Chuck Allen Floyd's musical career began when he and a group of college buddies formed a band and started playing cover songs throughout southern Oklahoma and north Texas. After forming a strong regional following, he decided to give Nashville a try.
Floyd pursued music in Nashville for three years while he finished his degree at Belmont University. Getting nowhere, he then made an unconventional career choice (at least for a songwriter); he returned to Oklahoma and attended law school at the University of Oklahoma. He then passed the bar in Texas and practiced law in Amarillo for roughly ten minutes (actually, about 6 months). Convinced a career in law was not for him, Chuck sold his house, dusted off his guitars and moved back to Nashville in pursuit of a songwriting deal.
In 2004, Floyd found that deal with country music legend Clint Black's Blacktop Music Group. A full-time writer/performer ever since, Floyd has collaborated with many of Nashville's most celebrated songwriters as well as some of the best up and comers on Music Row.