Later years and second comeback
Transverse City was a commercial disappointment, and Virgin Records let Zevon go shortly after the album's release. Zevon, however, almost immediately signed with
Giant Records, and the first issue under Zevon's contract with his new label was the self-titled
Hindu Love Gods album recorded during the
Sentimental Hygiene sessions. The album included a cover of
Prince's "
Raspberry Beret", which became a #23 Modern Rock hit in the US.
In 1991, Zevon, once again a solo artist, released
Mr. Bad Example. This album featured the modest pop hit "Searching for a Heart" and the rocker "Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead," later utilized for the title of the
neo-noir film directed by
Gary Fleder, (after some skirmishing over the unauthorized use of Zevon's song title, the Zevon track was licensed to play over the film's end credits).
Zevon toured the United States, Europe, and Australia and New Zealand during this period.
Owing to his reduced circumstances, his performances were often true solo efforts (with minimal accompaniment on piano and guitar); 1993's live
Learning to Flinch documents such a tour. The disc received some airplay on college radio and was considered Zevon's
Unplugged. Zevon often played in Colorado to allow for an opportunity to visit with his long-time friend
Hunter S. Thompson.
A lifelong fan of "hard-boiled" fiction, Zevon was close to several prominent writers who also collaborated on his songwriting during this period, including Thompson,
Carl Hiassen and
Mitch Albom. Zevon also served as musical coordinator for an ad-hoc rock group called the
Rock Bottom Remainders, a collection of writers performing rock and roll standards at book fairs and other events. This group included
Stephen King, Dave Barry, Matt Groenig and
Amy Tan, among other popular writers, and it has continued to perform one benefit concert per year since Zevon's death. An affiliated project Zevon both played on and wrote liner notes for is the offbeat 1998 album
Stranger Than Fiction, a two CD set attributed to the
Wrockers containing rock covers and originals by many of the Remainders authors plus such notables as
Norman Mailer and
Maya Angelou. Zevon oversaw music for the short-lived revival of the television series
Route 66 (1993, NBC), contributing that series' main title theme, "If You Won't Leave Me I'll Find Somebody Who Will".
Occasionally, Zevon filled in for
Paul Shaffer as bandleader on
Late Show with David Letterman.
In 1995, Zevon released the self-produced
Mutineer. The title track was frequently covered by Bob Dylan live on tour in the 2000s, and Zevon's cover of cult artist
Judee Sill's "Jesus Was a Crossmaker" predated the wider rediscovery of her work a decade later. The album, however, suffered the worst sales of Zevon's career, in part because his label, superagent
Irving Azoff's short-lived
Giant Records, was in the process of going out of business.
Rhino Records released a Zenon "best-of" compilation that same year,
I'll Sleep When I'm Dead (An Anthology).
After another five-year layoff, Zevon signed with industry veteran
Danny Goldberg's Artemis Records and again rebounded with the mortality-themed 2000 release
Life'll Kill Ya, containing the hymn-like "Don't Let Us Get Sick" and an austere version of
Steve Winwood's '80s hit "Back in the High Life Again". With record sales reasonably brisk and adulatory music critics giving Zevon his best notices since
Excitable Boy,
Life'll Kill Ya is seen as his second comeback. He followed with 2002's
My Ride's Here (with morbid prescience of things to come, Zevon is shown seated in a hearse on the cover), which included "Hit Somebody! (The Hockey Song)" (with a spoken guest vocal from TV host
David Letterman) and the ballad "Genius," later taken as the title for a 2002 Zevon anthology, and a song whose string section illustrates the lasting influence of Stravinsky on Zevon's work.
At about this time, he and actor
Billy Bob Thornton formed a close friendship, bonding over their common experiences with
obsessive-compulsive disorder .