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  1. Find album release information for Warming Up to the Ice Age by John Hiatt on AllMusic. Find album release information for Warming Up to the Ice Age by John Hiatt on AllMusic ... Warming Up to the Ice Age Album Information. Release Date January, 1985. Duration 38:51. Genre. Pop/Rock Country. Styles. Americana Heartland Rock Rock & Roll.

  2. 4 de nov. de 2003 · Warming up to the Ice Age [Hiatt, John] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Warming up to the Ice Age. Skip to main content .us. Delivering to Lebanon 66952 Update location ... 5.0 out of 5 stars John Hiatt’s Warming Up To The Ice age cd. Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2022. Verified Purchase.

  3. # #-----# # From marten@sky.net Sun May 4 10:24:19 1997 Date: Mon, 07 Apr 1997 08:45:14 -0700 From: Otto Marten Reply-To: mail.sky.net@sky.net To: guitar@olga.net Subject: CRD: John Hiatt - I Think She's Warming Up To The Ice Age [The following text is in the "iso-8859-1" character set] [Your display is set for the "US-ASCII" character set ...

  4. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2003 CD release of "Warming Up To The Ice Age" on Discogs.

  5. Warming Up to the Ice Age is singer-songwriter John Hiatt's seventh album, released in 1985. It was his last album with Geffen Records, who dropped Hiatt after the album failed to chart. It was the last Hiatt studio album to miss the Billboard 200. "The Usual" would later be covered by Bob Dylan. "Living a Little, Laughing a Little", originally a hit for The Spinners, was a duet with Elvis ...

  6. Warming Up to the Ice Age is singer-songwriter John Hiatt's seventh album, released in 1985. It was his last album with Geffen Records, who dropped Hiatt after the album failed to chart. It was the last Hiatt studio album to miss the Billboard 200. "The Usual" would later be covered by Bob Dylan. "Living a Little, Laughing a Little", originally a hit for The Spinners, was a duet with Elvis ...

  7. Warming Up to the Ice Age [Geffen, 1985] Commercial failure hasn't touched Hiatt's devotion to craft, but it's been hell on his sense of humor. He still cracks wise while rolling out the hooks, but the sprightly feel of Riding With the King has given way to a soulish hard rock that suggests he's satirizing all these bitter macho men in the first person because satire isn't the main idea.