John Eddie

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
If You're Here When I Get Back 04:00 Tools
Jungle Boy 03:25 Tools
Let Me Down Hard 04:59 Tools
Everything 05:08 Tools
Forty 03:28 Tools
Play Some Skynyrd 06:23 Tools
Inbetween Days 03:59 Tools
Family Tree 02:27 Tools
Jesus Is Coming 05:18 Tools
Low Life 03:11 Tools
Place You Go 03:53 Tools
Nobody's Happy 03:18 Tools
Shithole Bar 03:50 Tools
Pretty Little Rebel 03:16 Tools
It Doesn't Get Better Than This 11:20 Tools
Dream House 04:12 Tools
Just Some Guy 03:24 Tools
Stranded 04:11 Tools
Same Old Brand New Me 04:09 Tools
Romance 04:05 Tools
Please Jodi 04:08 Tools
Buster 04:50 Tools
Hide Out 05:01 Tools
Your Love 03:43 Tools
Living Doll 02:05 Tools
Cool Walk 02:47 Tools
Waste Me 03:40 Tools
In Private 05:09 Tools
Suspicious Minds 07:36 Tools
Did She Ask About Me 04:16 Tools
The Man I Am 03:02 Tools
I'm Still Drunk 03:39 Tools
If Only They Could See Me Then 03:53 Tools
American Thing 04:18 Tools
Real Big Deck 03:24 Tools
Happy New Year 03:08 Tools
Gettin Kinda Old 03:28 Tools
Wonderful Life 04:34 Tools
Payday 08:55 Tools
What's Left Of My Heart 03:13 Tools
Forever Anymore 03:31 Tools
They Don't Make Em Like That No More 03:19 Tools
Sweet Ride 03:03 Tools
Looking Up At Heaven 05:19 Tools
Beautiful 05:12 Tools
Won't be Me 04:36 Tools
Pourin' Rain 04:54 Tools
Don't Stop Me ( If You've Heard This One Before ) 03:20 Tools
Frank Sinatra Said 04:07 Tools
Fall For It Every Time 04:20 Tools
Heart Of Gold 04:49 Tools
Sleeping On The Beach 03:13 Tools
Pretty Lil Rebel 04:00 Tools
Another Lonely Christmas 00:00 Tools
Country In My Blood 04:26 Tools
Just A Song 04:04 Tools
Definitely 03:59 Tools
The Same Mistake 04:28 Tools
Thing Of Beauty 03:09 Tools
Pourinrain 04:20 Tools
Whispering Distance 03:01 Tools
All Is Forgiven 03:49 Tools
The Man Upstairs 03:12 Tools
If You're Here When I Get Back (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 03:12 Tools
In This House 04:37 Tools
Shake My Faith 05:08 Tools
Lost Along the Way 04:51 Tools
Let Me Down Hard (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 04:37 Tools
Tough Luck 04:16 Tools
Forty (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 04:37 Tools
Truth of the Matter 04:24 Tools
When Love Turns Mean 04:24 Tools
Swear 05:08 Tools
Daddy Said 04:24 Tools
Baby's Gone Wild 04:24 Tools
Everything (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 05:08 Tools
Place You Go (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 05:08 Tools
Nobody's Happy (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 05:08 Tools
Low Life (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 04:24 Tools
Family Tree (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 05:08 Tools
The Pourin' Rain 05:00 Tools
Run And Hide 03:16 Tools
Getting Kinda Old (Being Young at Heart) 03:16 Tools
Jesus Is Coming (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 04:24 Tools
Ain't That a Rock & Roll 03:28 Tools
Life Ain't Fair 04:30 Tools
It Doesn't Get Better Than This (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 04:24 Tools
Pourin´ Rain 04:24 Tools
Pay Day 03:28 Tools
Shithole Bar (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 04:24 Tools
Whats Left Of My Heart Lullabye 03:37 Tools
Ain't Nothin' Better (Sex with You) 02:27 Tools
Mary's Ghost - Single Version 03:07 Tools
Forty Version (Explicit)) 03:28 Tools
Waste Me - Live - Single Version 03:52 Tools
Forty (Album Version (Explicit)) 03:28 Tools
Fall For It Everytime 03:28 Tools
Play Some Skynyrd (Explicit Content - Parental Advisory) 02:27 Tools
Gettin' Kind Of Old (Being Young At Heart) 03:16 Tools
Mary's Ghost 03:07 Tools
Life Aint Fair 03:07 Tools
Ain't That Rock & Roll 03:28 Tools
Aint Nothin' Better 02:27 Tools
Let Me Down Hard (Live) 02:27 Tools
Low Life (Album Version (Explicit)) 03:11 Tools
S**thole Bar 03:11 Tools
Forty (Explicit) 03:11 Tools
It Doesn't Get Better Than This Version (Explicit)) 03:11 Tools
If You're Here When I Get Back 03:11 Tools
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On the roller coaster of his career so far, John Eddie has had enough big breaks, hard luck, new beginnings, false starts, serious adventure and big fun to inspire a boxed set's worth of country songs. He's had the sort of life - often hard-scrabble, occasionally charmed -- that other artists only imagine, or have someone else write about for them. John has managed to document a lot of this on Who The Hell Is John Eddie?, his debut disc for Lost Highway, along with details of assorted dreams, wishes, romances, and regrets. He really has spent endless days and nights on the road, playing the "shit-hole bars" he so hilariously and accurately recalls. And he's endured the heckling of alcohol-fueled patrons wanting to hear Skynyrd and Petty and demanding to know, Who The Hell Is John Eddie?. The funny thing is, his career first took at a time when everybody, in the music biz at least, wanted to know who the hell John Eddie was. It was the mid-eighties and the Virginia native, who'd recently relocated to New Jersey, was playing a showcase club in Manhattan called Trax. A busload of supporters had come to cheer him on. A few A&R guys caught the show, in which John wowed everyone in the house. By the next morning he found himself on the brink of an intense major-label bidding war that soon attracted the interest of the press as well as the industry. It didn't hurt that Bruce Springsteen, was, and still is, a fan and would sometimes surprise John by hopping onstage during his weekly gig at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, NJ. Though lots of comparisons to the Boss were made, especially after John signed a two-album deal with CBS/Sony, John's approach was always more Memphis than Asbury Park. He had a lot of country in him, plus elements of soul music, folk, and rockabilly. There was boyish swagger in his voice, but it was the vulnerability lurking behind it that could really get to you. John had an easy-going rapport with his very loyal audience, and a self-deprecating sense of humor that has only sharpened over the years. It's fitting then that he would wind up in Memphis, at the fabled Ardent Studios, to make the most-self assured record of his career, an album that's smart, funny, tender, and that rocks as hard as his sweat-drenched live shows. Who the Hell Is John Eddie? features Kenny Vaughan and PK Lavengood on guitar, Kenny Aaronson on bass, and Kenny Aronoff on drums. The album was produced by Jim Dickinson, a guy as legendary as the studio he helped make famous, and who knows his way around authentic. Dickinson's credits include producing Big Star's Third/Sister Lovers and the Replacements Pleased To Meet Me at Ardent, as well as playing with the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin and Bob Dylan, just to name a few. Jim's a producer who likes to cut to the chase: to capture, not merely reproduce, an artist's most incandescent moments. He found a lot of those with John. "Jim taught me a lot about letting the whole thing just happen," John explains. "Don't over-think it and if it doesn't feel real, lose it. We didn't do any pre-production. We just set the band up, I would play the band a song, we would run through it a few times, record something, then look to Jim to see if we were doing anything worthwhile. Jim brought some Memphis voodoo to the sessions. On 'Jesus Is Coming,' I had one verse and half a chorus when we started running through the song. I hadn't even played it for Jim before. He told me I'd been holding out on him. And as I looked at him through the glass, the words finished themselves. I believe God works in mysterious ways. So does Jim Dickinson." John's always been a great songwriter; now he's an even better one. During his tenure at Sony, and later Elektra, his perennial Next Big Thing status got in the way of the truth of the matter he had already arrived. All you had to do was tune out the din of hype and listen. His material was unfailingly clever, often funny, alternately foot-stomping and heartbreaking. After John went on his own and launched Thrill Show Recordings, the more stripped-down sound of his subsequent albums made his gifts that much more apparent. Who the Hell Is John Eddie? starts off in a gentle, bittersweet vein with "If You're Here When I Get Back, which John calls "wishful thinking put to music," and "Let Me Down Hard," in which "wishful thinking gets mercilessly crushed." Both feature label-mate Tift Merrit on background vocals. But the album definitely grows more raucous as it goes along - John describes "Low Life," for example, as "me trying to be Randy Newman fronting the Rolling Stones"-and culminates in what John calls "my bar-band mini-rock opera." It's starts with "Nobody's Happy," a sly nod to a Replacements song of almost the same name, and climaxes with "Play Some Skynyrd." Regarding that very autobiographical song, John says, "I've been playing in bars my whole life. Jim Dickinson made this sound like we were playing in an arena to a sea of upraised cigarette lighters. He made it sound like I heard it in my head. He made it sound like an anthem. And he told me it brought tears to his eyes, which is probably the best compliment I've ever gotten." Although there are two hidden tracks at the end of the disc, it officially concludes with "It Doesn't Get Better Than This," a simple, folk-like ballad that takes you right back to where everything started, with images of a place to come home to and someone waiting there. Maybe it's more wishful thinking put to music, a happy ending John's envisioned somewhere down the road. For us, however, it doesn't get better than this: an album as rollicking and as real as Who the Hell Is John Eddie? from an artist will make damn sure everyone knows who the hell he is. - Michael Hill Read more on Last.fm. 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