King Wilkie pics

Emo-grass, alternative bluegrass band from Charlottesville, VA

From the opening notes, King Wilkie's Low Country Suite announces a new beginning for the band. Using the same tools that they used to make a splash on the bluegrass circuit - fiddles, banjos, Dobros, string bass, acoustic guitars, and mandolins - they forge a new sound: the tension and release created by every brush and scrape of the instruments and the close harmonies...
Date Time Location Watching
Nov 11 8:00 pm Boston
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Nov 12 8:00 pm Providence     Buy tickets
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Nov 13 8:00 pm Lebanon, NH
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Nov 18 8:00 pm San Francisco     Buy tickets
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Nov 19 8:00 pm Sacramento
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Nov 21 8:00 pm Santa Barbara, CA
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Nov 22 8:00 pm Los Angeles
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Nov 23 8:00 pm Felton, CA
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View all King Wilkie tour dates (8 of 8 events shown)

 

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    Bio
    From the opening notes, King Wilkie's Low Country Suite announces a new beginning for the band. Using the same tools that they used to make a splash on the bluegrass circuit - fiddles, banjos, Dobros, string bass, acoustic guitars, and mandolins - they forge a new sound: the tension and release created by every brush and scrape of the instruments and the close harmonies of the band's two lead singers inform brutally honest, poetic songs of dread, exhilaration, and the truth - and the consequences of denying it.

    Since releasing their debut album Broke in 2004, the six men of King Wilkie, then barely in their twenties, have transitioned from a classically-styled bluegrass group into something more fluid. In the years dividing then from now, time passed slowly, songs were written, and musical boundaries and definitions were set aside. The resulting album "has a 'we're not in Kansas anymore' theme," explains co-founder Reid Burgess. "The main thing was freeing ourselves up stylistically and showing different sides of the band."

    In reality, this surprising stylistic shift was a natural outgrowth of the band's musical curiosity, as Burgess points out. "We'd been playing different kinds of music individually for many years, and on this record we decided to let everything else in. You can try really hard to choose your influences, but in the end it's going to come out sounding like something different...like yourself."

    Produced by Jim Scott (Tom Petty, Dixie Chicks, Red Hot Chili Peppers), Low Country Suite finds the Charlottesville, Virginia-based band deftly tapping into rock's blue-highways heritage, drawing on the pioneering spirit of The Byrds circa Sweetheart of the Rodeo, Gram Parsons' solo LPs, and the Rolling Stones in their "Country Honk" mode. Yet Low Country Suite, while deviating from the band's initial blueprint, incorporates their deeply rooted study of the past into a new musical framework of their own invention. The album's gentler songs are equally informed by the sixties folk of Nico, Nick Drake, and Leonard Cohen, as by Bill Monroe, the Flying Burrito Brothers, or the Byrds. "King Wilkie create their own genre of music - a beautiful, true and honest sound," says Scott.

    The band formed in Charlottesville in 2003 and started a journey that took them from a suburban upbringing with a pop MTV soundtrack to an all-consuming obsession with bluegrass, which, in turn, took them to the stage of the Grand Ole Opry and led to an acclaimed debut album on Rebel Records, the pioneering bluegrass imprint and longtime home of Ralph Stanley. The International Bluegrass Music Association named them emerging artists of the year in 2004. But even as they were being embraced by their peers in bluegrass, their music was shifting and extending outward in directions that could no longer be contained under the bluegrass banner.

    According to singer John McDonald, "no matter how hard we worked and studied, we realized we'd never sing bluegrass like Del McCoury, so we sat down to work on songs that reflected our own strengths and lives and musical influence." Burgess elaborates, "Originally, I had wanted to do something in the genre, but it became clear that it wasn't really working - it wasn't personal enough."

    After this revelation, the music began to evolve naturally, spurred by a desire to leave precedent behind and concentrate on their own idiosyncratic sound and songwriting. "I think when you start with doing something because you feel it deep down in your gut, you're going in the right direction," says Burgess. "That's how it was with some of these songs and ideas."
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