T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2828.1 | | LEDS::BURATI | lay back and dream on a rainy day | Thu Oct 14 1993 00:12 | 35 |
| Mark,
Stolen Moments is the follow up to Slow Turning. I'd rate it somewhere
between Bring the Family and Slow Turning. I think the Goners really
held Slow Turning together, especially behind the exquisite slide work
by Landreth. They gave the album a consistancy and they were perfect
for the material.
If you're a fan, I'd say you should have Stolen Moments. The most played
track is (She's a Child of the) Wild Blue Yonder. But it has a few
tracks that are down-right chilling. Ten Little Indians is about his
father and siblings.
Hiatt also plays plenty of electric guitar tracks. Plays solos in a few
songs (can't thin of which). He's the only electric guitar on one of the
tracks on Bonnie Raitt's Luck of the Draw LP. He can hold his own on a
Tele.
I like his new one but the lead work gets on my nerves after a while.
It's good on some of the tracks but not all. I just picked it up and
need to listen through it a few more times. But I can tell you that
Buffalo River Home gave me goose bumps both times I've played it.
Hiatt is more than just prolific, he's a lyrical genius. I think that
right now he's about the best songwriter in America. His music should
somday have a place in the Smithsonean.
The opening to Icy Blue Heart:
She came onto him like a slow moving cold front
His beer was warmer than the look in her eye
She sat on a stool, he said "What do you want?"
She said "Give me a love that don't freeze up inside."
--Ron (Hiatt fan, DUH!)
|
2828.2 | A Long Career | TECRUS::ROST | Both kinds of bass, slap and pop | Thu Oct 14 1993 08:12 | 22 |
| Hiatt has actually been recording since about 1975 when he did two LPs
for Epic in Nashville.
After bombing in the C&W market (though Epic has reissued these on CD
after many years out of print), he went "new wave" with MCA. I have
one of the two LPs ("Slug Line"), where he has Jon Paris on second
guitar (Jon had played bass and harp for Johnny Winter). This stuff is
heavily in the style of early Elvis Costello or Joe Jackson.
Then it was off to Geffen for a few records, including "Riding With The
King" where on one side he is backed up by Rockpile, "Welcome To The
Ice Age" where Costello provides some backing vox and "All Of A Sudden"
which has loads of synths and sounds like a Cars album with a hangover.
I *think* some of the MCA and Geffen stuff has been reissued on CD.
The one constant is the excellent songwriting. His output since "Bring
The Family" is not nearly as frantic in the playing and production, I
would guess because that was when he kicked the obligatory drug and
alcohol problem.
Brian
|
2828.3 | | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Thu Oct 14 1993 10:05 | 8 |
| Like Willie Nelson, Hiatt was well-known (in the industry, not to the public)
as a songwriter long before he had any appreciable success as a performer.
*Lot's* of people have done John Hiatt songs over the years. Of course,
being the space cadet that I am, I can't think of hardly any of them right
at the moment, other than the Bonnie Raitt one mentioned earlier and
Emmylou Harris doing "Icy Blue Heart".
-Hal
|
2828.4 | C,mon baby, drive South | CSC32::D_PELTONEN | U R Stuck by I M Slick | Thu Oct 14 1993 10:29 | 7 |
|
If you like him (as do I), try to catch the Austin City Limits
show he did.....*excellent* work! They replay it from time to
time and its worth watching out for.
DAP
|
2828.5 | Hiatt, and ??? | DVOPAS::MARSHL::malkoski | | Thu Oct 14 1993 11:13 | 26 |
| I'm a fan, too. I like Stolen Moments and think the work holds up rather well. As
cited in an earlier response, Ten Little Indians is a stunning piece - quite
chilling in the tale. Hiatt can do that.
I like a lot of the new album, but it hasn't floored me - yet. Maybe it'll grow.
Hiatt has been around quite a while and has been recorded by a large group of
folks. I have a great album called Western Beat by Kevin Welch, another
singer/song writer from Nashville. He includes an old (1978?) Hiatt tune called
The Train to Birmingham that is a dynamite folk ballad.
I agree with the earlier assessment of Little Village. I think it misses because
the album was done NOT as a John Hiatt effort, but as a team effort. Too much
democracy. Which, IMO, does not help make good art.
Finally, there is a local radio station here in the Denver area - KBCO - that
invites artists in to their Studio C when they are in town for interviews and live
acoustic sets. John was on about 5-6 weeks ago and did 6 tunes, including debuting
5 tunes from the new album. Way cool to hear him in that setting. KBCO has put out
3 albums of work from artists who have been to Studio C. The CDs are in limited
distribution (only in their listening area) and are terrific. The artists include
Hiatt, James Taylor, Shawn Colvin, Fish, Crash Test Dummies, etc. all doing
acoustic numbers. Very exiciting stuff.
Paul
|
2828.6 | | MSE1::MULLER | | Thu Oct 14 1993 13:23 | 5 |
| re: .0
> Ravi Oli on electric sitar
Didn't he play with the calypso band La Zagna?
|
2828.7 | life is a minestrone | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Thu Oct 14 1993 13:40 | 2 |
| I thought he was in a world music / polka fusion
ensemble, led by accordionist Al Dente
|
2828.8 | | LEDS::BURATI | lay back and dream on a rainy day | Fri Oct 15 1993 10:28 | 11 |
| Al Dente! Ho ho! Good one, rick!
Regarding early Hiatt recordings that Brian mentioned back in .2:
I recently picked up a Hiatt CD called "Y'all Caught?" issued by Geffen
containing a compilation of tracks from his Epic/MCA days. This is
definitely a CD that should be considered only by hard core Hiatt fan's.
I like it simply because it gives me a reference point as to how far
he's come.
--Ron
|
2828.9 | Little Village | PAKORA::JHYNDMAN | | Tue Oct 26 1993 19:26 | 10 |
| I caught Little Village when they were on tour in the UK,and being a
fan of each member (Ry Cooder,Hiatt,Nick Lowe and Jim Keltner) was
expecting a real big event.....very disappointing.
There was no synergy,the whole was not greater than the sum of the
parts,and the best parts were when each member did one of their own
songs and the rest played backup.
Still wear the T shirt,tho',cuz I bought it on the way IN to the
show !
Jim.
|
2828.10 | Big Love | SAHQ::ROSENKRANZ | Go ask Alice.... | Wed Oct 27 1993 08:13 | 5 |
| There is cut on the CD. I think its called Big Love, or something.
Its got some real slooooww cool slide on it. Its got a lot of
tension to it. I really liked it after a couple of plays.
jim
|
2828.11 | | LEDS::BURATI | lay back and dream on a rainy day | Wed Oct 27 1993 14:18 | 3 |
| Big Love is a great tune.
I mentioned Ten Little Indians back a few. It's should be Seven.
|
2828.12 | Perfectly Good album | DVOPAS::MARSHL::malkoski | | Mon Nov 01 1993 10:55 | 15 |
| Yeah, right. I got the number of little indians wrong. Still a great song.
I think the observation on the concert is interesting. Many people anticipated
really great things from Little Village and came away disappointed - just as you
did from the concert. That sums up my take on the album. Certainly there was more
to that group of players when Hiatt fronted them on Bring the Family. Goes to show
what happens in a musical democracy may not be for the best. Too bad.
I continue to listen to Perfectly Good Guitar and like the song and the album. I
also agree that some of the guitar work seems a bit too strident, but the writing
and the songs are great. After listening a lot to the title cut, I feel that it
has a lot of Neil Young in it - stright ahead guitar work, simple but good story
line. I like it a lot.
Paul
|
2828.13 | | LEDS::BURATI | lay back and dream on a rainy day | Mon Nov 01 1993 12:05 | 3 |
| I also noticed the similarity of Perfectly Good Guitar with Neil Young's
"Rocking in the USA" of whatever it was. The opening track "Something
Wild" sounds a bit like a Smithereens tune.
|
2828.14 | To the end of the line... | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon Nov 01 1993 21:16 | 13 |
| One of my all time favorite Hiatt Tunes is off the "Bring the Family"
disc.....**Tip of my tongue** This is a nice ballad with beautiful
finger-style guitar accompanyment. I still can't figure if an electric
or acoustic guitar was used on this tune.
Another great tune off this album is "Have a little faith in me",
which consists of Hiatt singing gospel-style with piano accompanyment.
He really has a super powerful voice and this tune showcases it.
If anyone out there in guitarland hasn't been turned on to Hiatt yet,
you don't know what you're missing.
Mark
|
2828.15 | | LEDS::BURATI | lay back and dream on a rainy day | Tue Nov 02 1993 09:52 | 14 |
| Right on, Mark. "Have A Little Faith In Me" is one monstrous bit of
songwriting. How someone like this knows how to reach down to the depths
of his soul and commit to words and music feelings that are so
overwhelmingly personal is a complete mystery to me. He says more about
the human condition in those lyrics than what's been written in the
previous 200 years of literature. At the show I went to he did this tune
solo on a Wurlitzer Electric Piano. A big hall with a pinspot on him. It
was pure magic.
If my older brother, who took me to so many shows back in the late
sixties were alive today, I'd take him to see John Hiatt. And if the
show was half as good as the one I went to, I tell him "We're even".
--Ron
|
2828.16 | | ABACUS::PAGE | | Tue Nov 02 1993 10:12 | 15 |
|
No question, John Hiatt is one of the premiere American songwriters
now. And he does have a great voice. THe "Bring The Family" album
abounds with great vocal performances; as mentioned before, "Tip Of My
Tongue" is a great performance. I particularly remember a song called
"Love Like Blood" that had a great soulful vocal; I can't remember
which LP it was on.
John's great. I've been a "mild" fan since the "Warming Up To The
Ice Age" album, but "Bring The Family" really made me a follower.
Brad
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2828.17 | Heeeeeerrrrres Johnny! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Nov 10 1993 12:41 | 35 |
| John Hiatt was on "The Tonight Show" last night. They squeezed
him into the last 5 minutes of the show. Just enough time to perform
"Perfectly Good Guitar" and talk to Jay for about 2 minutes.
John was playing a Takamine acoustic electric. His lead guitarist
was playing a Gretch thin-hollow body. This guy does sound a lot like
Niel Young.
At the end of the song, John Hiatt smashed the Takamine guitar
against the stage monitors and it disintigrated into pieces on the stage.
After the tune, John sat with Jay, and his other guests (Rosanne
Arnold, and Barry Goldwater). Someone asked if he smashed a guitar at
every show, and he said "only the Big ones". He also mentioned that he
stopped in Nashville on his way to The Tonight Show to celebrate his
step-son's 16th birthday. He came across as being very humble and low
keyed. I got a kick out of his attire. He was wearing a pair of bib
overalls, construction boots, and a baseball cap. One of the guys in his
band (bass player?) had his head shaved and looked a little like *Uncle
Fester*.
This lark appearence left me wanting more. I'd love to see the
Austin City Limits segment, but I don't get cable. I taped the show
last night. Anyone wanna swap?
BTW, how is "Warming up to the Ice Age"? I've got all of his
recent stuff and still crave more, but I don't need no stinkin'
Elvis Costello album !
Mark
Mark
|
2828.18 | | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Wed Nov 10 1993 13:24 | 14 |
| re: .17
> At the end of the song, John Hiatt smashed the Takamine guitar
> against the stage monitors and it disintigrated into pieces on the stage.
Aauuuggghhh!!!! What a waste of a perfectly good guitar!
> This lark appearence left me wanting more. I'd love to see the
> Austin City Limits segment, but I don't get cable. I taped the show
> last night. Anyone wanna swap?
Austin City Limits isn't on cable, it's on PBS.
-Hal
|
2828.19 | Seconded... | TALOFA::HARMON | Paul Harmon, DECtp/East | Thu Nov 11 1993 07:13 | 14 |
| > <<< Note 2828.18 by TAMRC::LAURENT "Hal Laurent @ COP" >>>
>
>re: .17
>
>> At the end of the song, John Hiatt smashed the Takamine guitar
>> against the stage monitors and it disintigrated into pieces on the
> stage.
>
>Aauuuggghhh!!!! What a waste of a perfectly good guitar!
It makes me sick when I hear about someone doing this. I guess it's a
good thing I've never actually seen it happen.
Paul
|
2828.20 | | SAHQ::ROSENKRANZ | Go ask Alice.... | Thu Nov 11 1993 07:17 | 3 |
| In JH own words:
"There oughta be a law.. smash a guitar and go to jail"
|
2828.21 | | LEDS::BURATI | stompin at the savoy | Thu Nov 11 1993 07:25 | 5 |
| I guess maybe he was showin' everybody what he was talking about. Of
course, to people who really weren't paying attention to what he was
singing, he just looked like a jerk. I saw it and it *was* pretty weird.
Ron
|
2828.22 | | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Thu Nov 11 1993 11:22 | 1 |
| At least it was only a Tamamine... ;^)
|
2828.23 | a Sante Fe would be nice | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Thu Nov 11 1993 12:02 | 8 |
| re: .22
> At least it was only a Tamamine... ;^)
Hey, you got any "only a Takamine"s lying around you'd like to
give me? :-) :-)
-Hal
|
2828.24 | Tak or Y-word | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri Nov 12 1993 16:35 | 4 |
| After looking at the tape again, I think the guitar he smashed
might have been a Yamaha, rather than a Tak. Not much differance.
Mark
|
2828.25 | Perfectly good concert | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue Jan 25 1994 14:48 | 8 |
|
John Hiatt will be playing (at least) 2 shows in Boston
in the near future. He has one show scheduled at the Berkely
Performing Arts Center which is sold-out. There is another
show planned for Saturday, Jan 29, at the Avalon on Landsdown
St. Tickets are still available for the Avalon Show ($15.00).
Mark (hard-core Hiatt fan).
|
2828.26 | | LEDS::BURATI | I'mthecultofpersonality | Tue Jan 25 1994 21:32 | 6 |
| As I write this, Hiatt is playing at the Sting in New Britain CT and
WHCN Hartford is broadcasting it live. The tape is rolling. The sound is
most excellent. Party on Wayne. Party on Garth.
--Ron
|
2828.27 | My kingdom for live Hiatt! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri Jan 28 1994 10:45 | 5 |
| Sounds like the show at the "Sting" was most excellant. I'd love to
hear the tape (hint-hint)!
Mark
|
2828.28 | | CAPNET::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Product Management | Fri Feb 04 1994 10:55 | 3 |
| Saw his Berkleey gig on the 30th...truly religious experience.
Mark.
|
2828.29 | | E::EVANS | | Mon Feb 07 1994 08:19 | 4 |
| Yes, the Berkley gig was an eye opener.
Jim
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2828.30 | yeah he's pretty good for a Christian | FRETZ::HEISER | Hey! Ho! Hey! Ho! Hey! Ho! Hey! Ho! | Mon Feb 07 1994 12:30 | 1 |
| > Saw his Berkleey gig on the 30th...truly religious experience.
|
2828.31 | | LEDS::BURATI | human crumple zone | Wed Jun 15 1994 13:45 | 1 |
| Hiatt on Letterman tonight, I think.
|
2828.32 | he even got to sit in the guest chair | EZ2GET::STEWART | ones & zeros for everyone! | Mon Jun 20 1994 13:02 | 11 |
|
Yeah, he was there at the tail end...for once, Paul Schafer didn't
force himself on the visiting act...the rest of the band joined in,
well maybe the brass section sat out. JH has got a little goatee
action going now and a kid playing guitar with a little nod to the
grunge scene. The director didn't have a clue...showed closeups of
Hiatt's and the kid's hands while the guy in Schafer's band was playing the lead
fills...so that's how you play those tricky rhythm parts!!!
|
2828.33 | understatement alert | LEDS::BURATI | be like boy | Mon Jun 20 1994 14:05 | 4 |
| The "kid" is Mike Ward, and I frankly look forward to the day when Hiatt
teams up with a different player.
--Ron
|
2828.34 | | E::EVANS | | Mon Jun 20 1994 15:58 | 8 |
|
What did Hiatt play?
As for Hiatt hooking up with another player, this kid (Mike Ward) follows
Ry Cooder and Sonny Landreth. That's pretty fast company.
Jim
|
2828.35 | the last few details | EZ2GET::STEWART | ones & zeros for everyone! | Mon Jun 20 1994 19:33 | 7 |
|
Hiatt played a 12 string electro-accoustic kind of thing, didn't catch
the brand. The tune was "Cross My Fingers" or a song with those lyrics
in the chorus. He changed it to "let's go, Rangers" a couple of times.
|
2828.36 | | LEDS::BURATI | be like boy | Mon Jun 20 1994 20:50 | 20 |
| I was surprised at that choice for a song. It might have been changed at
the last minute because his segment got squashed into the last 5 minutes
of the show due to an appearance by the Stanley Cup and some of its new
owners. Maybe they had to pick a shorter tune. It's certainly not one of
his more memorable tunes.
> As for Hiatt hooking up with another player, this kid (Mike Ward)
> follows Ry Cooder and Sonny Landreth. That's pretty fast company.
It sure is, though he's not in their league. I figger Hiatt was looking
to make a different kind of sound this time around, what with tunes like
"Perfectly Good Guitar" and "Something Wild". And Ward does a decent job
on those tracks. It's just that he's ill suited for most of the rest of
Hiatt's material AND he overplays (to my ears) on just about everything.
BTW, Ward has one weird Gibson. What the hell is that thing. It looks
like an ES-335 that has some kind of asymetrical problem. I'm pretty
sure it says Gibson on the headstock. I got one good look at it.
|
2828.37 | sign here | RICKS::CALCAGNI | really useful engine | Tue Jun 21 1994 08:31 | 8 |
| That's a Les Paul Signature model, one of their early 70's abominations;
Gold Top, low impedance pickups, assymetrical semi-hollow. Remember
the GP ads for these, featuring a deranged looking rocker in a white
suit?
The bass versions of these have surged in popularity recently, thanks
to Jack Casady who's currently using one.
|
2828.38 | Hiatt Comes alive in my basement! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Jan 25 1995 11:18 | 10 |
| John Hiatt has a new Live disk out these days entitled "John Hiatt
comes alive at Budakan". The title is a spoof, as all of the tunes
were recorded at various venues here in the good ole US of A. This
album contains cuts from his last 4 albums and makes for great
listening. I highly recommend it for fan's and curiosity seekers
alike. I've seen this disk at bargain prices, which is an added
bonus for fans.
Mark
|