"This is American folk music stripped to its basics but freed of any stultifying reverence. Whitmore writes original songs which sound timeless in a voice which doesn't fit his comparitive youth." - WIRE
William Elliott Whitmore hails from an Iowa horse farm along the banks of the Mississippi River, and his intense love and spiritual understanding of the land is flawlessly conveyed on his albums for Southern Records; a trilogy of albums collecting songs overflowing with mortality, sorrowful joy and attempts to make peace with a conflicted sense of morality.
William's voice sounds decades older than his tattered birth certificate indicates, burnished by smoke and drink and full of emotional depth. While comparisons to the gravelly voice of Tom Waits and the lyrical story telling of Johnny Cash are prevalent (and not altogether inaccurate), Mr. Whitmore is clearly doing more than just regenerating the music of the past.
Dark tales of life, love, lonliness and loss are the cornerstones for his albums. These universal themes of desperation and redemption served Charley Patton, Robert Johnson and Henry Rollins well... and Whitmore has perfected his own unique strain of the rural folk blues with this impressive catalgoue.
Mr. Whitmore is going on an extended US fall tour. Look out for him near you.
In honor of Will's love for skateboarding, we had a skatedeck made from a drawing he gave us a few months ago. Use our web site's contact page to place your order or pick one up at one of Will's shows.
Exclusive to vinyl only and for individual purchase, Will's songbook is out now. Limited to 2,000, the book features the lyrics to all the songs on all three albums, handwritten by Will, translated to book form using blue and silver ink by designer Jon Resh, and printed by the kind folks at Westcan printing.
Reviews have already started rolling in for Song of the Blackbird... read what people have to say.
