John Hiatt mixed pop, folk, rock, R&B, country, and gospel on his
debut album, immediately becoming an uncategorizable (and thus uncommercial)
entity. Although this album was cut in Nashville, it owes more to Van
Morrison than it does to Conway Twitty, and like the Belfast bluesman,
Indianian Hiatt came to his influences somewhat secondhand, however sincerely
he evoked them. What he really was, of course, was a singer/songwriter,
albeit not in a style easily recognizable in 1974. The title indicates
his position: Hiatt's songs show him an acute observer. But the performances
require him to dig in, and although he does so with alacrity, the result
is too diffuse. Nevertheless, Hiatt earned critical kudos for this album,
and Three Dog Night (who knew good songwriting when they heard it) covered
"Sure As I'm Sittin' Here," getting a Top 40 single out of it.
(by William Ruhlmann, All
Music Guide)
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