JohnMellencamp.net
Biography

Date of Birth: 
October 7, 1951

Place of Birth:
Seymour, Indiana

Discography

2001
Cuttin' Heads

2000
Skin It Back /
The Kid Inside

1999
Rough Harvest

1998
John Mellencamp

1997
Best That I Could Do



1996
Mr. Happy Go Lucky

1994
Dance Naked

1993
Human Wheels

1991
Whenever We Wanted

1989
Big Daddy

1987
The Lonesome Jubilee

1985
Scarecrow

1983
Uh-Huh

1982
American Fool

1980
Nothin' Matters
& What If It Did

1979
John Cougar


1978
Mainman /
A Biography

1977
Kid Inside

1976
Chestnut Street Incident


A Great Singer Songwriter And Humanitarian
John Mellencamp

Mellencamp survived an early phase as a glam-rocker to become one of America's most successful mainstream rock singers of the past two decades. He played in local band Trash with guitarist Larry Crane (b. 1953), who remained with Mellencamp throughout the 80s. In 1976, David Bowie's manager Tony de Fries signed him to a recording deal with MainMan. Mellencamp's name was changed to Johnny Cougar and he was given a James Dean-style image.

The rush-released Chestnut Street Incident, comprised mainly of cover versions, did not chart. He left MainMan and moved back to Indiana, formed the Zone and recorded the self-penned The Kid Inside. Shortly afterwards he signed to Riva Records, owned by Rod Stewart's manager Billy Gaff who presented the singer as the next Bruce Springsteen.

His first chart action came courtesy of John Cougar, which included the US Top 30 single "I Need A Lover" in December 1979. Cougar and his band toured constantly, a strategy which paid off in 1982 when American Fool headed the US album chart (USA sales by 1996 were 5 million) while both "Hurts So Good" and "Jack And Diane" were million-sellers.

The following year he became John Cougar Mellencamp, eventually dropping the "Cougar" part in 1989. Many of his songs were now dealing with social problems, and Mellencamp was one of the organisers of the Farm Aid series of benefit concerts. His straight-ahead rock numbers also brought a string of big hits in the second half of the 80s.

Among the most notable were "Small Town", "R.O.C.K. In The USA", "Paper In Fire" (1987) and "Cherry Bomb" (1988). Lonesome Jubilee used fiddles and accordions to illustrate bleak portraits of America in recession, while "Pop Singer' from Big Daddy expressed Mellencamp"s disillusionment with the current state of the music business. He took time off to concentrate on painting but returned with Whenever We Wanted, which recaptured the muscular rock sound of his earlier albums.

In 1992, Mellencamp directed and starred in the movie Falling From Grace. He continued to hit the US charts with amazing rapidity and, up until early 1991, he had charted 21 singles in the US Hot 100 of which nine were Top 10, with one number 1, "Jack And Diane" in 1982. Despite the relative failure of 1993's Human Wheels, Mellencamp made a strong comeback with Dance Naked and the attendant Top 10 cover version of Van Morrison's "Wild Night".

Mellencamp suffered a major heart attack shortly after the release of Dance Naked, and following this major scare was sidelined for over a year. He returned in 1996 with Mr. Happy Go Lucky, on which his sound was augmented by the work of noted dance music producer Junior Vasquez. A more traditional self-titled set was released in 1998, earning Mellencamp his best reviews in years. In 2000, Mellencamp teamed up with novelist Stephen King to write a full-length ghost story stage musical.

Source: Sonicnet.com


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