Artist's albums
The Best Of Del Amitri - Hatful Of Rain
1998 · compilation
Some Other Sucker's Parade
1997 · album
Roll To Me
1995 · single
Twisted
1995 · album
Change Everything
1992 · album
Waking Hours
1989 · album
Del Amitri
1985 · album
Fatal Mistakes: Outtakes & B-Sides
2022 · album
At The End Of The Lightning
2022 · single
Gone In a Second
2022 · single
This City Loves You Back
2021 · single
All Hail Blind Love (Single Version)
2021 · single
Fatal Mistakes
2021 · album
You Can’t Go Back
2021 · single
It's Feelings
2021 · single
Close Your Eyes and Think of England
2020 · single
Into the Mirror: Del Amitri Live in Concert
2014 · album
Change Everything (Re-Presents)
2013 · album
Twisted (Re-Presents)
2013 · album
Waking Hours (Re-Presents)
2013 · album
20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: Best Of Del Amitri
2003 · compilation
Can You Do Me Good?
2002 · album
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Biography
Del Amitri's easy blend of Beatlesque pop and country-rock has made them a worldwide road and radio staple since the mid-'80s. Formed in Scotland in 1982 by bassist/vocalist/songwriter Justin Currie and longtime guitarist and collaborator Ian Harvie, the duo released Sense Sickness on a small Glasgow indie label the following year. Through heavy touring and positive word of mouth, the band -- which now included drummer Paul Tyagi and guitar player Bryan Tolland -- managed to impress the suits at Chrysalis Records enough to offer the fledgling group a recording contract. Their Hugh Jones-produced self-titled major-label debut was released in 1985 amidst a tidal wave of hype, but their signature blend of new wave and country-folk isolated audiences and critics alike, resulting in their inevitable departure from the Chrysalis family. Del Amitri rebounded with a self-financed U.S. tour that broadened their network of fans and landed them a deal with A&M. In 1987 the quartet expanded by one, adding keyboardist Andy Alston and replacing Tolland with David Cummings and Tyagi with Brian McDermott, and began work on Waking Hours. Released in 1989, the Gil Norton/Hugh Jones-produced LP yielded the band's first British hit, "Kiss This Thing Goodbye," a song that also found success in the U.S. In 1992 the group charted with "Always the Last to Know" from the Change Everything album, but it wasn't until the release of 1995's Twisted and its infectious hit "Roll to Me" that Del Amitri could declare global victory. Their follow-up, Some Other Sucker's Parade, relied heavily on the adult alternative jangle pop that made Twisted such a success, but failed to generate any lasting hits. Hatful of Rain: The Best of Del Amitri, a much-needed career-spanning anthology that collected the prolific yet spotty group's best tunes, was released in 1998 along with a companion CD, B-Sides Lousy With Love. Del Amitri released the soulful and melodic Can You Do Me Good? in 2002. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi