Tag Archives: Legendary Shack Shakers

Show Review: Reverend Horton Heat, Legendary Shack Shakers, Unknown Hinson, Lincoln Durham

Written by Jesse Davidson.

Photography by Jesse Davidson

After witnessing The Legendary Shack Shakers live at the Lancaster Moose Lodge, I was an instant fan and decided I wasn’t going to miss another one of their shows. When I found out about the upcoming tour they had with Reverend Horton Heat and Unknown Hinson, there was no way I was going to miss that. Then I had the bright idea of interviewing JD Wilkes before the show since I’d already be going. One thing led to another and not only did the wonderful folks at the Shack Shakers management, 12×12 MLS, set up a phone interview with him but also a press and photo pass to review the show.

I arrived a little after 5pm at the Canyon Club in Agoura Hills, CA and quickly obtained my press pass. Well actually, it wasn’t a pass but rather a purple wristband. But hey, I’m not picky. Not only did I have a great lineup of bands to watch but I also got to document it. My timing seemed to be serving me well as the Shack Shakers were just beginning their sound check. It was interesting to see them communicating and working with the tech crew in this venue. Like a fly on the wall taking a small snapshot of their average day at work. Soon after they finished, Lincoln Durham would be next to sound check and open the show. When you hear the name, you expect the focus to be on one man in the band but that’s just what he is, a one-man band with a lot of gumption behind him. His gear set up was just as interesting as the man himself. It starts with his drop tuned resonator guitar with punk stickers all over it. Iggy Pop was the most prominent I could see. From the guitar, his sound led out into a guitar amp also run in tandem with a bass amp providing him with a full sound before any of his percussive elements got a say in it. When they did, he had two kick drums placed in front (one with a tambourine on top) and two snares he would beat mercilessly during drum breaks in his songs. Before the actual show started, I had two people at the show hyping him up to me since I’d never heard of him. One of them being his tour manager and one being a really cool photographer covering him for a blog called High Voltage. Apparently, he’s been out on the road doing his one-man thing for years. It showed because although the crowd trickled in during his set, he still played full bore and very well at that. He also showcased a variety of instruments that night including a strum stick and a cigar box guitar. It feels almost insulting to say this because he’s been working for years on the road but he’s definitely someone to look up and watch out for.

Lincoln did about 30-40 minutes and then it was time for L.S.S to take the stage. As the crew got everything in place for them, I compared notes with the photographer on where good places to shoot would be. Not much time could be had for this because when they were up, they just walked out without fan fare. JD started wail on his harmonica and then the band took off. Not only did I take note of their show for this article but also as a fan. The first time I had seen them, a few months prior, was one of the best shows I’ve ever seen. However, things like that can’t be compared too closely. It’s best to live in the moment and that’s exactly what the Shack Shakers do. When JD goes off and does what he wants, the band did a great job at following him. There’s something to be said for that. On the drums, Preston Corn of The Dirt Daubers would be replacing longtime drummer Brett Whitacre and bassist Fuller Condon would be replacing longtime bassist Mark Robertson. This is also no easy task for a band to pull off. Along Brett and Mark being amazing musicians, changing out a rhythm section is like changing out an engine on car. It drives the group and gets people moving. Preston and Fuller had a tight and punchy chemistry that made you get down in true L.S.S fashion while also having a slightly new sound to it. Rod Hamdallah was of course still on guitar and killing it as usual. When songs like “Mud” and “Shake Your Hips” came up in the set, he added so much personality to the music creating a great top layer of sound above a fantastic rhythm section. I’m not sure what car part analogy he would be but when you play like he does, you don’t need to be one. Nor does JD Wilkes.

I’m a big fan of people who follow a John Lee Hooker approach to music. This means when you perform your songs, you don’t play them the exact same way twice. I’m not sure if that’s where he got it from but JD definitely fits that philosophy. Watching him at the Canyon last night, I felt I got the spectrum of American entertainment presented in front of me. There was Iggy Pop hopping off the stage and eating someone’s dinner and drinking his or her beer in the front row (not to mention holding a mic between your crotch and having someone from the audience singing into it). There was an actor on the stage doing a theatrical version of “Blood on the Bluegrass” making the lyrics come to life with his movements. There was a little bit of D. Ray White dancing and sliding across the stage. Mid song, he did some sort of sudo-James Brown split move while wailing on his harp. Dare I say it, there was bit of a Three Stooges slapstick element in it with the faces he makes on stage. Although not every single person in the audience was thrilled with his wild antics. While sitting at a friend’s table to watch part the performance, JD took a sip of an open water bottle and then flung it all over the audience. Everyone laughed and cheered him on except for one woman directly in front of me. I could only see the back of her head as she waved index fingers around frantically but something told me she didn’t appreciate that part of the show. At the end of the set, JD went back to the same that table he absconded food from and took someone’s glasses to wear on stage. I guess that person wasn’t having any of it either since he immediately gave them back. Laughing and apologizing he said he was just trying to entertain. Then, he proceeded to do a somersault across the stage and belt out the most rock and roll scream during the final seconds of their closing song. The Reverend Horton Heat praised him later in the show for being one of the best front men in history and he was right. He channeled the energy of this sonic soulful force into the people and won them over. The Legendary Shack Shakers say we are hear to raise hell and have fun and the people follow suit. We need more of that.

After that thunderous performance, only one thing could top that. That would be a joint set from The Reverend Horton Heat and Unknown Hinson. Like the previous acts, The Rev’s set also had its surprises. For starters, like the other acts, they came out with no particular fanfare. They just walked out on stage and kicked off an instrumental jam (possibly “Marijuana” but I wasn’t 100% positive on it). Adding on to that first surprise, they started with “Psychobilly Freakout” and “Bales of Cocaine”. That was a bold move considering they are arguably the two biggest songs for the group. Early on in the set, something else happened I didn’t expect. As Jim Heath (AKA The Reverend Horton Heat) was praising his opening acts, there was this low feedback coming from the stage monitors persistent enough to stop his anecdote about Lincoln Durham reminding him of Bull Durham tobacco. The feedback went on and off for about a minute and half as The Rev criticized what was happening over the microphone. This struck a personal chord for me because as a sound guy/stage hand, it’s a huge pet peeve when performers openly criticize you on stage. At the same time, it was a lot of feedback and I wondered why it went on for as long as it did. Ultimately, I don’t know what happened and wasn’t really any of my business to know what happened except for the fact that it created a weird momentary lull in the show. Luckily, the show continued on without a hitch and Jim Heath picked it back up with his usual classy charm. Keeping with the surprise theme, Eddie Nichols of the Royal Crown Revue came out and played guitar on a Bill Haley tune (the name of which escapes me now). Along with a new song called “Zombie Dumb” complete with The Rev doing a sort of Frankenstein walk across the stage,“Jimbo Song” was next. Of course since it’s a Reverend Horton Heat classic, the crowd belted every letter of his name and was swept up in a huge burst of energy. Carrying off of that energy, Jimbo and Heath switched instruments and began to play the Chuck Berry classic “Little Queenie”. Shimmies and shakes were being had all over the packed bar area. Through this last set, The Rev really demonstrated his musical prowess and ability to seem timeless. His voice has seemingly stayed exactly the same since the first album without diminishing in quality. That calls for a certain amount of respect from both musicians and non-musicians alike. It also helps that he another fantastic rhythm section backing him provided by “Nature Boy” Jimbo Wallace on the upright bass and Scott Churilla on drums. The dynamic rhythm section had a great highlighted moment in the set during “Smell of Gasoline”. Scott showed an incredible amount of stamina as he kept a consistent double kick going throughout the song and his solo. Then the spotlight was on Jimbo for his solo. His solo wasn’t long but he looked so damn cool while he did it. Jimbo Wallace looks like an iron-jawed badass who does what he pleases but also uses his powers for good.

 

About halfway through their set, Unknown Hinson was introduced and The Rev and company backed him up. The King of the Country and Western Troubadour’s walked out to his famous drum intro followed by his chart toppin’ hit “Silver Platter” The last time I saw Unknown was at the Arcadia Blues Club in 2012 on his own show. California has been known to be a less frequent tour stop for Hinson let alone touring with Horton Heat to back him up, which was a real treat. Unknown spanned the plethora of #1 chart toppin’ hits under his belt including “Fish Camp Woman”, “Venus Bound, “I Ain’t Afraid of your Husband” and “Your Man is Gay”. He carried with him the usual swagger you’d expect from Unknown minus the sideburns and bowtie. The tone and style of picking is something you could hear all night long. As cool and special as this co-headlining tour was, I ended up wanting more Hinson in the show. Even though, I walked away feeling satisfied that I had seen him again. The night ended with a big finale jam. Horton Heat, Unknown Hinson, and Rod and JD from the Shack Shakers came out and performed “Love Whip”, a Rev classic followed by “King of the County Western Troubadours” minus JD and Rod. This show was a really fantastic night out and I hope the Shack Shakers team up with more great acts for future tours.

Related articles: 

The JD Wilkes Interview Part 1 & Part 2

What You Missed (photos): Legendary Shack Shakers 

Questions for JD Wilkes

The JD Wilkes Interview Pt. 2

 

Ever wonder what it was like to grow up playing in bars? Coming up through rough beer joints and honky tonk bars where the foreman who has had a little too much booze starts a brawl with you just for looking at him cross?

 

JD Wilkes knows along with the rest of the Legendary Shack Shakers. They came up in an era where you had to engage a rough crowd and it meant something to come out on top. Now they are about to go out on a two month tour and are making a stop at the Canyon Club in Agoura Hills, CA along with Unknown Hinson and Reverend Horton Heat. We last left our heroes during an in-depth conversation about music, Kentucky music history, and touring with the Rev and Unknown.

Get your tickets here.

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By Jesse Davidson

Davidson: A lot of people I talk to, either interviewing them or casually, seem to be waiting for the next “Sex Pistols” or “Ramones” moment where a band comes along and just turns things on it’s side. Have you seen anything like that recently during your time on the road?

 

Wilkes: Well, not really. The only place I see music going is in a more traditional direction. To break anymore ground, you’d have to go back to the basics. You see that with a few R&B singers trying to go for the 60’s/70’s Al Green thing. I think what would really do that would be an all black rock and roll band doing Little Richard style Jump Blues and selling it hard. That would be the thing because Rockabilly was only around for maybe five years. After that, you had Surf music and Garage and that was a craze for about five or six years. You had the Beatles and they came in about ’62 and disbanded in ’71. So they had a good run of about ten years. There’s these genres that come and go like Arena Rock, Disco, etc. Hip-Hop however, has been around since the 70’s and rapping over samples has been around forever. The only place for black music to go to is back to something organic. Hip-Hop has already done the rappity-rap thing about the bitches and the hos. I think they understand there is this perennial turn over of teenage boys that always want to hear something violent and dirty. That’s whose really propping up that market.

 

But that’s not good for everyone else. The stuff that I see that wins all the Grammys and everyone loves is the stuff that sells the records but the people don’t have any taste. They aren’t grown up. It used be that grown ups bought music. They’d take an LP, turn off all the lights, smoke a joint, listen to it and really get involved. This was like a ritual people did. Now it’s turned into this .99-cent happy meal thing. A constant turnover of this Jelly of the Month, Jelly of the Week and Jelly of the Day crap. The only thing I know that could turn it around would be an all black rock and roll band. There used to be a band in the 90’s called the Atomic Fireballs and for whatever reason, they broke up. Oooh, that was so close! That would be a great thing for America to get some classic R&B going. I think the underground would love it. I think it could cross over into the mainstream and pull more people into cool music, kind of like what The Dap Kings do a little bit but a little more primal and something that’s just undeniable. I would love to see that.

 

 

D: Yeah. That’s what I’m looking for out of it myself. Just something that’s more edgy. I love Gary Clark Jr. When he is playing a solo and he’s really reaching for it, you get that feeling out of him. I love Alabama Shakes because it can get really loud and intense but it’s also pretty mellow too. Something really edgy would be great.

W: Yeah just something undeniable for everybody. Your rockabilly kids would love it. Your hipsters would love it. I think it would be good for America. There was a front man for this band. It was Vintage…

 

D: Vintage Trouble?

 

W: Vintage Trouble! He’s a great front man. I think take him out of that band and put him with some of these other folks and that’d be great. Carolina Chocolate Drops were able to sort of hip-up old time music as well.

 

D: Yeah. The good thing about Hip-Hop now is that artists are bringing in an actual band play with them or bringing in Jazz musicians to play behind them while they tell a story about their experiences. It’s interesting because they’re going back to their roots in a way.

 

W: I love that they have the musicians there and I don’t have a problem with the rapping on top of that at all. It’s the time signature and the drumming I have a problem with. We’ve had variations on the same beat for 40 years. We need it to swing. I hate it when they take an old jazz song and remix it with a Hip-Hop beat. The Hip-Hop beat is, to me, cliché now and the only place to go is back to swing. Rap on top of that. You might find something cool. One of my favorite records is Jack Kerouac rapping on top of Steve Allen’s Jazz piano. That’s a great record. Its spoken word but you could consider it rap. It’s free form but it has dynamics to it that are so interesting. To square it all off with a Hip-Hop beat is just numbskulling it to death. The tradition that came out of Jazz drumming that started off in the military with paradiddles and the way they took that and made it swing was just infectious. It gives such a depth and a layer to the music that made you think, “Who would have thought the drums can do that?”

 

D: Definitely. There as a newer rapper Kendrick Lamar that is doing stuff like that. He has a track that he brought in a jazz band on and he just raps over it.

 

W: That’s great. I have no problem with that. At the same time, I don’t think we’ve exhausted every possible melody that can be written. We kind of turned our back on melody back in the 90’s and that’s something that became a passé thing to sing come up with nice compositions. Before this era, we had the amazing era from Tin Pan Alley days of the early 20th Century to I guess the mid-sixties with the Hit Parade. You had this American Songbook of melodies and then it just ended. I think The Beatles continued it on and bands influenced by The Beatles but then it really tapered off. It was dead by the 90’s. If it came back, maybe that would blow people away. But again, are people so dead now that have to have everything spelled out? There’s no more nuance in music. There’s no mystery in what people mean anymore. You listen to a country song, it’s just bad. “I did this. I think this. Then this happened. Then this. This is what I believe”. There’s no subtlety in the lyricism and no melody to go along with it to enhance it. No creative drumming or musicianship to go along with it. And the recording quality is too clean and too perfect. Everything is so literal and high definition, it’s the only way we can understand anything.

 

It’s a shame…but here I am. I’m the guy that rips his shirt off on stage and jumps in the audience. What do I know? (Laughs) I’m definitely a bold cartoon version of myself. Flannery ‘O Connor says, “Sometimes for the hard of hearing you have to shout and for the almost blind, you have to draw large and startling figures.” That’s kind of what I’m doing. Trying to get their attention and lure them in.

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D: With this tour cycle coming up, you’ll be out with Reverend Horton Heat and Unknown Hinson at the Canyon Club on March 19th. I’ve read online that the Shack Shakers have had an extensive touring history with Reverend Horton Heat. Is that true?

 

W: Yes that’s right. We were his opening band for many runs. We’re good friends with that whole camp.

 

D: That’s great. Were they the first band to take you guys out on the road or did you have experiences with other bands before them?

 

W: We went out with Hank 3 originally and Southern Culture on the Skids. We toured with Robert Plant across Europe. And The Black Keys. We did a run with them early on. We’ve probably done the most dates with The Rev. or Hank 3.

 

D: With that long relationship with R.H.H, have you thought about collaborating on an album together?

 

W: Well, he has played on a Shack Shaker record. About four tunes on our Pandelerium album. I was on a Reverend Horton Heat tribute record where we did “Love Whip” (laughs). He has threated to get me up onstage and play harmonica. Evidently, he’s a big blues harp fan and his first love was Little Walter. I might take him up on it on this next run. We’ll probably play “Love Whip” (laughs).

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D: (Laughs) Have you played any shows with Unknown Hinson or will this be a first for you guys?

 

W: Well I was in Hank 3’s band for a month and we…oh yeah, you know what? We did open up for Unknown Hinson in Nashville once. I used to go and see him before he was signed playing at the Sutler in Nashville. This was back when he was selling tapes out of a shoebox. He had the whole shtick down. Boy, I laughed so hard. It was so hilarious. This guy standing on stage like a chauffer that didn’t budge. Staring at the audience through his sunglasses for like an entire hour and a half. Some guy starts heckling him and he pulled out a cap gun and shot the guy (laughs) then he laid on the floor for the rest of the set. Then he got signed  and I think Marty Stewart helped him out with that. He has some of the funniest songs. I’m looking forward to seeing that every night.

 

D: I bet. I saw him at the Arcadia Blues Club a few years ago and got to watch him sound check without his shtick. He’s great.

 

W: And a guitar god on top of that. He’s a shredder.

D: Yep and an interesting tone too. Something you can’t quite put your finger on.

 

W: Yeah I’ll have to check that out. A couple of times I’ve seen him, I couldn’t quite hear him to well because the room was too echoey.

 

But yeah, funny songs. Polly Urethane, Foggy Windows, I Make Faces when I Make Love (laughs).

 

D: Alkyhal Withdrawl too (laughs).

 

With the music community in Nashville/Kentucky area, it seems really close. Everyone seems to know each other and it seems really tight there. Would you say that is true?

 

W: In Nashville, yeah it’s always been kind of that way. Slightly competitive but “keep your enemies closer” so they all party together. There’s kind of a split in Kentucky between the East and the West. There’s kind of this weird rivalry. Regardless, they all celebrate if someone from Kentucky gets big and goes far. Bill Monroe was from Western Kentucky. He created Bluegrass music. Everyone thinks he’s from Eastern Kentucky but he’s really from my neck of the woods. Eastern Kentucky is a very different place from where I live. That’s the mountains and where I live is more like the Mississippi Delta. Very flat and very swampy. Historically speaking, we’ve got influence from New Orleans and Memphis. The river traffic brings a lot of Jazz and that’s why Rockabilly kind of happed around here. In Memphis, you had Blues, Country and all these influences come together. The same with Bluegrass, really. It’s mountain music meets New Orleans Jazz chord changes and progressions. The articulation of the guitar and banjo picking was them trying to sound like Merrill House piano players. That’s a little bit of tid bit of history there. There was a lot of collaboration.

 

D: Yeah that’s what I’ve been seeing and hearing. There’s a Music City documentary with Joe Buck and Hank 3 in it. They both talk about that and Joe has his song “Music City is Dead” in it.

 

W: Well I don’t believe in writing songs and making it a political thing. I know Shelton (Hank 3) and Joe Buck does that. I don’t want to make people feel bad as part of my product. I can talk nonchalantly in an interview about it and bemoan the way things have changed but I don’t want it to be my official output. It might be true but I don’t want to but people out with the songs I write. The things I write are more about folklore, culture and if you’re to the anthropology and history of the South. I’m not gonna do political song about “Fuck Nashville” or anything like that.

 

D: Totally. I think music is like your car. Some people put political bumper stickers on it and other people keep it to themselves. You might be outspoken about it but not have it reflect in the music.

 

W: I guess I just don’t want to distill it down to a bumper sticker slogan. I want to be thoughtful about my criticism. I also want to show how Nashville is a great town too. It’s a great city and close by me. I go there about once a month. I don’t want it to be an anthem for me that “Nashville Sucks”. Even though, it has changed a lot and times have changed. I just have to learn to adapt.

 

D: I get where you’re coming from. Here in the Antelope Valley, we are about an hour outside of L.A. Musicians from here will play down below and have bad experiences and hate it afterward. I’m not necessarily for L.A. but I’m not against it either.

 

W: Yeah, that’s it.

 

D: It’s a cool place but it’s not anything to hold to a high esteem. There are some cool places and not cool places.

 

W: Yeah, it’s complicated.

 

D: Do you have any other Shack Shaker or side project news you’d like people to know about?

 

W: I’m going be working on documentary that will follow up Seven Signs. Similar kinds of characters that will be more of a featurette I hope to have it out by the end of the year and then do a run with it. In the place where an opening band would be, we would have a film show and then the audience would see us play. Sort of like a multimedia event. Then probably going back to Europe this summer in August and probably recording a new album after that. What we are going to do is like a live lo-fi record. Maybe at my own house in a shack out in the woods and have it be a follow-up to Cockadoodledon’t and call it Cockadoodledeux (laughs) maybe not.

 

D: Well I’m a fan of great music and bad puns so I’m hooked already.

 

W: Cockadoodledon’t is kind of pun so it seems only fitting. We want to put the fun back in recording and not sweat it so much. Play it, put it out, and be done with it. Don’t belabor it.

 

D: Absolutely. I really appreciate you taking the time to talk to me today. I always enjoy a conversation with a fellow music lover.

 

W: Yes. I think we solved a lot of problems today. We’ve figured it out.

 

D: (Laughs) Yeah it’s good. We’ve made real progress and we’ll turn our results into the committee.

 

W: Right. Crunch the numbers and see what happens

 

Thanks again JD. Be sure to catch the Legendary Shack Shakers at the Canyon Club on March 19th.

If you’d like more information on the band, click here.

 

JD Wilkes Interview: Part 1

 

The JD Wilkes Interview: Pt. 1

Ever wonder what it was like to grow up playing in bars? Coming up through rough beer joints and honky tonk bars where the foreman who has had a little too much booze starts a brawl with you just for looking at him cross?

 

JD Wilkes knows along with the rest of the Legendary Shack Shakers. They came up in an era where you had to engage a rough crowd and it meant something to come out on top. Now they are about to go out on a two month tour and are making a stop at the Canyon Club in Agoura Hills, CA along with Unknown Hinson and Reverend Horton Heat. We’ll be reviewing the show but in the meantime, we had an hour long conversation about music, touring, art, and playing in front of a modern audience.

Get your tickets here.

Photo by Shutter Punk Photography
Photo by Shutter Punk Photography

By Jesse Davidson

 

Davidson: Thanks for giving me a call today, JD. I really appreciate it.

 

Wilkes: Yeah no problem.

 

D: What are you up to this fine afternoon?

 

W: I’ve been out running errands in my own hometown. Over at my parents right now just visiting and getting in all domestic stuff while I can before I leave. Just being very normal.

 

D: It’s always good to get that in. I was looking at the tour schedule today for the Legendary Shack Shakers today and it looks like it’s pretty extensive over the next two months.

 

W: Yeah.

 

D: Is that something that has picked up recently since coming back from the hiatus or that how it’s been the whole time in the Shack Shakers?

 

W: Well, we got back to touring about a year and a half ago. We were doing about ten days a month but then this record (The Southern Surreal) came out. When we go out west that will be about a month. Then if we go over to Europe, we’re looking at about a month a way. If it’s on our side of the country, we can get away with little ten-day legs and cover a lot of ground. That’s about all I can tolerate anymore but it’s work so you have to go out and do it. If California calls or you gotta go to Europe, it’s part of the job.

 

D: Yeah, absolutely. That was something I was actually curious about. How do the Shack Shakers go over in Europe?

 

W: We do great. We usually pack it out. Like mid-sized clubs and things. Not theatres or anything like that. We’re a working band in the underground. But attendance is really great over there and it’s consistently great. And for a twenty-year-old band, that’s really good. It’s almost like a cliché now to say that American music is more popular over there because it’s exotic to them and they dig it. Especially when you’re a Southern band, there’s a fascination with that, I think. So we benefit from that.

 

D: Definitely. That’s part of why I ask because a lot of American music, traditionally blues artists, have always had a much bigger response there than in the States.

 

W: Right. Here’s, it’s kind of a “been there-done that” thing, which a lot of people take for granted. Over there it’s special to them.

D: Right. I think in more recent years with the rise of artists like Gary Clark Jr. and Alabama Shakes, it seems like Blues and Soul is coming back. And I’ve been hearing more about L.S.S. in the last few months than in previous years. It seems like you guys have a great team behind you right now.

 

W: Yeah. I think going away for a while helped too, you know? You’ve got to make them miss you sometimes. You’ve got to leave them wanting more and then you come back. Then, you give it another run. You kinda tease them little bit, you know? Put out a new record and generate some excitement. It helps. You don’t want to turn into one of those bar bands that just slugs it out and gets tired. So taking a break is a good thing.

 

D: Absolutely. Especially with being around as long as you have, it seems like bands earn a right to take a break when they want and not be worried about losing their audience.

 

W: Uh-huh. As much as I bitch and moan about it, the Internet does help. We’ve got fans now that we picked up during the hiatus. Technology kind of advanced while we were on mothballs. We were able to come out and see new people we haven’t met yet. Things being the way they are on the Internet and word traveling fast, we’ve gained new fans.

 

D: Honestly, even me being a younger person, I’m not sure how to feel about it either. I’ve seen it work to people’s favor and I’ve seen bands that now have to do the jobs of three people or more. They have to be a blogger, a visual person, and active on social media along with being an artist and businessperson.

 

W: Well, I think it’s a good thing to try and be as multi-faceted as you can. I don’t like the Internet side of things we have to deal with so our management does that. It’s kind of their job to gin up interest online. It’s upon me to come up with content. I like the fact I have to put out more. I have to work harder to create art, to create music, to create a mythos around the band. The stakes are higher, which is a good thing and I think it will weed out those that are just the flash in the pan bands. Because, we are trying to earn a living making art and making music. There’s such a glut of new bands now, you have to something that makes you stand out and I think the hard work the renaissance aspects of this band/brand will help us in the long run.

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D: I think it’s interesting to talk about creating a mythos around the band. Can you talk about that more in detail?

 

W: Yeah. There’s a cultural aspect to everything that I try to do in the band and in the surrounding projects. It has to do with southern culture, regionalism, art, and imagery that go along with these southern gothic and cultural themes that I touch on. Any other band might be all about how cool they dress or how hip they fit in with the new trends and the fashion side of things. Our thing has always been a sort of unique, cultural, southern brand that touches on the aspects of southern that might get over looked by the media. We’re feeding the audience culture more than just our own ego and our own fashion. So I think it’s a more rewarding and enriching product as a result.

 

I’ve written a book about Kentucky Barn Dances. I’ve made a film about southern music and storytelling. I do field recordings of old fiddle and banjo players from Kentucky and I have side projects where I play banjo. I take photographs of these far-flung dance barns and railroad tracks. Things that conjure up a mythology of a strange and awesome South that is disappearing. There’s an almost etymological side to it. It’s vaguely political but not overt. It’s reaffirming of the culture here in a way that is enriching and not divisive. All of those things when you put them all together become a broader brand that people check in with and enjoy exploring. The deeper they get in to the band, the deeper they get into the other side projects and find that it’s more rewarding.

 

D: I think that’s great. One could even say you’re just speaking from the heart on that subject. You’re not trying to pretend that you are from the South. It’s like the best version of your storytelling that you can do.

 

W: Yeah and it’s not preachy either, it’s fun. At the end of the day I’m still a wild front man, I love a good laugh, and people come out and see a crazy show. That’s what hooks ‘em in and as they dig deeper into the lyrics, the literature, and the artwork that surrounds the band, they’ll see that it runs deeper than just the sight gags, the flashing lights and stuff like that.

 

 

D: Absolutely. I haven’t gotten too deep into the side projects but I’ve really liked what I’ve seen so far. I’m hoping that you’ll have a few copies of the Seven Signs DVD available when I see you guys at the Canyon Club in March.

W: Yes indeed and we’ll have a bunch of copies with us. I’ll be sure to bring ‘em. We’re trying to get it distributed. At the time, there was no Netflix, streaming or Amazon. There might have been but it was really early. We’re talking about eight years ago. Now we’re trying to catch up with where technology is so people don’t have to go to a Shack Shakers show to buy it. You can buy it online now but it would be nice to have it streaming to dial up on your TV if possible. It’s one of the many projects that flesh out what were going for here.

 

D: The way you describe your art and your process, it reminds me of someone like an Iggy Pop. The way I equate that is an artist who can get things done. They aren’t very airy about what they do and they have a very working class vibe about them. If they had a flat tire or if you dropped them in the woods, they’d be able to figure things out and still be creative.

 

W: (Laughs) Yeah, I like that.

 

D: Is that how you see you see yourself as an artist?

 

W: Yeah I think that’s important. Coming from a blue-collar background, that’s the difference between the musicians came up playing…rough joints. Playing four-hour sets and packing your own P.A. There was no Internet and no GPS. You piled in the van. It was against your better judgment. The lifestyle was ridiculous.

 

D: (Laughs)

 

W: You know what I mean? To try and do it for a living was radical. I got started in the late eighties playing in church. No one does that anymore as far as roots music goes. Maybe they do but the crop of country musicians, if you want to call it that, in Nashville now are mostly Northern hipsters that have come down to escape the tax burden of New York. They don’t know the packing of the P.A. They don’t know the four-hour gig. They don’t know a world without GPS or Email. They’ve got the fashion sense down. It seems like it’s more important to look cool and be beautiful. This tragic beauty thing with the Yoko Ono hats and having a beard. It’s more important to look right and party with the right people than to slug it out in a bar fight and wind up in jail a couple times (laughs). All the things that we’ve went through to get to where we are. And still, we’ve scratched and clawed our way to the middle, let’s be honest. It’s a strange world when it is so successful and easy to choose a life of music. It shows you leisure time and affluence we have in a country where rich kids can just decide they are country singers all of a sudden, have a career and blow right past us professionally. It’s kind of disconcerting but in the end, I think people know we’ve been doing it for twenty years. I’ve playing bars for twenty-five.

Things are so different now just in the past five years. The industry is totally upside down from when I started. It’s just kind of baffling to see so many artists battle for the same attention. But we occupy our own space. We have our own niche carved out and we’ll keep at it.

 

D: It seems like there have always been those kinds of problems and the more it changes, the more it stays the same.

 

W: Yes, that’s right.

 

D: I think when people watch the Shack Shakers play; they can feel the twenty-year thing. I remember watching you play harmonica and thinking that I could do that. When I sat down to play, it was very humbling very quickly. It’s great testament to the band that you guys make playing looks so effortless that I think people can tell the difference.

 

W: I hope so, yeah. One thing that is kind of a mark against us is the amount of enthusiasm, humor and energy that is in the band. It’s a strike against us in a lot of ways because playing those honky-tonks and sports bars and cruddy beer joints; you couldn’t stand there and look bored. You’d get kicked out, fired or beat up if you liked you were too precious. You were there to entertain people for four or five hours and then maybe you’d get a break. It was somewhat blue-collar, I’d say. It’s not like I’m complaining. Even then, I had it good. But there’s something to be said for bands coming out of this old road. It’s almost a lost art to being an entertainer or a song and dance man. Someone who tries to entertain people beyond just the content of the song, but through the entire performance. And the entire band performing as four front men. Entertainers putting smiles on people’s faces. Now the audience just stands there looking at how cool the band looks. They get fashion advice from seeing how they are dressed and murmur amongst themselves if this is the right gig to be at.

 

D: Yeah.

 

W: Before, it was hard-drinking, blue-collar people that wanted to see a show and dance. And there might be something that breaks out that’s wild. There might be a bar fight because you got ‘em all riled up or something. There was something different to those old days. The Nashville of now is a totally different place. It is a fashion runway with a lot of Johnny come latelies. I sound bitter and I kind of am but at the same time, I’m happy that we get to come out of the old way. That was an era that goes back to the rowdy minstrel show days and the old pubs of England. It’s what people wanted to see something go down. It lasted all the way to the early 2000s and all of a sudden, it switched. People started being self-conscious. We had Duane Denison from the Jesus Lizard in the band for a while. And they were a rowdy band. A rowdy, hard-rockin’ band with a wild front man that came out of Texas. When he joined the Shack Shakers, in the time that had elapsed from the end of the Jesus Lizard to him picking up with us, he just couldn’t believe how audiences were behaving so much differently. They had their hands in their pockets, they stood still, and they looked nervous or uneasy even though the band is having a ball onstage. Everyone just seemed so stiff and self-conscious that he couldn’t believe it and would yell from the stage, “What’s wrong with you people?!”

 

D: (Laughs)

 

W: You know it’s a rock show. Lighten up. Spin Magazine voted him one of the “Top 100 Guitarists of All Time” and he has to perform for a bunch of waxed figures that look perfectly quaffed. They’re supposed to be all rock n’ roll but rock n’ roll is on the inside, man. You’ve got to let it out. There are still a handful of people that like to come out and raise hell.

 

 

D: Yeah. I don’t why that is either. I’ve seen that working sound on shows, going to them or playing them as well. There’s an old music professor of mine, Nate Dillon, in the AV that has gotten his old punk band Dead Rats back together in the past couple years and been doing one off local shows here and they have somewhat of a following. One of the things they used was buy packs of Oatmeal Crème cookies from the dollar store and throw them at people from the stage if they looked tired and say, “You look like you can use some energy, eat!” The last few times I’ve seen them, people just stand there and get hit in the face with these packs of cookies.

W: (Laughs) Your normal human reflex is to dodge them, they are so dead.

 

D: (Laughs) Yeah, I don’t know man.

 

W: I know. You don’t even think a sugar fix would wake them out of their stupor. They’re not present. People walk around now and they aren’t present. They’re thinking about where they are going to be or what someone else is thinking. They’re present on Facebook. I had to scold an audience the other night. We were in Arkansas. I had to tell them, “If you like a song, you can clap. If you’re going to hang around, give us a little applause because in real life, that’s how you do the Like button.” And I have to explain the difference between reality and Facebook. Then, the next song ended and people started clapping. Ahh, okay, they do like it.

 

D: Depending on how many people are in the audience, that’s how many “likes” you got.

 

W: (Laughs) Yeah, exactly. People aren’t human beings anymore, they’re consumers. Internet consumers, cyborgs or something, I don’t know. People don’t really have blue-collar lives anymore. They do in certain joints. The joints we’re playing are like punk rock clubs with hip people that have good paying jobs. There are not really the agrarian, coal-mining people that there used to be. People who are machinists and whatnot. They’re not the ones coming to these kinds of rock clubs. It’s the kids that work at the Spaghetti Factory or wherever. It’s not like they have this growing, physically debilitating job that just want to get away from, to go drink and raise hell to blow off some steam from their shitty work week. People have a pretty cushy living now so sometimes a blue-collar band like us can fall on deaf ears. There’s so much leisure time now that people are getting soft and weird.

 

D: That’s interesting. I can’t really speak for people my age because I’ve never really related that much. I’ve never had that hard blue-collar life but I still go out and have a good time.

 

W: Yeah some people got it and some people don’t, you know? And I’ve always tried to avoid work.

 

D: (Laughs)

 

 

W: But the type of places I play are blue-collar so growing up playing them, I knew what a good time was in a rough club. I’m kind of spoiled in a weird way. I’m spoiled in a different way now because instead of a four hour set, I only do about an hour and I don’t have to pack my own P.A. There’s snacks they give us and beer tickets, which never happened fifteen years ago. In a way I’m spoiled by the old stuff too because people seemed more real. It was really bizarre. But I’m with ya. I’m not like a blacksmith or anything (laughs).

 

JD Wilkes Interview: Part 2

The Grinning Man: Questions for JD Wilkes

By Jesse Davidson

 

If I’ve ever met a renaissance man, it has been JD Wilkes. After seeing a performance that brought an Iggy Pop like presence to the stage. Later I would learn of the many accomplishments of Mr. Wilkes such as his drawing, painting, and filmmaking abilities. Also, to my knowledge, he is the first real live Kentucky Colonel I’ve met. So with out further ado, here is some questions we had for Col. JD Wilkes.

 

Jesse: How has this tour and album cycle been going for the band so far?

 

Wilkes: So far so good! Lotsa great shows and press. Nine days away from home. Seems an eternity.

 

Jesse: After getting to experience the Shack Shackers live for the first time, I’ve been learning about the various artistic projects you have going and the list of artists you’ve played with as a musician. Has this work ethic always been with you or has it developed over time?

Wilkes: I go in spurts. It’s not a steady stream of constant work, but I will never turn down an opportunity that comes along. I’ve been at it twenty years or more, so anyone’s accomplishments would add up over that much time.

But yes, I’ve always been ambitious, yet super distracted by other interests and flights of fancy. I’d be a lot further along if I was just good at one thing and one thing only.

 

Jesse: Do you have a specific practice routine for all of your talents?

 

Wilkes: I don’t practice as a discipline, I just play a lot because it’s fun. Anything I’m into at the time I tend to go overboard with. I have these little obsessions that come and go. So when I “practice” it’s really just me sinking hours into something I’m really excited about. It never feels like work.

 

Drawing by JD Wilkes
Drawing by JD Wilkes

 

Jesse: Among your many accomplishments, you’re a Kentucky Colonel. Can you tell us about how that came to be?

 

 

Wilkes: I was nominated in secret by another Colonel who told the governor about my contributions to Kentucky’s arts. Specifically, harmonica music I recorded for a public radio piece on Stephen Foster, of all things.

 

 

Jesse: Can you take us through the process of writing “Barn Dances and Jamborees Across Kentucky“?

 

 

Wilkes: I took off on several excursions around and across Kentucky, taking along a notebook, a computer and some harmonicas. I tried to locate as many of the old barn dances that were still going on, sit in with the musicians, jot down my notes and type it out later. There are so many spots out there I have yet to document. Luckily I can update my book with each reprint!

 

Jesse: In what ways has growing up and living in the south influenced your artistic vision that you couldn’t receive from anyplace else?

 

Wilkes: The south is uniquely rustic, traditional, obstinate and yet multi-racial/cultural. There was a natural “hot house” flourishing of culture that went on there despite what Hollywood tells us. Bluegrass, Rockabilly, Old-time, Piedmont Blues, and New Orleans jazz are all examples of cultural interplay. Our cuisine is an example of that too. All of this makes us the secret envy of the world, which is why they disdain us.

I also like the isolation the Appalachians once provided. It acted as a deep freeze of old Scots Irish and English sayings, accents, folklore and ballads. Even the mountains boasted a strange hodge-podge of races: English, Scots/Irish, German, African blacks, Cherokee Indians, Melungeons (Turk/Portuguese), and even the Fugate “blue people”!

What’s not to love and be utterly fascinated by?!

 

Photo by Jared Manzo
Photo by Jared Manzo

Jesse: Has being an artist changed your view on society and humanity?

 

 

Wilkes: No, I don’t think art has done that. Life tends to do that no matter what you do. Perhaps being in “the arts” exposes me to other ideas, but TV and the internet do that too. I think I am confirmed in the fundamentals of my original assumptions more and more each day.

 

 

Jesse: Is there anything creatively you’d like to try that you haven’t yet?

 

 

Wilkes: I want to get my novel published, perhaps illustrate it as a full graphic novel one day. I’d like to get back into painting. I’d also like to complete the sequel to my film “Seven Signs”. That’s my To-Do list.

 

Jesse: Any upcoming news or information on the Shack Shakers you’d like us to know about?

 

Wilkes: Touring Europe next month! Back down south early 2016. Dirt Daubers tour in June.

 

 

Jesse: Lastly, do you have any advice for upcoming artists and musicians?

 

Wilkes: Don’t do it unless you’re already rich and beautiful. I got into the racket before the Millennials came of age and started demanding all artists be supermodels.

You will get paid more to be just a “DJ”, squiggling your finger across the screen of an iPad at a rave.

Get out while you can!

 

Jesse: Thank you so much for taking time to talk to us and for playing the Antelope Valley!

 

Wilkes: My pleasure!

 

If you haven’t checked out the Legendary Shack Shakers or JD Wilkes, do it right now.

Their new album, The Southern Surreal is out on Alternative Tentacles now

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