  2. ^ a b American Idol Songwriter Isn't That Undiscovered After All
  3. ^ JesusFreakHideout.com: Scott Krippayne - Gentle Revolution review
  4. ^ Crown may be Jordin's for a song
  5. ^ "Daytime Emmy Awards 2014: Complete list of winners and nominees". The LA Times. May 2014.
  6. ^ "Daytime Emmy Nominations: 'Young and the Restless' Leads with 26 Nominations". Deadline Hollywood. May 2014.
  7. ^ "Hugs for Teens at Barnes & Noble". Barnes & Noble.
  8. ^ Krippayne, Scott (15 January 2011). More Than a Story - Simon & Schuster. Howard Books. ISBN 9781451636222. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  9. ^ ScottKrippayne.com - Discography
[edit]


    Scott Krippayne
    Also known asScott Krippayne, Krippayne, S. Krippayne, Scott Kripayne, Scott Krippaehne, Scott Krippaene
    Born
    Scott A. Krippaehne

    (1970-07-23) July 23, 1970 (age 55)
    OriginSeattle, Washington, U.S.
    Genres
    InstrumentsPiano, guitar
    Years active1992–present
    Labels
    • Word
    • Spring Hill
    • Purple Honda
    • Pirk
    • Burning Bush
    Websitewww.scottkrippayne.com

    Scott Krippayne (born July 23, 1970) is an American singer and songwriter. He is better known for his contributions towards other artists, as over 150 of his songs have been recorded by others including Point of Grace, John Tesh,[2] Avalon, Jaci Velasquez, FFH, True Vibe and Sandi Patty.[3]

    In 2007, he wrote the song "This Is My Now", which was chosen as the coronation song for the final of American Idol Season Six, and sung by the Top 2 Jordin Sparks and Blake Lewis.[4] In 2014, Krippayne received a Daytime Emmy nomination for writing the theme music for Paw Patrol.[5][6] He has also authored two books: Hugs for Teens[7] and More Than a Story.[8]

    Discography

    Albums

    Albums
    AlbumReleasedLabelRemarks
    What Matters1992Independent release
    Wild Imagination1995Word RecordsFirst release on a music label
    More1997Word Records
    Bright Star, Blue Sky1999Spring Hill MusicFirst release on Spring Hill music; the album produced three No. 1 singles[9]
    All of Me2001Spring Hill Music
    It Goes Like This2003Spring Hill Music
    Gentle Revolution2005Spring Hill Music/Word Entertainment Group
    Autobiography2006Spring Hill Music/Word Entertainment GroupCompilation album
    Christmas [EP]2006Purple Honda MusicEP release containing seven songs
    Crying for a ChristmasA song co-written by Krippayne and Jeff Peabody
    Simple Worship2008Pirk Music
    Exalted Worship2009Burning Bush Communications
    Fight for Love2012Pirk Music
    Not So Silent Night2012Pirk Music
    Hymns2013Pirk Music

    Singles

    References

    1. ^ a b c "Scott Krippayne's Gentle Revolution". Billboard Magazine.
    2. ^ a b American Idol Songwriter Isn't That Undiscovered After All
    3. ^ JesusFreakHideout.com: Scott Krippayne - Gentle Revolution review
    4. ^ Crown may be Jordin's for a song
    5. ^ "Daytime Emmy Awards 2014: Complete list of winners and nominees". The LA Times. May 2014.
    6. ^ "Daytime Emmy Nominations: 'Young and the Restless' Leads with 26 Nominations". Deadline Hollywood. May 2014.
    7. ^ "Hugs for Teens at Barnes & Noble". Barnes & Noble.
    8. ^ Krippayne, Scott (15 January 2011). More Than a Story - Simon & Schuster. Howard Books. ISBN 9781451636222. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
    9. ^ ScottKrippayne.com - Discography
    • Official website


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