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Warren
Zevon
A Great Singer Songwriter
One
of the most acute and savagely satiric songwriters of
his era, Warren Zevon was born in Chicago on January 24,
1947. His formative years were as colorful as the scenarios
played out in his music: his father was a professional
gambler, a lifestyle which forced the family to move frequently,
and Zevon spent most of his formative years in California
and Arizona. He learned to play piano, focusing primarily
on classical material before a disintegrating home life
led him into pop music, as well as a few run-ins with
the law; after his parents divorced when he was 16 years
old, Zevon hopped into the Corvette his father won in
a card game and headed for New York to become a folksinger.
His music found little response, however, and he returned
to California, eventually releasing his first recordings
as part of the duo Lyme and Cybelle. Session work followed
before Zevon issued his solo debut Wanted--Dead or Alive
in 1969; the LP received a poor reception, and so he returned
to session work and composing advertising jingles, and
also served as the Everly Brothers' pianist before the
duo's break-up. Following a 1974 sabbatical to Spain,
Zevon returned to Los Angeles, where his longtime friend
Jackson Browne had secured him a recording deal; with
Browne in the producer's seat, Zevon cut a self-titled
offering which was met with lavish critical praise upon
its 1976 release. His 1978 follow-up Excitable Boy established
him as a wholly unique talent, and earned a sizable hit
with its wry single "Werewolves of London."
However,
Zevon had fallen prey to alcoholism, and his personal
demons sidelined him for the next two years; 1980's Bad
Luck Streak in Dancing School and 1981's live set Stand
in the Fire marked his gradual return to form, and the
promise of his early work was restored on 1982's brilliant
release The Envoy. The album fared miserably on the charts,
however, and Zevon again fell off the wagon. A long period
of therapy and counseling followed before, newly sober
and revitalized, he issued Sentimental Hygiene in 1987,
recorded with backing assistance from members of R.E.M.
(In 1990, another collection of material from the sessions
featuring Zevon and R.E.M.'s Peter Buck, Mike Mills and
Bill Berry was released under the name Hindu Love Gods.)
He continued his comeback in 1989 with Transverse City,
a concept record inspired by science fiction's cyberpunk
movement, and 1991's Mr. Bad Example. In 1993, Zevon issued
his second live album, Learning to Flinch, followed in
1995 by Mutineer. His next studio effort, Life'll Kill
Ya, did not appear until early 2000. It was a moderate
success, enough to inspire him to step back into the studio
after touring the US. My Ride's Here, which featured a
guest appearance from David Letterman of all people, was
released in the spring of 2002. -- Jason Ankeny
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