John Hiatt (born August 20 1952 in Indianapolis, Indiana) is an American musician with a growing following, who gets airplay on alternative radio stations. He has played a variety of styles, including New Wave, rock and roll, blues and country.
Though he has achieved modest mainstream fame as a performing and recording artist since he debuted as a solo artist in 1974, Hiatt's songs have been covered by Bob Dylan, Iggy Pop, Nick Lowe, the Neville Brothers, Emmylou Harris, Three Dog Night, Dr. Feelgood, Bonnie Raitt, Ronnie Milsap, Willie Nelson, B. B. King with Eric Clapton, Paula Abdul, Jimmy Buffett, Jewel, and Mandy Moore. His first album to chart at all was Bring the Family (1987). He continues to gain fame as a respected songwriter and performer into the present.
Hiatt moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he got a job as a songwriter for the Tree-Music Publishing Company. Hiatt, who was unable to read or write scores, had to record all 250 songs he wrote for the company. Hiatt wrote the song, Sure As I'm Sitting Here, which performed by Three Dog Night rose to number 16 on the Billboard chart.
Hiatt meanwhile began playing with a band, White Ducks, which recorded an album, In Season, in 1972. Hiatt performed with both the White Ducks, and solo in a variety of clubs around Nashville. Hiatt met Don Ellis of Epic Records in 1973, and received a record deal, releasing his first single We Make Spirt later that year. In 1974 Hiatt released Hangin' Around the Observatory, which was a critical success and a commercial failure. A year later Overcoats was released, and when it failed to sell, Epic dropped Hiatt. Hiatt would suffer a similar fate with his next two labels, both MCA Records and Geffen Records dropped him.
While working with Geffen, Hiatt received some praise however, he had been called "the American Elvis Costello" by some. Hiatt even recorded a duet with Costello, a cover of the Spinners' song, Living A Little, Laughing A Little, which appeared on Warming Up to the Ice Age. Shortly after its release, Bob Dylan covered Hiatt's song, The Usual which had appeared on Warming Up to the Ice Age.
Hiatt finally came into success in 1987, when he released his first big hit, Bring the Family. For the album Hiatt had a backing band consisting of Ry Cooder, Nick Lowe, and Jim Keltner. One of the cuts from the album, "Have a Little Faith in Me" would be covered by a number of artists, including Joe Cocker, Jewel, and Mandy Moore. "Thank You Girl" was a moderate radio hit, but nothing that would garner Hiatt national attention.
Following Bring the Family, Hiatt would have varied success on his following albums, though he did have a string of 9 straight studio albums hit the Billboard 200. In 1989, Hiatt returned to the studio to record Slow Turning, which would be his first album to hit the upper half of the Billboard 200. It also featured his only successful single, the title track, which hit #8 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. Also in 1989, Jeff Healey covered Hiatt's song "Angel Eyes", and took it to the top 5 of the Billboard Hot 100.
In 1992, Cooder, Keltner, and Lowe again backed up John Hiatt, but this time they gave themselves a band name, "Little Village", a reference to a Sonny Boy Williamson II project. Expectations for the Little Village album were high, but the album failed to even chart as high as Hiatt's last solo album, and the group disbanded after an equally unsuccessful tour.
In 1993, Hiatt recorded Perfectly Good Guitar with members of alternative rock groups School of Fish and Wire Train. It was Hiatt's highest peaking album at #47, but again high expectations would not be met. The next year, Hiatt released Hiatt Comes Alive at Budokan?, his first live album and his last album with A&M Records.
Hiatt's next few albums never gained any momentum on the charts, and he saw little change in his fanbase in the late 1990s, indicating a dedicated (but not growing) following. In 2000, Hiatt released his first independent album (on Vanguard Records), Crossing Muddy Waters, which saw a strong mixture of bluegrass music in his music. Later that year, he was named songwriter/artist of the year at the Nashville Music Awards. In 2001, Crossing Muddy Waters was nominated for a Grammy award for Best Contemporary Folk Album. A compilation of Hiatt's songs that have been covered was also released on Vanguard. A CD and DVD of John Hiatt's performance on Austin City Limits was released in 2005, along with his most recent album, Master of Disaster.
| Year | Title | Chart positions | Album | |||
| US Hot 100 | US Modern Rock | US Mainstream Rock | UK | |||
| 1987 | "Thank You Girl" | - | - | #27 | - | Bring The Family |
| 1988 | "Slow Turning" | - | #22 | #8 | - | Slow Turning |
| 1988 | "Paper Thin" | - | - | #18 | - | Slow Turning |
| 1990 | "Child of the Wild Blue Yonder" | - | #24 | #17 | - | Stolen Moments |
| 1992 | "She Runs Hot" (w/ Little Village) | - | - | #17 | - | Little Village |
| 1992 | "Solar Sex Panel" (w/ Little Village) | - | - | #35 | - | Little Village |
| 1993 | "Perfectly Good Guitar" | - | - | #16 | - | Perfectly Good Guitar |
| 1993 | "Something Wild" | - | - | #31 | - | Perfectly Good Guitar |
1952 births | American singer-songwriters | American male singers | American guitarists | Indianapolitans | Living people | WikiProject Musicians articles
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"John Hiatt".
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