The List

5 Enduring Songs Written and Sung by Mott the Hoople Frontman and Solo Star Ian Hunter

Ian Hunter, the prolific British singer/songwriter and musician who led the popular glam-rock band Mott the Hoople before launching a long solo career, celebrated his 85th birthday on June 3, 2024.

Mott the Hoopleโ€™s biggest hit was a 1972 cover of David Bowieโ€™s โ€œAll the Young Dudes,โ€ which reached No. 3 in the U.K. and No. 37 on the Billboard Hot 100. That being said, Hunter wrote or co-wrote many songs for the band, including some of the groupโ€™s best-known tunes.

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[RELATED: Exclusive: Ian Hunter Talks Collaborating with the Late Jeff Beck and Taylor Hawkins on New Album, Defiance Part 2]

Hunter left Mott the Hoople in 1974, and since then, heโ€™s released more than a dozen solo albums. Although Hunter hasnโ€™t experienced a lot of solo chart success, quite a few of his songs have garnered heavy rock-radio airplay and have made their mark in other media.

In honor of Hunterโ€™s birthday, here are five great songs he wrote and sang, either with Mott the Hoople or solo:

โ€œAll the Way from Memphisโ€ – Mott the Hoople (1973)

โ€œAll the Way from Memphisโ€ was the lead single from Mott the Hoopleโ€™s 1973 album, Mott. The rollicking rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll tune is driven by Hunterโ€™s barrelhouse piano, and also features sax solos courtesy of Roxy Musicโ€™s Andy Mackay.

The sing tells the story of a touring rock musician who arrives for a gig in Memphis and discover his guitar has been shipped to Kentucky instead.

โ€œAll the Way from Memphisโ€ reached No. 10 on the U.K. singles tally.

โ€œRoll Away the Stoneโ€ – Mott the Hoople (1973)

โ€œRoll Away the Stoneโ€ was a soaring glam-rock anthem Mott the Hoople released as a single in late 1973. The tune peaked at No. 8 on the U.K. charts, making it Mottโ€™s second-most-successful single after โ€œAll the Young Dudes.โ€

The track featured backing vocals by the female trio Thunderthighs, who were famously featured on Lou Reedโ€™s classic hit โ€œWalk on the Wild Side.โ€

Mott the Hoople re-recorded โ€œRoll Away the Stoneโ€ for its 1974 album The Hoople. That version featured British singer/songwriter Lindsey De Paul on a spoken-word section that had been recited by one of the Thunderthighs members on the original.

โ€œOne Bitten Twice Shyโ€ (1975)

โ€œOnce Bitten, Twice Shyโ€ was the lead track from Hunter self-titled 1975 debut solo album. The catchy rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll tune showcases Hunterโ€™s gritty Cockney vocals and bar-room piano. It also features guitar heroics from Mick Ronson, who had briefly joined Mott the Hoople after playing in Bowieโ€™s backing group The Spiders from Mars, and had left Mott to collaborate with Hunter on Ianโ€™s solo career.

โ€œOnce Bitten, Twice Shyโ€ was Hunterโ€™s biggest solo hit, reaching No. 14 on the U.K. singles chart. The song later was famously covered by hair-metal band Great White, who scored a No. 6 hit with it on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1989.

โ€œJust Another Nightโ€ (1979)

โ€œJust Another Nightโ€ was the lead track of Hunterโ€™s fourth solo album, Youโ€™re Never Alone with a Schizophrenic. Hunter co-wrote the song with by Ronson, who co-produced the album with Ian and played guitar throughout the record.

The album also features E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg, bassist Garry Tallent, and keyboardist Roy Bittan. Singer Ellen Foley, known for her work with Meat Loaf, contributed backing vocals to the tune.

โ€œJust Another Nightโ€ peaked at No. 68 on the Hot 100, the highest position any Hunter solo single reached in the U.S.

โ€œCleveland Rocksโ€ (1979)

โ€œCleveland Rocksโ€ also appeared Youโ€™re Never Alone with a Schizophrenic. Hunter had first released the song under the title โ€œEngland Rocksโ€ with slightly different lyrics as a U.K. single in 1977, with hopes of scoring a hit in his home country.

Hunter said he was inspired to write the song because he felt Cleveland was looked down on in the U.S., but he felt it was a great rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll city. The original version of the song begins with an audio snippet of late Cleveland-based radio DJ Alan Freed, who is considers one of the fathers of rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll radio.

โ€œCleveland Rocksโ€ was used as the theme song to the popular TV comedy series The Drew Carey Show, which ran from 1995 to 2004.

About Hunterโ€™s New Album, Defiance Part 2

Hunter released his latest album, Defiance Part 2: Fiction, in April. The record features guest appearances by a jaw-dropping list of artists, including the late Jeff Beck; the late Taylor Hawkins; Cheap Trickโ€™s Robin Zander, Rick Nielsen, and Tom Petersson; Def Leppardโ€™s Joe Elliott and Phil Collen; Lucinda Williams; The Black Crowesโ€™ Chris and Rich Robinson; Pearl Jamโ€™s Mike McCready and Matt Cameron; and Stone Temple Pilots members Dean DeLeo, Robert DeLeo, and Eric Kretz.

Photo by Mike Coppola/WireImage