Dwight Yoakam
biography
With his stripped-down approach to
traditional honky tonk and
Born in
At the time he moved to
Yoakam released an independent EP, A Town South of
Bakersfield, in 1984, which received substantial airplay on
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."
In 2001, Yoakam debuted as a writer and director, also
issuing the soundtrack South of Heaven, West of Hell to accompany it. Two years
later, he debuted on a new label (Audium) with Population Me, while Reprise
issued the compilation In Others' Words to compete with it. In 2004 he released
Dwight's Used Records, a 14-track anthology of duets that appeared on other
artists' albums, unreleased covers, and cuts Yoakam contributed to various
tribute compilations. An album of all new material, the self-produced Blame the
Vain, followed in 2005 along with the live album Live from Austin, TX