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Date Posted: 13:16:44 10/16/01 Tue
Author: No name
Subject: DWIGHT INFO

On rare occasions, a sense of the past is mated with a fierce, intransigent vision of the future, and something new is born. Something new like the music of Dwight Yoakam.

In all his recorded work and stage performances, Dwight Yoakam's music has been marked by an abiding affection for the purity of traditional country's precedent, but never has it been straitjacketed by a mindless fidelity that creates a vacuum in which a song withers and dies. Dwight's understanding of country's past is one of the great virtues of his music; his will to go the past one better -- to up the ante emotionally, to jump the energy level up several notches -- is an equally important virtue in the Yoakam canon. And his vision as a songwriter continues to set him apart.

Initially, the Kentucky native burst onto the scene in the early '80s by driving an alternate route of his own invention. Hailed as a "Renaissance Man" by Time magazine, Dwight creates music that, according to the Los Angeles Times, is "rooted in the rawest of country traditions (Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, et al), but it's aggressively contemporary without pandering to fleeting pop trends." Vanity Fair has also noted: "Yoakam strides the divide between rock's lust and country's lament."

Dwight realized in the early days of his career that he might need to find an alternate highway for his music. So he brought his music to an unlikely audience -- the roots rock fans of Los Angeles, who were becoming conversant with a new breed of traditionalist through the work of such local bands as Los Lobos, the Blasters and Lone Justice, all of whom shared stages with Dwight.

It was strange chemistry, certainly, but Dwight stuck by his guns and achieved a new audience for his heady combination of gutsy country emotion and rock 'n' roll electricity. That combination was also on view in his six-song 1984 debut EP Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc. -- a record that attracted the attention of devotees of rock's most progressive sounds.

Guitars, Cadillacs, issued independently by a small Hollywood label, was re-released in 1986, augmented by four new songs, on Reprise Records. That album, and the six studio sets that followed it, encapsulate Dwight's uncompromising approach to modern country. They are: Hillbilly Deluxe (1987), Buenas Noches From a Lonely Room (1988), Just Lookin' for a Hit (1989), If There Was a Way (1990) -- all of which have sold more than 1 million units -- plus This Time (1993), Dwight's double-platinum bestseller, GONE (1995).

Writing about the milestone This Time in a four-star Rolling Stone lead review, Don McLeese noted that the album "suggests that he has no contemporary peer, that his emotional precision and command of nuance have attained a kind of perfection." Listeners within the music industry concurred: "Ain't That Lonely Yet," the #1 top-selling single drawn from that album, won a 1993 Grammy for best country vocal performance, male, while the album's "Pocket of a Clown" received a Grammy nomination in the same category a year later.

Dwight summed up his career to date with 1995's Dwight Live, a smoking document of the last dates on his '94 "This Time Tour" recorded at San Francisco's Warfield Theater. Like all its precursors, this energetic concert recording captured his dramatic melding of country roots and contemporary fervor.

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