The Czars (1994–2006) In 1994, Grant returned to the U.S. and co-founded the
Denver-based
alternative rock band
The Czars. With Grant as its lead singer, pianist, keyboardist, and primary songwriter, the band enjoyed critical success and released six studio albums, but commercial recognition proved elusive. Grant met with English musician
Simon Raymonde, a member of one of Grant's favorite bands, the
Cocteau Twins; Raymonde had recently started the record label
Bella Union and, although he was not particularly looking for new acts at that time, he saw potential in The Czars and agreed to produce two of their albums. After releasing
Sorry I Made You Cry in 2004, the band split in 2006. Grant then took a four-year hiatus, which he spent working in New York City as a waiter at the
Gramercy Tavern, a medical interpreter for Russian patients in a hospital, a record store clerk, and a flight attendant.
Solo career (2010–present) During his hiatus in New York City, Grant had a chance encounter with members of the
Texas-based folk rock group
Midlake, who eventually persuaded him to return to music. They joined him to record and produce
Queen of Denmark, his first solo album, which was released on the Bella Union label in April 2010. Described as a "deeply personal album", it explores Grant's struggles with alcohol and drug addiction as well as his personal struggle to reconcile his homosexuality. He described the members of Midlake as his "brothers" in an interview.
Queen of Denmark received critical acclaim and was chosen as the best album of 2010 by British music magazine
Mojo, which also awarded Grant its Best Live Act Award and nominated him for its Best Breakthrough Act Award. Filmmaker
Andrew Haigh used several songs from
Queen of Denmark in his 2011 film
Weekend. During a trip to
Iceland to perform at the
Airwaves Festival, Grant met Birgir Þórarinsson (aka Biggi Veira) of Icelandic electronic pop group
GusGus. The electronic and synthesized dance sounds that he was looking for and experimented with in Veira's studio formed much of the backdrop to his second album,
Pale Green Ghosts, which Veira produced. Irish singer
Sinéad O'Connor was a guest vocalist on three tracks from the album. Having been quickly and deeply touched by the Icelandic people and landscape, Grant permanently settled in
Reykjavík in 2013 and received Icelandic citizenship in 2022. and ranked at No. 2 on
The Guardian list of Best Albums of 2013. A nomination for Best Solo Artist at the
Q Awards followed, with
David Bowie and
Laura Marling among the other nominees. He also received a nomination for Best International Male Solo Artist at the
Brit Awards in 2014, Later that year, Grant put his linguistic skills to effect by translating
Ásgeir Trausti's album
Dýrð í dauðaþögn. The English version,
In the Silence, was released in October. In 2014, Grant co-wrote "No Prejudice", the Icelandic entry for
that year's Eurovision Song Contest performed by
Pollapönk. He also guested on the 40th anniversary release of
Elton John's
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, covering the song "Sweet Painted Lady". He also guested on the album
The Feast of The Broken Heart by
Hercules & Love Affair, and was also named Man of the Year for 2014 by
Attitude magazine. Also in 2014, he joined English band
Elbow on the North American leg of their tour. In October 2014, accompanied by the
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Grant performed tracks from his first two albums for a concert on
BBC Radio 6 Music arranged by
Fiona Brice. This was released as an album called
John Grant and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra: Live in Concert. Grant concluded 2014 with rave reviews following his UK concert hall tour with the
Royal Northern Sinfonia.
Clash magazine wrote that the concert "could honestly be one of the greatest gigs of all time at London's
Royal Festival Hall". That night, he duetted with English singer
Alison Goldfrapp on the
Nancy Sinatra and
Lee Hazlewood song "
Some Velvet Morning" at the Royal Albert Hall. In 2015, Grant released his third solo album
Grey Tickles, Black Pressure. Recorded in
Dallas and produced by
John Congleton, it featured guest vocalists
Tracey Thorn and
Amanda Palmer and drummer
Budgie. The album was acclaimed by
NME,
The Guardian, and
Mojo. Before embarking on a worldwide tour, Grant appeared on British talk show
Later... with Jools Holland in early October. Accompanied on stage by a band including several backing singers and guest drummer Budgie, he delivered a show at the
Hammersmith Apollo in London, receiving a five-star review in the national press. In July, he played at the
Glastonbury and
Latitude festivals before embarking on a world tour. The following year, he toured across much of the U.S. and Europe. In October of that year, he made a third appearance on the
BBC Two show
Later... with Jools Holland. Grant co-wrote and recorded the track "I Don't Want To Hurt You" with
Robbie Williams, featured on Williams' 2016 album
The Heavy Entertainment Show. In 2016, he performed a solo show at the
Royal Albert Hall, which was met with rave reviews. He was joined on stage by
Richard Hawley who performed "Disappointing" from
Grey Tickles, Black Pressure. Also guesting were
Cate Le Bon, who duetted on "Torn Between Two Lovers" (a song made famous by
Mary MacGregor) and
Kylie Minogue in a performance of "Glacier". Minogue invited Grant back to the Royal Albert Hall to duet with her on "Confide In Me" for
A Kylie Christmas in December that year. Two songs from 2013, "Black Belt" and "Pale Green Ghosts", appeared on the
HBO series
Looking. On December 3, Grant was the subject of
BBC Radio 4's
Reimagining the City, where he took listeners around his new home city of Reykjavík. In 2017, Grant appeared at the Hay Literary Festival in conversation with
Cosey Fanni Tutti to discuss her autobiography
Art Sex Music, which had been named Book of the Year by
Sunday Times,
Telegraph, and
Rough Trade Records. Grant announced in 2017 that he had signed with publishers
Little, Brown and Company to write his own autobiography. 2017 also saw him curate North Atlantic Flux: Sounds From Smoky Bay, a four-day event celebrating the best of Nordic culture as part of
Hull's year as the
UK City of Culture. The festival won three awards at the Drum UK Event Awards, including the prestigious Cultural Event of the Year. Highlights of the festival included performances from
Susanne Sundfør,
GusGus, Tonik Ensemble, Nils Bech,
Adelle Stripe, Wrangler, and Grant, who also gave a two-hour Q&A session. In July 2017, Grant returned to the Royal Albert Hall to contribute to a fundraising event on behalf of
Stonewall, for a conversation with
Elizabeth Fraser of the
Cocteau Twins; the evening marked the 50th anniversary of the
Sexual Offences Act 1967. That month, Grant celebrated the music of
Scott Walker as part of an event hosted by the BBC's Late Night Proms. The event was broadcast on
BBC Four,
BBC Radio 3, and
BBC Radio 6 Music. Grant also recorded "Mountaineers", a duet with
Susanne Sundfør for her album
Music for People in Trouble, which was released in August 2017. Grant teamed up with
Elbow frontman
Guy Garvey, having previously toured the U.S. with the band in 2014, to record a duet version of Elbow's "Kindling (Fickle Flame)" in September 2017. Grant was a guest vocalist on
The Great Distraction, an album by electro-rock band
Vessels. The single "Erase the Tapes" featuring Grant was released in September 2017. In 2018, Grant formed a side project called Creep Show, described as an "experimental pop" and "surreal funk" collaboration with Wrangler members
Stephen Mallinder, Phil Winter, and Benge. They have released two albums:
Mr. Dynamite (2018) and
Yawning Abyss (2023). On July 10, 2018, Grant announced his fourth album
Love Is Magic and released the title track. The album was released in October to favorable reviews. In a 5/5 star review,
The Independent described the record as "sardonic wit and heart-stopping drops of sheer honesty", and
NME hailed it as an album of "arch brilliance that also makes room for quiet introspection". Grant then went on tour in the UK with a full band including Budgie on drums, before embarking on a world tour from November. In January 2021, Grant released the
anti-Trump song "The Only Baby" with an accompanying music video. In March, he released the single "Boy From Michigan" and announced that
his upcoming album would share the single's name. In May, the single "Billy" was released, the second from the new album. The album was released on June 25 and received acclaim. In 2022, Grant recorded a cover of the folk song "
God's Gonna Cut You Down" to be used as the opening theme for the
BBC One thriller series
Inside Man. In October 2024, Grant released the single "Stay Down, Lazarus" with Big Special, a punk duo from the
Black Country, ahead of their UK and European tour together. Grant collaborated with choreographer-director Jonathan Watkins on a ballet adaptation of
Christopher Isherwood's
A Single Man, which premiered at
Aviva Studios in Manchester in July 2025, with Grant performing on stage as a representation of the protagonist's "mind", opposite former
Royal Ballet principal dancer Ed Watson playing the protagonist's "body". == Personal life ==