Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
The Eclipse Sessions
2018 studio album by John Hiatt From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Eclipse Sessions is singer-songwriter John Hiatt's twenty-third album, released in 2018. It is his eighth studio release on the New West Records label. The album was partly recorded in August 2017 as the solar eclipse travelled across the U.S., hence the album title.[5][6]
With Hiatt on lead vocals and guitar, he is joined by long-time collaborators Kenneth Blevins on drums and Patrick O'Hearn on bass. New to the team is producer and musician Kevin McKendree joining in on keyboards. McKendree has worked with Delbert McClinton, Lee Roy Parnell, Tinsley Ellis and Brian Setzer. McKendree's son Yates, who was only 16 at the time, adds lead guitar.
Remove ads
Release
The Eclipse Sessions was released by New West on October 12, 2018.[7][8] The album debuted, and peaked at No. 162 on the Billboard 200 chart.[9][10] "Cry to Me,"[11] "Over the Hill,"[12] and "Poor Imitation of God" were released as singles. A music videos was made for "Over the Hill."[13] Hiatt toured the US in support of the album.[12]
Critical reception
Summarize
Perspective
The Eclipse Sessions was met with generally favorable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 82, based on four reviews.[14]
AllMusic's Mark Deming writes "The Eclipse Sessions rings true as the work of someone who has been thinking a lot about human frailty and the consequences of the choices we all must make. Hiatt is too smart to pretend he has answers to any of the emotional puzzles he's working in these tunes, but he sounds fearlessly honest as he ponders it all, and the grain in his voice gives the right texture to his contemplative delivery. And the arrangements and production on The Eclipse Sessions are well matched to the material."[20] Eric R. Danton of Paste Magazine writes "At its core, The Eclipse Sessions shows that Hiatt remains a songwriter worth listening to: He’s a skillful lyricist with a singular voice. Yet anyone who’s been releasing albums for as long as Hiatt has tends to bury themselves under the weight of their earlier work, which fans have been imprinting on their souls for decades. If his latest album doesn’t quite rise to the level of Bring the Family or Slow Turning, well, that’s a high bar, and Hiatt is not the same person as he was in his mid-30s. But the past is past, and The Eclipse Sessions is strong enough to make an impression of its own."[21]
Remove ads
Track listing
All tracks are written by John Hiatt.
Personnel
- John Hiatt – acoustic guitar, baritone guitar, electric guitar, vocals
- Kenneth Blevens – drums
- Patrick O'Hearn – bass
- Yates McKendree – guitar, slide acoustic guitar
- Kevin McKendree – piano, electric piano, organ
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads