John Cowan got his start in Louisville, where he played in scrappy rock outfits like Everyday People and Louisville Sound Department. In 1974, he auditioned as a bassist and vocalist for
New Grass Revival, and together with
Sam Bush and later bandmates
Béla Fleck and
Pat Flynn, led the charge of the 1980s' bluegrass revival.
New Grass Revival disbanded in 1990 when
Fleck departed for a solo career, but
Cowan didn't slow down. He did distance himself a bit from
NGR's acoustic foundation, however, choosing to tour as a solo rock act as well as front the country-rock band Sky Kings (with
Poco's
Rusty Young). But despite writing an album, arranging the artwork, releasing a single, and setting a release date (March 27, 1997), the Sky Kings' full-length sat on a shelf.
Cowan next busied himself with solo work for the Sugar Hill label. His releases there included an ambitious self-titled effort in 2000, as well as the lower-key
Always Take Me Back in 2002. The year 2000 also saw the final release of the Sky Kings album From Out of the Blue; the set included the entire original LP, as well as demos and songs that were subsequently completed for the project.
Cowan continued to release the occasional solo project, including the fine Sixty, which appeared in 2014 as
Cowan himself hit that number in age. ~ Johnny Loftus