1972–1985 As CCR was coming to an end, Fogerty began working on a solo album of
country and western covers, on which he produced, arranged, and played all of the instruments. Despite the solo nature of the recordings, however, Fogerty elected to credit the album to The Blue Ridge Rangers—a band of which he was the only member. The eponymous
The Blue Ridge Rangers was released in 1973; it spun off the
top-20 hit "
Jambalaya", as well as a lesser hit in "Hearts of Stone".
1985–1997 After a hiatus of several years from the music industry, Fogerty's solo career re-emerged with 1985's
Centerfield, his first album for
Warner Bros. Records, which had taken co-ownership of Asylum's contract with Fogerty. In 1990, his brother Tom Fogerty died of complications from
AIDS at the age of 48, survived by his second wife and six children. Tom contracted HIV from blood transfusions during surgery for a back ailment. Specifically, he died from a tuberculosis infection. John Fogerty has mentioned that the darkest moments in his life were when his brother took the record company's side in their royalties dispute, and the fact that when his brother died, the two of them were barely speaking to each other. In fact, even in the brothers' very last conversation with each other, Tom at one point referred to Creedence Clearwater Revival's former manager Saul Zaentz as his "best friend". Given that Zaentz had swindled the band out of millions of dollars and had just recently attempted to sue John, this revelation made it painfully difficult for John to reconcile with Tom. In the eulogy he delivered at Tom's funeral, he said: "We wanted to grow up and be musicians. I guess we achieved half of that, becoming rock 'n roll stars. We didn't necessarily grow up." Fogerty traveled to
Mississippi in 1990 for inspiration, and visited the gravesite of blues legend
Robert Johnson. According to him, while there, he had the realization that Robert Johnson was the true spiritual owner of his own songs, no matter what businessman owned the rights to them, thus Fogerty decided to start making a new album and to perform his old CCR material regularly in concert. At this time, visiting the Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church cemetery, Fogerty met Skip Henderson, a New Jersey vintage guitar dealer who had formed a nonprofit corporation, the
Mount Zion Memorial Fund, to honor Johnson with a memorial marker. Fogerty subsequently funded headstones for
Charlie Patton,
James “Son” Thomas,
Mississippi Joe Callicott, Eugene Powell, and
Lonnie Pitchford, and helped with financial arrangements for numerous others. Creedence Clearwater Revival was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. Fogerty refused to perform with his former bandmates and fellow inductees Stu Cook and Doug Clifford during the musical portion of the induction ceremony, citing the Zaentz lawsuit as a reason. In place of the surviving members of CCR, Fogerty recruited session musicians on drums and bass and was also joined by
Bruce Springsteen and
Robbie Robertson in performing three songs: "
Who'll Stop the Rain", "
Born on the Bayou", and "
Green River". Tom's widow Tricia had expected a CCR reunion and even brought the urn containing her husband's ashes to the ceremony. Furious, Cook and Clifford, who were seated with their families at a table across the room from Fogerty's, walked out of the ballroom just as the performance began, and would later write separate letters to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's board of directors, saying it was "hurtful" and "insulting" to allow the performance to continue without them. During the induction speech, Springsteen said, "As a songwriter, only a few did as much in three minutes [as John Fogerty]. He was an Old Testament, shaggy-haired prophet, a fatalist. Funny, too. He was severe, he was precise, he said what he had to say and he got out of there."
1997–present Fogerty returned to the commercial music industry in 1997 with
Blue Moon Swamp. The layoff between
Zombie and
Swamp had been longer than his mid-1970s to mid-1980s break. The album was much more successful than
Zombie and won the
Grammy for best rock album in 1997. A live album, named
Premonition, of the equally successful Blue Moon Swamp tour, was released to similar acclaim and good sales in 1998. A track from
Blue Moon Swamp titled "Blue Moon Nights", was used in the 2002 film
The Rookie. On October 1, 1998, Fogerty was honored with a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 7000 Hollywood Blvd. In 2004, Fogerty released
Deja Vu All Over Again through
DreamWorks Records, which had taken over distribution of Fogerty's Warner catalog.
Rolling Stone wrote: "The title track is Fogerty's indictment of the
Iraq War as another
Vietnam, a senseless squandering of American lives and power". On the album, Fogerty squeezed ten songs into only 34 minutes. The sale of Fantasy Records to
Concord Records in 2004 ended the 30-year estrangement between Fogerty and his former label, as the new owners took steps to restore
royalty rights Fogerty had given up to be released from his contract with Fantasy in the mid-1970s. In September 2005, Fogerty returned to Fantasy Records, made possible when DreamWorks Records' noncountry-music unit was absorbed by
Geffen Records, which dropped Fogerty, but continued to distribute his earlier solo albums. The first album released under the new Fantasy contract was
The Long Road Home (November 2005), a compilation CD combining his CCR hits with solo material. A live CD and concert
DVD were released the following year. Fogerty's touring schedule increased in the period after
Deja Vu All Over Again. In October 2004, Fogerty appeared on the
Vote for Change tour, playing seven of the concerts in U.S.
swing states. He also appeared in a Christmas special video produced by the Australian children's group
The Wiggles. Fogerty toured with
John Mellencamp in the summer of 2005 and with
Willie Nelson in the summer of 2006. On June 29, 2006, he played his first headlining British concert since 1972, at the
Hammersmith Apollo theater in London, as part of the European leg of the tour. During that leg, he also performed in Sundsvall, Sweden, where 25,000 people came to see him perform at the town square. On Thanksgiving Day of 2006, Fogerty performed at halftime at the
Miami Dolphins/
Detroit Lions game and at the
Denver Broncos/
Kansas City Chiefs halftime later that evening. Fogerty was inducted into the
Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2005. In 2005, Fogerty received the Golden Plate Award of the
American Academy of Achievement presented by Awards Council member
B.B. King. On June 23, 2007, Fogerty appeared at
Glastonbury Festival, playing an hour-long set of 17 songs, mainly CCR classics. Introducing "
Who'll Stop the Rain", Fogerty said he did not perform it at
Woodstock as rumored, but wrote the song inspired by the event.
Revival was released October 2, 2007. and was released in 2009. On April 16, 2009, Fogerty performed his hit "Centerfield" from center field of the new
Yankee Stadium, at its opening-day festivities. On July 2, 3, and 4, 2009, Fogerty performed with the
Los Angeles Philharmonic at the
Hollywood Bowl, which was sold out for these shows. Though billed as Fogerty with the L.A. Philharmonic, the orchestra began the night with music by U.S. composers, and Fogerty and his band came on after intermission, playing only three songs with the orchestra. On August 31, 2009, Fogerty released
The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again, a sequel to his 1973 solo debut
The Blue Ridge Rangers. The album includes a duet with Bruce Springsteen on the 1960
Everly Brothers classic "
When Will I Be Loved". In addition,
Don Henley and
Timothy B. Schmit of
Eagles sang with Fogerty on a cover of
Rick Nelson's 1972 classic "
Garden Party". The album was the first issued on Fogerty's own label Fortunate Son Records, which is distributed by the
Verve Forecast Records unit of
Universal Music Group and also handles the Fogerty/CCR Fantasy catalogue. On October 29, 2009, Fogerty appeared at Madison Square Garden for the first night of the celebratory 25th Anniversary Rock and Roll Hall of Fame concerts. Bruce Springsteen, with the E Street Band, called Fogerty out to play three songs with them. "Fortunate Son" was their first song, followed by "Proud Mary", and finally the duo tried their take on Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman". The show aired as a four-hour special on HBO on November 29, 2009. On November 3, 2009, Fogerty released the Royal Albert Hall DVD entitled ''
Comin' Down The Road, named after his 1973 single, which he performed at this concert. Fogerty was also nominated for a Grammy Award at the 2010 Grammys. He was nominated for the Best Rock Solo Vocal Performance Grammy for the song "Change in the Weather", which he recorded for The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again''. For his songwriting achievements, Fogerty was honored as a
Broadcast Music Incorporated Icon at the 58th annual BMI Pop Awards on May 18, 2010. BMI Icons are selected because of their "unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers." , November 11, 2013 Fogerty began recording
Wrote a Song for Everyone in 2011, which was released on
Vanguard Records on May 28, 2013, his 68th birthday. The album is a collection of classics and tracks from his canon of hits performed with other artists. The album includes two new Fogerty-penned songs. On November 17, 2011, Fogerty performed on the
Late Show with David Letterman. On November 17 and 18, Fogerty performed two CCR albums, ''
Cosmo's Factory and Green River
, respectively, in their entirety at the Beacon Theatre in New York City (he also played Cosmo's Factory'' in Atlantic City on November 20). He was also featured on the
CBS coverage of the
Thanksgiving Day Parade, performing several prerecorded songs. In January 2012, Fogerty's new song "Swamp Water" debuted over the opening credits of the new Fox TV series
The Finder. Fogerty wrote the song for the show and guest-starred in its debut episode. On November 12, 2012, Fogerty announced that he was writing his memoirs, and that the book was expected to be released in 2015. During the 2014 Veterans Days celebration, "Salute to the Troops" at the White House, Fogerty performed for many veterans. On February 21, 2015, he was a featured artist for the
National Hockey League stadium series game between the
Los Angeles Kings and the
San Jose Sharks at
Levi's Stadium in
Santa Clara, California. In October 2015, Fogerty published his autobiography,
Fortunate Son (Little, Brown & Co.). In September 2017, Fogerty signed a new recording contract with
BMG Rights Management, which will cover an upcoming album and his solo catalogue. In November 2019, Fogerty appeared on Public Broadcasting Station pledge week with "John Fogerty: My 50 Year Trip", a taped performance from Red Rocks Amphitheater, Colorado. His most recent performance was at the Winstar in Thackerville, Oklahoma, on December 31, 2019. The remaining performances of his current tour "My 50 Year Trip" have been postponed due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. While on lockdown during the pandemic in early 2020, Fogerty, accompanied by sons Shane and Tyler and daughter Kelsey, began releasing performance videos of previously released originals and covers. Under the brand "Fogerty's Factory", the group performed remotely on
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,
NPR's Tiny Desk Concerts, and
SiriusXM's Classic Vinyl station. Collecting seven songs from the remote performances, the ''Fogerty's Factory'' EP was released on May 28, 2020, coinciding with Fogerty's 75th birthday. A 12-track album edition featuring additional lockdown performances followed on November 20. Fogerty performed backing vocals on "Scream and Shout", a single by his sons' band Hearty Har, released October 19, 2020. On January 6, 2021, Fogerty released "Weeping in the Promised Land", a gospel-styled single, featuring sociopolitical commentary on
Black Lives Matter, the COVID-19 pandemic, and
Donald Trump. On January 13, 2023, Fogerty announced on Twitter that he now owned the rights to the CCR global catalog after a 50-year legal battle. He followed the announcement on August 22, 2025 with an album of re-recorded Creedence Clearwater Revival songs, titled
Legacy: The Creedence Clearwater Revival Years. He performed a concert with his band on NPR's Tiny Desk on January 16, 2026. ==Personal life==