John Hiatt - Hiatt Comes Alive At Budokan? (1994)
Artist: John Hiatt
Title: Hiatt Comes Alive At Budokan?
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:16:10
Total Size: 176 mb | 529 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Hiatt Comes Alive At Budokan?
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:16:10
Total Size: 176 mb | 529 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. John Hiatt - Through Your Hands (Live (1994/State Theater, Portland, ME))
02. John Hiatt - Real Fine Love (Live (1994/Freemont Theater/San Luis Obispo, CA))
03. John Hiatt - Memphis In The Meantime (Live (1994/Red Mile Racetrack, Lexington, KY))
04. John Hiatt - Icy Blue Heart (Live (1994/Schuba's, Chicago))
05. John Hiatt - Paper Thin (Live (1994/Red Mile Racetrack, Lexington, KY))
06. John Hiatt - Angel Eyes (Live (1994/State Theater, Portland, ME))
07. John Hiatt - Your Dad Did (Live (1994/Strand Theater, Providence, RI))
08. John Hiatt - Have A Little Faith In Me (Live (1994/The Chance, Poughkeepsie, NY))
09. John Hiatt - Drive South (Live (1994/The Chance, Poughkeepsie, NY))
10. John Hiatt - Thing Called Love (Live (1994/Stone Balloon, Newark, DE))
11. John Hiatt - Perfectly Good Guitar (Live (1994/Toad's Place, New Haven, CT))
12. John Hiatt - Feels Like Rain (Live (1994/Toad's Place, New Haven, CT))
13. John Hiatt - Tennessee Plates (Live (1994/Terrace Ballroom, Austin, TX))
14. John Hiatt - Lipstick Sunset (Live (1994/Von Braun Civic Center, Huntsville, AL))
15. John Hiatt - Slow Turning (Live (1994/State Theater, Portland, ME))
John Hiatt's first live album was recorded during a 1994 winter-spring tour of the U.S. (the title is a joke) and finds the singer/songwriter backed by the Guilty Dogs, a guitar-bass-drums trio. He doesn't need any more ammunition than that, not when he's got a set of 15 songs drawn from his last four critically acclaimed albums, including "Thing Called Love" and "Tennessee Plates." Hiatt gives his songs a rougher treatment than some of those who have covered them, his throaty voice giving even love songs like "Angel Eyes" an unsentimental force. In the absence of an A&M best-of, Hiatt Comes Alive at Budokan? makes a good sampler of his work, 1987-1993.