Los Angeles Times

Country singer had five No. 1 hits in the ’90s

JOE DIFFIE, 1958-2020

- By Sonaiya Kelley

Joe Diffie, a country music star who won Country Music Assn. and Grammy awards and charted five No. 1 country singles in the 1990s, died Sunday of complicati­ons from COVID-19. He was 61.

The news was confirmed by Adkins Publicity, which announced his death in a news release. Diffie revealed his positive coronaviru­s diagnosis Friday.

The Tulsa native’s career spanned three decades and more than 20 Top 10 hits, including “Home,” “If the Devil Danced (in Empty Pockets),” “Third Rock From the Sun,” “John Deere Green” and “Pickup Man.” Diffie also wrote hits for others, including Tim McGraw, Conway Twitty and Jo Dee Messina.

Diffie started out working in the Oklahoma and Texas oil fields. He also drove a cement truck and worked at a foundry, all while flirting with the idea of launching a career in country music.

After getting a divorce and losing his job at the foundry, Diffie packed up and moved to Nashville, where he got a job working at the Gibson guitar factory, eventually rising to quality control specialist.

“When I moved here, I moved with the idea of being an artist,” he said in 1990. “I wanted to hone my songwritin­g skills. When you come here, it takes awhile to be accepted because there are so many people who come to Nashville who are talented but they have some personalit­y flaw or they are not dependable. By hanging around long enough, they find out if you are dependable.”

While at Gibson, Diffie spent his free time recording demo records and was eventually introduced by a coworker to Johnny Slate, who owns a music publishing company in Nashville. Slate brought the demos to Bob Montgomery of CBS Nashville, who eventually signed Diffie to a contract.

“I know what I look for,” Diffie said, describing his formula for finding the right country song. “It’s something that moves me emotionall­y or makes me smile, or gets a lump in my throat. It’s something that I have lived.”

“It’s hard to express how good this feels,” said Diffie of his success in 1990. “I’m just a country boy, although that sounds like a cliche. But it’s true; I was raised on a farm.”

 ?? Crystal K. Martel ?? ‘COUNTRY BOY’ Oklahoma native Joe Diffie died of complicati­ons related to COVID-19. His hits included “Pickup Man.”
Crystal K. Martel ‘COUNTRY BOY’ Oklahoma native Joe Diffie died of complicati­ons related to COVID-19. His hits included “Pickup Man.”

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