After a 20-year hiatus from recording his own material, Hart surprised fans in 2019 with the EP Dreaming Time Again. Produced by legendary producer Bob Ezrin, the record felt like a warm homecoming. It maintained the cinematic quality of his early work but infused it with the wisdom of an artist who had spent two decades away from the "fame machine."

Corey Hart remains one of the most recognizable figures of the 1980s pop-rock era. While many casual listeners know him best for his breakout hit "Sunglasses at Night," a deep dive into the Corey Hart album discography reveals a sophisticated songwriter who balanced synth-pop trends with heartfelt, guitar-driven rock. From his meteoric rise in the mid-80s to his experimental later years and 2019 comeback, each record serves as a snapshot of a Canadian icon’s evolving artistry. The Early Years: First Offense and Boy in the Box

First Offense peaked at No. 27 in Canada and No. 26 in the US—respectable but not stratospheric. Yet its influence rippled through the decade. Hart would go on to score bigger hits (“Never Surrender,” “Everything in My Heart”), but First Offense remains the rawest document of his artistic DNA: a guy who wanted to be Bruce Springsteen by day and David Bowie by night.

Corey Hart never stopped wearing sunglasses at night. But with First Offense , he proved he didn’t need to hide behind them.

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