Coronavirus: Grammy-winning country music star Joe Diffie dies after contracting COVID-19
He was not on the list.
Joe Diffie, a consistent country-music hitmaker throughout
the Nineties, died Sunday due to complications related to COVID-19. His
publicist confirmed the death to Rolling Stone. Diffie was 61.
With a traditional-leaning voice that drew comparisons to
George Jones, Diffie populated his records with honky-tonk ballads and
lighthearted novelty tunes, earning the Oklahoma native five Number One singles
in the first half of the Nineties. These began with his debut release, the
deeply moving “Home,” followed by “If the Devil Danced (In Empty Pockets),”
“Third Rock From the Sun,” “Pickup Man,” and “Bigger Than the Beatles.” In all,
Diffie charted 18 Top 10 singles, with the majority reaching the Top Five,
including the 1993 radio staples “Prop Me Up Beside the Jukebox (If I Die)” and
“John Deere Green.”
The singer was famously name-checked, as were a number of
his best-known songs, in Jason Aldean’s 2013 single “1994.” “There are plenty
of singers in this town, but not many with a range like his,” Diffie’s fellow
Opry star Vince Gill told People magazine in 1993.
Joseph Logan Diffie was born in Tulsa and raised in the tiny
community of Velma, Oklahoma. In the intervening years, the Diffie family lived
in San Antonio, Washington state, and Wisconsin. His father, who held jobs as a
teacher, rancher, truck driver, and welder, had musical tastes that ran more
toward traditional country, but Diffie learned about harmony singing by working
in gospel and bluegrass groups, including, respectively, Higher Purpose and
Special Edition. Diffie also played bars, VFW halls, and honky-tonks as a solo
act in Duncan, Oklahoma, where he lived with his wife and children while
working in a local foundry. He also partnered with his father to run a small
recording studio.
After the closing of the foundry and the dissolution of his
first marriage, Diffie relocated to Nashville in 1986, implementing a five-year
plan to make it in the music business. There, he took a job with the Gibson
guitar company and also began singing on countless demos and writing songs. In
1988, country legend Hank Thompson cut the Diffie composition “Love on the
Rocks.” In 1989, Diffie co-wrote and sang backing vocals on Holly Dunn’s Top
Five single “There Goes My Heart Again.”
Signed to Epic Records, Diffie released his debut LP, A
Thousand Winding Roads, in 1990. The album produced his inaugural hit, “Home,”
which set a record by becoming the first debut single to reach the top of the
country charts on all three trade publications at the time: Billboard, Gavin, and
Radio & Records. Opening for acts including George Strait and Steve
Wariner, Diffie continued his hit streak with six Top Five singles in a row,
one of which, 1992’s somber “Ships That Don’t Come In,” would likely have gone
to Number One but for its use of the word “bitch” in the lyrics.
In 1993, the year he was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry,
Diffie released the platinum-selling LP Honky Tonk Attitude, followed by 1994’s
Third Rock From the Sun, which was also certified platinum. Following moves to
Monument and Broken Bow Records, Diffie signed with the Rounder label,
returning to his bluegrass roots with Homecoming. In 1998, he won a Grammy
award for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals for the all-star recording
“Same Old Train” with Merle Haggard, Clint Black, Emmylou Harris, and more.
In 2013, Diffie and two of his country contemporaries, Aaron
Tippin and Sammy Kershaw, teamed for the collaborative album All in the Same
Boat. In July 2019, he released the honky-tonk tune “As Long as There’s a Bar,”
and in November issued his first-ever vinyl LP, Joe, Joe, Joe Diffie, featuring
updated versions of 11 of his hits and a cover of the Stevie Ray Vaughan tune
“Pride and Joy.”
Representative of his workingman persona, Diffie took a
no-nonsense approach to his craft. “I just like the songs themselves,” he told
Rolling Stone in 2019. “Finding songs I really liked and that I related to.
Really, it’s not any more complicated than that.”
No comments:
Post a Comment