Tom Waits
Songwriter / Actor / Singer
Tom Waits released his first album, Closing Time, in 1973. It was a set of bluesy ballads about love gone sour, and established his musical persona as a raspy-voiced, whiskey-soaked denizen of smoky places in the wee hours. His 1976 album Small Change included the signature tunes "Invitation to the Blues" and the "The Piano Has Been Drinking," and subsequent albums earned him a cult following, if not a commercial hit. He turned to acting in the 1980s, working with Francis Ford Coppola in The Outsiders, Rumblefish (both 1983) and Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992). Waits was nominated for a 1983 Oscar for his soundtrack to One From the Heart, and critical praise for his three albums Swordfishtrombones (1983), Rain Dogs (1985) and Frank's Wild Years (1987) kept his musical momentum going. During the 1990s he acted in films, released albums and performed on stage, carving out his own little niche of avant garde music and urban drama of the beatnik-noir variety. He co-starred with Hank Azaria and Janeane Garofalo in Mystery Men (1999) and appeared in the independent flicks Coffee and Cigarettes (2003) and Wristcutters: A Love Story (2006).Four Good Links
Tom Waits Filmography
He's tied to the movies in a number of ways
Tom Waits Interview
Brief conversation from 1999
Tom Waits Library
Comprehensive site for fans
ANTI: Tom Waits
Biography, news and downloads from a kinda-official site
Vital Stats
Birth
7 December 1949
(age 58)
Birthplace
Death
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Best Known As
Raspy-voiced singer of "The Piano Has Been Drinking"

