At age 20, Hyatt formed Uncle Walt's Band with
Champ Hood and
David Ball. In 1972, they moved to
Nashville, Tennessee, where they caught the attention of Texas singer/songwriter
Willis Alan Ramsey. The band returned to Spartanburg, South Carolina in 1974, recording
Blame It on the Bossanova, their first record, at Arthur Smith Studios in nearby Charlotte, North Carolina. The band released the record on their own Lespedeza Records label. A year later, Uncle Walt's Band split up, with Hyatt returning to Nashville and forming a new band, The Contenders, with Hood and Nashville musicians Steve Runkle, Tommy Goldsmith, and Jimbeau Walsh. In 1978, Uncle Walt's Band reunited. They released three more albums on their own Lespedeza Records label between 1980 and 1988:
An American in Texas, ''Uncle Walt's Band Recorded Live
, and Six * Twenty-Six * Seventy-Nine''. The group broke up again in 1983, but continued to perform occasional shows through 1993 as the members pursue their solo careers in Austin and Nashville. In 1985, Hyatt released his first solo recording on Lespedeza Records, a cassette EP titled
Fall Through to You. In 1987, Hyatt returned to Nashville with his wife, Heidi, and continued pursuing his career as a solo performer and songwriter. Hyatt's songs at this point had been recorded by several major label artists, including
B. J. Thomas ("Aloha"),
Jerry Jeff Walker ("Deeper Than Love"),
The Lost Gonzo Band ("Getaway"), and
Dana Cooper ("Rollin' My Blues"), and living in Nashville allowed Hyatt greater access to the country music producers and performers who were a market for his songs. In 1990, Hyatt released his first full-length solo album,
King Tears, on the MCA Master Series label (his was the first vocal album in the Master Series catalog). The album was produced by
Lyle Lovett, who had first encountered Hyatt while attending an Uncle Walt's Band show as a college student. Hyatt later toured as an opening act for Lovett. In 1993, Hyatt released his second solo album,
Music Town, on
Sugar Hill Records. Hyatt began work on a third solo album in 1995, and during that year and into the next he recorded more than 40 song demos as a part of the preproduction process. These recordings were the basis of two CDs produced by Heidi Hyatt in 2008-2009, both titled
Some Unfinished Business. The studio production of these recordings was completed in the 2000s by a variety of musicians and arrangers who worked with Heidi Hyatt and associate producer David Dorris. ==Death==