“AT 18, HE LEFT HOME WITH NOTHING BUT A DREAM — AND A $25-A-WEEK JOB CHANGED EVERYTHING.” In 1970, an 18-year-old kid from Indianapolis showed up in Nashville with no connections, no formal training, and no ability to read or write a single note of music. His name was John Hiatt. Someone at Tree International took a chance on him. They paid him $25 a week. That’s it. Twenty-five dollars to sit in a room and write songs all day. So he did. He wrote and recorded demos — over 250 of them — singing every melody from memory because the paper meant nothing to him. By 1974, he had his own debut album. But something else happened that year. Three Dog Night, one of the biggest rock acts in America, heard one of his tracks and recorded it for their album Hard Labor. Cory Wells sang lead. Those unmistakable harmonies wrapped around a song born in a tiny demo room from a kid who couldn’t read sheet music. The voice that couldn’t translate notes onto paper somehow translated pure feeling into songs that legends wanted to sing. What happened next in John Hiatt’s journey might surprise you even more.
About the Song: “Sure As I’m Sittin’ Here” — Three Dog Night’s Sharp 1974 Statement Released in June 1974 on…