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Dwight Yoakam
With his stripped-down
approach to traditional honky tonk and Bakersfield
country, Dwight Yoakam helped return country music to
its roots in the late '80s. Like his idols
Buck Owens,
Merle Haggard,
and
Hank Williams,
Yoakam never played by Nashville's roots; consequently,
he never dominated the charts like his contemporary
Randy Travis.
Then again,
Travis
never played around with the sound and style of country
music like Yoakam. On each of his records, he twists
around the form enough to make it seem like he doesn't
respect all of country's traditions. Appropriately, his
core audience was composed mainly of roots rock and rock
& roll fans, not the mainstream country audience.
Nevertheless, he was frequently able to chart in the
country Top Ten, and he remained one of the most
respected and adventurous recording country artists well
into the '90s.
Born in Kentucky but raised
in Ohio, Yoakam learned how to play guitar at the age of
six. As a child, he listened to his mother's record
collection, honing in on the traditional country of
Hank Williams
and
Johnny Cash,
as well as the Bakersfield honky tonk of
Buck Owens.
When he was in high school, Yoakam played with a variety
of bands, playing everything from country to rock &
roll. After completing high school, Yoakam briefly
attended Ohio State University, but he dropped out and
moved to Nashville in the late '70s with the intent of
becoming a recording artist.
At the time he moved to
Nashville, the town was in the throes of the
pop-oriented urban cowboy movement and had no interested
in his updated honky tonk. While in Nashville, he met
guitarist
Pete Anderson,
who shared a similar taste in music. The pair moved out
to Los Angeles, where they found a more appreciative
audience than they did in Nashville. In L.A., Yoakam and
Anderson
didn't just play country clubs, they played the same
nightclubs that punk and post-punk rock bands like
X,
the Dead Kennedys,
Los Lobos,
the Blasters,
and
the Butthole Surfers
did. What Yoakam had in common with rock bands like
X,
the Blasters,
and
Los Angeles
was similar musical influences; they all drew from '50s
rock & roll and country. In comparison to the polished
music coming out of Nashville, Yoakam's stripped-down,
direct revivalism seemed radical. The cowpunks, as they
were called, that attended Yoakam's shows provided an
invaluable support for his fledgling career.
Yoakam released an
independent EP,
A Town South of
Bakersfield, in 1984, which received
substantial airplay on Los Angeles college and
alternative radio stations. The EP also helped him land
a record contract with Reprise Records. Dwight's
full-length debut album,
Guitars,
Cadillacs, Etc., Etc., was released in
1986 and was an instant sensation. Rock and country
critics praised it and it earned airplay on college
stations across America. More importantly, it was a hit
on the country charts, as its first single, a cover of
Johnny Horton's
"Honky Tonk Man," climbed to number three in the spring,
followed by the number four "Guitars, Cadillacs" in the
summer. The album would eventually go platinum.
Hillbilly Deluxe,
Dwight's 1987 follow-up, was equally successful,
spawning four Top Ten hits: "Little Sister," "Little
Ways," "Please, Please Baby," and "Always Late with Your
Kisses." In 1988, Yoakam had his first number one hit
with "Streets of Bakersfield," a cover of a
Buck Owens
song recorded with
Owens
himself. It was the first single off his third album,
Buenos Noches
From a Lonely Room, which continued his
streak of Top Ten hits. "I Sang Dixie," the album's
second single, went to number one, and "I Got You"
reached number five. In 1989, Yoakam released a
compilation album,
Just Lookin' for
a Hit, which went gold. "Long White
Cadillac," taken from the collection, stalled at number
35 in the fall of 1989.
Although his 1990 album
If There Was a
Way didn't have as many Top Ten hits, it
was a major success; it was his first album since his
debut to go platinum.
This Time,
released in the spring of 1993, was an even bigger hit,
spawning three number two singles — "Ain't That Lonely
Yet," "A Thousand Miles From Nowhere," and "Fast as You"
— and going platinum. After its release, Yoakam was
silent for two years, returning in the summer of 1995
with
Dwight Live,
which didn't set the charts on fire. In the fall of that
year, he released his sixth album,
Gone,
which went gold by the spring of 1996, although it
didn't produce any major country hits. After 1997's
Under the Covers,
a collection of cover songs, Yoakam returned with the
all-new
A Long Way Home
in 1998. Another compilation,
Last Chance for a
Thousand Years: Greatest Hits From the '90s,
was released in 1999; its newly recorded version of
Queen's
"Crazy Little Thing Called Love" became Yoakam's biggest
hit in six years, even hitting the lower reaches of the
pop charts thanks to its exposure in a khakis
commercial. Two albums followed in 2000:
dwightyoakamacoustic.net, a bare-bones,
all-acoustic revisitation of Yoakam's back catalog; and
the more standard studio project
Tomorrow's Sounds
Today, which featured further
collaborations with
Buck Owens
and a cover of
Cheap Trick's
"I Want You to Want Me."
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