Singer-songwriter

Jonny Hiko

An American voice of Russian chanson

A wounded Texas Marine.
A Russian song that saved his life.
The first American voice of Russian chanson in English.

He came back from war as a different man. He lost his love, his home, and his father. But one Russian song, heard between life and death, became the beginning of his own voice.

He calls himself Johnny

His friends call him Jonny Hiko.

Jonny Hiko is a Texas Marine veteran, songwriter, bar musician, and the central figure of an unusual music project. Behind him are Afghanistan, a devastating wound, a return to civilian life that proved almost as cruel as war, loneliness, lost love, and the death of his father.

Now, on weekend nights, he sings in a local bar in Hico. His songs sound as if a dusty Texas bar, an old guitar, frontline memory, and Russian chanson had met inside one confession — restrained, weathered, unshowy, yet carrying a pain that cannot be faked.

The first American artist singing Russian chanson in English

Jonny Hiko is not an attempt to copy a genre or imitate someone else’s tradition. The project builds a rare cultural bridge: American ballad, dark Americana, barroom confession, and Russian fate-song come together in one voice. Its sound grows out of personal loss, war memory, longing for home, and the Russian melody once heard between life and death. In this world, chanson is not a costume or a reference point — it becomes a way to speak about fate, guilt, gratitude, love, and hope after the point of no return.

Chapters of one fate

The song that saved his life

As a young man, Jonny signed a two-year contract and served in Afghanistan. After an explosion, he was dragged to safety by a wounded Russian officer named Andrey, who kept singing the same Russian melody.

The home where no one was waiting

After half a year in hospital, including months in a coma, Jonny returned to Texas. His father had died a month earlier, and Becky had married his friend Tom after the missing-in-action notice.

A guitar instead of silence

Out of work and out of words, he picked up a guitar just to survive the silence. That is when the songs began: war, father, Becky, the river, the empty house, and the road home.

Weekend nights in a small-town bar

Now he sings in a local bar in Hico, Texas. To some he is a strange veteran with a guitar; to others he is a voice that carries real pain and dignity in every line.

The Jonny Hiko song cycle

Each song opens a different chapter of his life. Together, they form the story of a man who lost almost everything, yet found a way to turn memory into music.

Father single cover Open Father section

Father

A song about the father who raised Jonny alone. A man who sang old Irish songs, taught his son to stand his ground, and died before Jonny returned from Afghanistan.

Son, walk on and never bend / Face the wind that fate will send...

Read Jonny's memories
Becky single cover Open Becky section

Becky

Becky was Jonny's first love. This is not a song of blame, but a song of gratitude for the bright feeling he carried through his whole life.

For coming each night as an angel I see / By the river that whispers your name...

Read Jonny's memories

To be continued...

The visual world of the project

The visual language of the project works as memory architecture: heat-struck Texas streets, the house by the Brazos bend, hospital corridors, a small-town bar stage, and roads that never quite lead back to the past. Across all scenes runs the after-sound of war and the Russian melody that once kept him alive.

Shores of Fate

A song about love, loss, and the impossible return to the shore left behind.

He goes by Jonny, and the folks around here just call him Jonny Hiko.

Life hit him hard. He signed up for a two-year hitch in the Marines and shipped off to Afghanistan. They marked him missing. While he was gone, his girl married his best buddy, and his dad passed on. He came back to an empty house, sideways looks, the bottle, and odd jobs that never lasted.

Crazy thing - an enemy Russian officer, hurt just like him, dragged him for miles while humming one Russian song. Jonny's kept that tune in his head ever since.

With work drying up he picked up a battered guitar, and songs started spilling out. Now every Friday and Saturday night he sings them in the bar down in Hico. Small place, but it's always packed, and he's got a loyal little crowd. They say he's the first American singing Russian shanson in English. Jonny just tells his story the only way he knows.

One of the Russian labels heard Jonny and saw something worth following. Something special came out of it.

That's Jonny Hiko - heart on his sleeve, no fancy polish. Here's one of his songs.

Lyrics

Shores of Fate single cover Listen to Shores of Fate

Life tossed me like a river wild
Away from you, I drifted far
I lost you at the dawn so mild
Now empty is my aching heart

Through endless roads I roamed alone
To ease the pain, I chased the past
Without goodbye, your love had flown
But losing you, I can't hold fast

Oh shores of fate, I try in vain
To cross and find my love anew
So many years, yet still this pain
Forever longing just for you

The past is hidden deep in mist
Your eyes glow on in memory
Though clouds deceive, I still insist
Believing you'll return to me

The House on Brazos Bend

A ballad about war, the house by the river, and the melody that bound two fates.

From Jonny Hiko's Story:

So, we're some of the first Marines dropped outside Kandahar. I'm in one of those lead squads, right in the thick of it.

Months of pure chaos. Taliban everywhere, blasting us day and night. Losing guys left and right. Foreign dirt. Sun burning us alive, warm dirty water, barely any food. That stuff crushed us, same as the bullets. Every day, we're sinking lower.

One day, they send me and a couple others to scout. Next thing I know - flash, explosion, right under me.

After that, it's all a blur. Consciousness comes and goes. Legs? Nothing. Can't move a muscle. Then someone's dragging me through sand and rocks, long damn time. It's this officer, speaking Russian. I'd learned a few words by then.

My head's somewhere else, like I'm not even there. But he's singing, this Russian song. That thing's stuck with me for life, carved in deep like a bullet.

Time's gone. He says his name's Andrey. I barely croak out "Jonny" through burned lips. He's wounded too, running on fumes. Still pulling me, an American, through it all - whatever separated us.

What kept him going? No clue.

He gets me to a Red Cross camp in some gorge. Never saw him again.

This Russian-speaking guy, on a different side of things, saved my life. Risked his own to do it.

Kept himself together with that song, maybe kept us both alive. That song - I'll sing it one day. For sure.

Lyrics

The House on Brazos Bend single cover Listen to The House on Brazos Bend

There's a house on the Brazos bend
Where the lanterns burn like sin
It drags every shattered heart to mend
Where once, I bled my sorrows in

I signed on for war as a contract man
The desert sang like Noah's ark
I made it back to my father's home
But the rooms were empty as a laugh in the dark

Mama, tell all the young boys
They'd better keep far away
Souls there flare like stolen joys
That house along the river way

A Russian major once saved my skin
Whistling a tune that bound our fate
Now I pour our song on the midnight wind
Praying for flames to abate

Mama, tell all the young boys
They'd better keep far away
Souls there flare like stolen joys
That house along the river way

Lanterns drown in shadow now
Yet the river still drags me down

Father

A dedication to the father who raised Jonny and taught him to stand through every storm.

From Jonny Hiko:

My mama died bringing me into this world. Dad named me after her father - figured it was the least he could do to keep her memory close.

Growing up, my old man was everything to me. He had this quiet strength about him, you know? Could be tough when he needed to be, but there was always warmth underneath. I remember being eight years old, flying down a hill on my bike with no brakes, screaming my head off as I headed straight for the cliffs above the river. Out of nowhere, Dad came running - caught those handlebars just before I went over. We went tumbling together, scraped up and bruised, but we were alive. That was him. Always there when it counted.

He never had much - no college degree, no inheritance. Just calloused hands and a stubborn Irish heart that refused to let me go without. Spent his last dollars on my football gear, drove me to every practice. Made me the best player our little town had seen. He'd raised Catholic, and he lived by it too. "Treat people the way you'd want to be treated, son" - I must've heard that a thousand times.

Evenings, he'd sit on the porch with a beer and sing these old Irish songs. Never played an instrument, but man, he had a voice that could stop you in your tracks. Women took notice, sure they did. But after Mama, he never looked at another.

Everything changed when the Army reported me missing in Afghanistan. Neighbors told me later that he just... broke. They'd find him on that old bench outside our house, watching the road like I might come walking up any minute. That's where he was when his heart finally gave out.

He didn't leave me money - the house had been mortgaged so many times there was nothing left. But what he did give me? That was worth more than any inheritance. He taught me that you keep going, no matter what life throws at you. You see it through. And honestly? That lesson's gotten me through things I never thought I'd survive.

This song is for him.

Lyrics

Father single cover Listen to Father

Mother faded at first light
Birds took off in sudden flight
Granddad carved my Irish name
I will guard that living flame

I fell mind blank through yawning dark
Burned youth down to a glowing spark
Father's hand pulled hard and fast
Life and death rolled dice and passed

Son, walk on and never bend
Face the wind that fate will send
Under ice our embers glow
Irish blood will feed the flow

In the dark you'll hear the song
Grief will carve its chorus strong
Faith finds warmth in Love's embrace
Hope stands guard upon this place

When the notice said I'd fallen
Grief struck hard and kept him sullen
His voice was lost his fire gone
Pleading death to wait one more dawn

Becky

A song of first love and gratitude for a bright feeling that survived time and war.

From the memories of Jonny Hiko:

Her name was Becky. Rebecca Sullivan. Her father owned a tire shop with a small garage attached - solid, dependable business, just like their home. They had what folks in our town called "the good life." Comfortable. Secure. You could tell just by looking.

And to me - hell, to every guy I knew - Becky was heaven-sent.

Golden hair, blue eyes... and a smile that could rearrange everything inside you. I knew it the moment I saw her. Knew I was done for.

I had this friend, Tom. We were rivals in everything - even played for different teams. Becky would come to the games with the other girls, and Tom and I could never figure out which one of us she was really cheering for.

One game, Tom hit me hard. Real hard.

Becky visited me in the hospital. Sometimes with Tom.

I didn't hold it against him. That's sports... these things happen.

When I got better, Becky and I became inseparable. We'd walk until late into the night - her parents hated me for it. First kisses, first "I love yous"... that feeling like you're floating six feet off the ground and the whole world just disappears. It was this quiet, shining happiness - two hearts that couldn't stop talking, couldn't stop being happy.

But Dad and I, we didn't have much. College wasn't in the cards. So to earn something, to get out somehow, I signed contract with the Army.

Becky cried. Begged me to stay, take any job, anything. I promised I'd come back. And she promised to wait - no matter what.

I can't blame her. She waited as long as she could. And I survived against all odds. The thought of her... it kept me going. Gave me something to hold onto.

Today, Tom and Becky have two kids. They're happy. And I'm genuinely glad for them. I'm grateful to that girl for the pure, good feeling I've carried with me all these years. It still warms me now - and it still gives me strength.

Lyrics

Becky single cover Listen to Becky

Becky - angel from long-faded days
Your blue eyes cut deep like a flame
We nearly touched heaven in so many ways
But fate split the road to this aim

Tom - my rival, my friend through the game
Broke my arm and my life torn in pain
Fate looked down as the dark clouds were near
And my love turned to smoke, fading thin in the air

Thanks for the light that keeps burning in me
For the joy in the sorrow and pain
For coming each night as an angel I see
By the river that whispers your name

Life was never enough, so I swore
Signed a pact with fate and with war
I faltered through thunder, with words left unsaid
And with faith I returned home instead

I saw you with Tom, with your children in tow
Your eyes like the sky, clear and true
But hidden within burned a fire, I know
And thunder kept breaking the blue

Songs that unfold like a life story

Jonny Hiko’s songs are not isolated singles thrown into the world one by one. They feel like chapters from the same worn notebook: each track opens a new door, and behind every door there is another piece of the man — love, war, father, home, loss, gratitude, and the stubborn need to keep singing.

You can listen to one song and hear a complete story. But the deeper power of the project appears when the songs are heard together. Then the cycle becomes a cinematic journey through a broken life that refuses to stay broken.

This is music for listeners who like songs with a past. Not background sound, not polished emptiness, but a voice carrying dust, memory, regret, and the quiet dignity of someone who has survived more than he can explain.

Russian chanson through an American soul

Jonny Hiko does not imitate Russian chanson from the outside. He translates its emotional core into another landscape: Texas roads instead of city courtyards, a small-town bar instead of a smoky tavern, the Brazos River instead of a dark northern street — but the same sense of fate remains.

That is what makes the project unusual. The songs are in English, yet they carry the weight of a tradition built on confession, loyalty, loss, exile, and the hope that refuses to die even when life has taken almost everything.

For listeners of dark Americana, folk ballads, cinematic country-noir, and story-driven songwriting, Jonny Hiko offers something rare: a familiar sound with an unfamiliar soul, and a foreign genre made suddenly personal.

Why Jonny Hiko deserves to be heard

There is a reason these songs stay with you. They do not try to impress with speed, fashion, or studio shine. Their strength is in atmosphere: a tired voice, a river in the dark, a memory that returns at the wrong moment, and melodies that feel as if they have already lived a life before reaching the listener.

Jonny’s world is intimate, but it is not small. Behind one man’s story stands a larger question: what remains of us after love is gone, after war is over, after home has changed beyond recognition — and can a song become the place where a person survives?

The project is still growing, and that is part of its appeal. Each new release adds another fragment to the legend. If the first songs sound like memories, the next ones promise something larger: a full musical universe where American sorrow and Russian fate-song meet in the same wounded heart.