"Sunglasses at Night" and First Offense Hart's debut album,
First Offense, was recorded at Revolution Recording Studios in
Manchester, England, in the spring of 1982. It was produced by
Jon Astley, then best known for his work with
The Who, and Phil Chapman. Released in 1983,
First Offense featured the US
Billboard Top 10 hit song "Sunglasses at Night" (No. 7) and Top 20 follow-up single "It Ain't Enough" (No. 17 The
Juno-award-winning video for "
Sunglasses at Night" (directed by Rob Quartly), which featured a futuristic, Orwellian society, helped propel the popularity of the track. Hart toured the United States and Canada extensively in 1984 and early 1985, first as a supporting act for
Culture Club,
April Wine,
Thomas Dolby,
Hall & Oates and
Rick Springfield, then later as a headline performer.
First Offense was nominated for Best Album of the Year at that year's
ADISQ Awards in Hart's native Quebec, where the singer was also nominated for Best New Artist.
First Offense won the
Félix.
"Never Surrender", Boy in the Box and Fields of Fire Hart's second album was
Boy in the Box, released in June 1985, which reached Diamond status in Canada (one million copies sold) by February 1986. It was the second album by a Canadian artist to do so. The album featured the hit single "
Never Surrender" which spent nine consecutive weeks at No. 1 in Canada and peaked at No. 3 on the US Billboard Hot 100, Subsequent singles all charted in the Canadian and US Top 40 ("Boy in the Box", "Everything in My Heart" and "Eurasian Eyes"). In the US,
Boy in the Box peaked at No. 20 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart and went platinum.
Boy in the Box was nominated for a Juno Award as well as an
ADISQ Award for Best Album, taking home a
Félix for Hart in this category. "Never Surrender" won the Juno for Best Selling Single of 1985. Hart was also nominated for the Composer of the Year award at both the Junos and the ADISQ awards, winning a
Félix in this field. He also received nods in the Juno categories of Best Video for "Never Surrender" and Best Male Vocalist of the Year, as well an ADISQ nomination for Concert of the Year. Hart also won the
Félix for the Quebec artist achieving the most success outside Quebec in the Anglophone market, along with Best Male Artist. He appeared frequently on ''
Good Rockin' Tonite (Canada), Friday Night Videos and MTV (US), and Music Life'' (Japan), and toured Europe and Australasia.
Fields of Fire, Hart's third album release, came out in fall 1986 and went double platinum in Canada and achieved gold status in the US. It featured the US Top 20 hit single "I Am By Your Side", Once more Hart launched a world tour in support of the record. He performed sold-out concerts in Japan and made promotional appearances in Europe from fall 1986 through mid-1987. However, Hart's tour had to be halted prematurely in July 1987 after the then 25-year-old singer collapsed backstage from exhaustion after a concert in Canada. After nearly four years of constant touring and recording, he took some time off for rest and recuperation.
Young Man Running, Bang! and Attitude and Virtue Hart returned to songwriting, leading to the singer's fourth album release,
Young Man Running. Featuring the US Top 40 hit The album included experienced backing musicians, in particular
Ruby Turner, and was largely produced by Hart himself. Photographer
Herb Ritts shot the cover and other photographs for the album. The video for "In Your Soul" featured location footage in
New Mexico and
Moab, Utah and was directed by
Meiert Avis (
U2,
Bruce Springsteen). Hart toured extensively in Japan and the
Philippines in 1988, as well as in Canada's East Coast and Quebec where he spoke mostly in French. Hart again sold out the Budokan in Tokyo as well as arenas in other Japanese cities and the Ultra, a 13,000-seat venue outside
Manila.
Young Man Running received an ADISQ nomination for Album of the Year. In early 1989 Hart returned to songwriting in preparation for what would be his final album with EMI America,
Bang!. Recorded in Los Angeles, the release debuted in early 1990 to positive reviews and airplay on MTV.
Bang! shipped platinum in Canada and hit the Japanese Top 20 two weeks into its release. The first single, "A Little Love", hit the US Top 40 in early 1990 and featured another video by Meiert Avis.
Bang! also reunited Hart with Ruby Turner and featured drummer
Kenny Aronoff (
John Cougar Mellencamp) on drums and percussion. Despite the success of the first single (a Top 10 hit in Canada),
Bang! was less successful than previous albums in the US; EMI also failed to nominate Hart for any Juno Award categories that year. Hart was released from his contract with the company in August 1990. EMI later released a collection of Hart's singles on a compilation album,
Singles in 1991. Hart did secure a nomination for Best Male Artist at the 1990 ADISQ awards.
Sire Records co-founder
Seymour Stein approached Hart at this juncture and eventually signed him to Sire shortly thereafter. What followed was Hart's sole album for the label,
Attitude & Virtue. Released in 1992, it appeared on the Top 40 in Canada, and featured several guest musicians including
Jane Siberry,
Duff McKagan of
Guns N' Roses,
Terence Trent D'Arby and the return of Ruby Turner. Three singles were released from the album: "Baby When I Call Your Name" (released in Canada and the United States), "92 Days of Rain" (released in Canada) and "Always" (released in Canada and the United States). All three singles charted in the Canadian Top 40. "Baby When I Call Your Name" and "92 Days of Rain" were accompanied by videos, the latter helmed by Hart's first director, Rob Quartly. The first song on the album, "Back in the Hand", summed up the prior decade in a celebration of feeling back in control of his musical career. Hart received a Juno nomination for 1992 Best Male Vocalist of the Year. He then took a break from writing and touring ("
Jane Hawtin Live", 1997). He released one single, a cover of
Edith Piaf's "Hymn to Love", in 1994. == Career rebirth ==