Lucinda Williams

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One of the most celebrated singer/songwriters of her generation, Lucinda Williams is also a fiercely independent artist who had to fight for the creative freedom that allowed her to do her best work. The daughter of a well-respected poet, Williams brought a literacy and sense of detail to her music that was unpretentious but powerfully evocative and emotional, and a number of major artists covered her tunes while she was still establishing herself as a musician. As a vocalist, Williams used the rough edges of her instrument to her advantage, allowing the grit to heighten the authenticity of her performance. Early in her career, critics compared Williams to Bob Dylan and Townes Van Zandt, praise that flew in the face of her originality; if she was clearly informed by the blues and the giants of the singer/songwriter community, her execution put her in a class of her own that was beholden to blues, folk, country, and rock without swearing full allegiance to any of them. Her first two albums (1979′s Ramblin' and 1980′s Happy Woman Blues) presented her as a strong if not exceptional folk-blues artist, but 1988′s Lucinda Williams was a striking set of original songs that won her rave reviews and announced her status as a major artist. Williams butted heads with record labels and producers while making 1992′s Sweet Old World, and her determination to make the album her own way led to Car Wheels on a Gravel Road not emerging until 1998, though its critical and commercial success paved the way for her to create on her own terms. Since then, she’s released a steady stream of albums that have found her exploring her muse and her heart, including 2003′s World Without Tears, and 2011′s Blessed. With 2014′s Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone, Williams further asserted her independence by forming her own label and launching it with an expansive double set. Her 2021 series of Lu’s Jukebox albums gave her room to share and explore her influences, musical roots, and personal favorites, and 2023′s Stories from a Rock ‘n’ Roll Heart, recorded after she recuperated from a stroke and released in tandem with her memoirs, was a tough, heartfelt LP that confirmed she would never allow anything to hold back her creativity.
Lucinda Williams was born in Lake Charles, Louisiana, on January 26, 1953. Her father was Miller Williams, a literature professor and published poet who passed on not only his love of language, but also of Delta blues and Hank Williams. The family moved frequently, as Miller took teaching posts at colleges around Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, Arkansas, and even Mexico City and Santiago, Chile. Meanwhile, Lucinda discovered folk music (especially Joan Baez) through her mother and was galvanized into trying her own hand at singing and writing songs after hearing Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited. Immersed in a college environment, she was also exposed to ’60s rock and more challenging singer/songwriters like Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell. She started performing folk songs publicly in New Orleans and during the family’s sojourn in Mexico City. In 1969, she was ejected from high school for refusing to say the Pledge of Allegiance, and she spent a year working her way through a reading list supplied by her father before leaving home.
Williams performed around New Orleans as a folk artist who mixed covers with traditional-styled originals. In 1974, she relocated to Austin, Texas, and became part of that city’s burgeoning roots music scene; she later split time between Austin and Houston, and then moved to New York. A demo tape got her the chance to record for the Smithsonian Folkways label, and she went to Jackson, Mississippi, to lay down her first album at the Malaco studios. Ramblin' on My Mind (later retitled simply Ramblin') was released in 1979 and featured a selection of traditional blues, country, folk, and Cajun songs. Williams returned to Houston to record the follow-up, 1980’s Happy Woman Blues. As her first album of original compositions, it was an important step forward, and although it was much more bound by the dictates of tradition than her genre-hopping later work, her talent was already in evidence.
However, it would be some time before that talent was fully realized. Williams flitted between Austin and Houston during the early ’80s, then moved to Los Angeles in 1984, where she started to attract some major-label interest. CBS signed her to a development deal in the mid-’80s but wound up passing since neither its rock nor its country divisions knew how to market her; around the same time, a short-lived marriage to drummer Greg Sowders dissolved. Williams eventually caught on with an unlikely partner — the British indie label Rough Trade, which was historically better known for its post-punk output. The simply titled Lucinda Williams was released in 1988, and although it didn’t make any waves in the mainstream, it received glowing reviews from those who did hear it. With help from guitarist/co-producer Gurf Morlix, Williams’ sound had evolved into a seamless blend of country, blues, folk, and rock; while it made perfect sense to roots music enthusiasts, it didn’t fit into the rigid tastes of radio programmers. But it was clear that she had found her songwriting voice — the album brimmed with confidence, and so did its assertive female characters, who seemed to answer only to their own passions.
Many critics hailed Lucinda Williams as a major statement by a major new talent. Rough Trade issued a couple of EPs that featured live performances and material from Lucinda Williams, and Patty Loveless covered “The Night’s Too Long” for a Top 20 country hit. However, it would be four years before Williams completed her official follow-up. She signed with RCA for a time but left when she felt that the label was pressuring her to release material she didn’t deem ready for public consumption. Instead, she went to the small Elektra-distributed label Chameleon, which finally released Sweet Old World in 1992. A folkier outing than Lucinda Williams, Sweet Old World was an unflinching meditation on death, loss, and regret. Even its upbeat moments were colored by songs like the title track and “Pineola,” two stunning, heartbreaking accounts of a family friend’s suicide (poet Frank Stanford, not, as many listeners assumed, Williams’ own brother). Needless to say, the record won rave reviews once again, and Williams toured Australia with Rosanne Cash and Mary Chapin Carpenter.
On that tour, Carpenter decided to record “Passionate Kisses,” the key track and statement of purpose from Lucinda Williams. It shot into the country Top Five in 1993 and won its writer a Grammy for Country Song of the Year. Other artists soon started mining Williams’ back catalog for material: avowed fan Emmylou Harris recorded “Crescent City” for 1993’s Cowgirl's Prayer and cut “Sweet Old World” for her 1995 alternative country landmark Wrecking Ball; Tom Petty covered “Changed the Locks” for 1996’s movie-related She's the One. As the buzz around Williams grew, so did anticipation for her next album. With Chameleon having gone under, she signed with Rick Rubin’s American Recordings label and began sessions with Morlix again co-producing. Dissatisfied with the results, Williams’ rigorous retouching led to Morlix’s departure from the project. In 1995, she moved into Harris’ neighborhood in Nashville and through Harris hired Steve Earle and his production partner Ray Kennedy. At first, she was so enamored with their work that she re-recorded the entire album from scratch. When it was finished, she decided that the results sounded too produced, and took the record to Los Angeles, where she enlisted Roy Bittan (onetime E Street Band keyboardist) to co-produce a series of overdub sessions that bordered on obsessive. During the long wait for the album, the media began to pay more attention to Williams; some of the coverage was fairly unflattering, painting her as a neurotic control freak, but she always countered that it was unfair to criticize the process if the results were worthwhile.
Rubin mixed the final tracks, but the album was further delayed when he entered into negotiations to sell the American label. Mercury stepped in to purchase the rights to the album, which was finally released in 1998 under the title Car Wheels on a Gravel Road. Boasting a bright, contemporary roots rock sound with strong country and blues flavors, not to mention major-label promotional power, the album won universal acclaim, making many critics’ year-end Top Ten lists and winning The Village Voice’s prestigious Pazz & Jop survey. It also won Williams a Grammy for Best Contemporary Folk Album (despite being the least folk-oriented record in her catalog) and became her first to go gold, proving to doubters that she was not just a songwriter, but a full-fledged recording artist in her own right. After a merger shakeup at Mercury, Williams wound up on the Universal-distributed roots imprint Lost Highway. She was the subject of an extensive, widely acclaimed profile in The New Yorker in 2000 written by Bill Buford, who was nominated for a National Magazine Award for his work; however, Williams and some of her supporters took issue with some of his more objective-minded analysis.
Williams delivered her next album, Essence, in 2001, after a relatively scant wait of just three years. An introspective collection, it often found Williams taking a simpler, more minimalist lyrical approach and was greeted with rapturous reviews in most quarters. The track “Get Right with God” won Williams her third Grammy, this time for Best Female Rock Vocal, which further consolidated her credibility as a singer, not just a songwriter. Paring down the time between album releases even further, Williams returned in 2003 with World Without Tears, which became her highest-charting effort to date when it debuted in the Top 20. Two live recordings were released in 2005, one (Live @ the Fillmore) for Lost Highway and the other (Live from Austin, TX) for New West. West arrived in 2007, followed by Little Honey in 2008. Williams returned to the studio in 2010 with producer Don Was at the helm with help from Eric Liljestrand and husband/manager Tom Overby (the latter two co-produced Little Honey), with some of the same guests from her previous offering, including Matthew Sweet and Elvis Costello, who sang and played on almost half the record. (Costello and Williams had already worked together; she duetted with Costello on his 2004 album The Delivery Man.) Entitled Blessed, the album was released in early 2011 in two editions, one a standard CD and the other as a limited deluxe version with a bonus disc that included the working demos for the songs on Blessed, recorded in Williams’ kitchen.
In early 2014, Williams reissued her 1988 self-titled album with bonus material via funding from a PledgeMusic campaign. If the crowd-funding campaign suggested Williams was moving away from the standard music business paradigm, she confirmed it by forming her own record label, Highway 20 Records, which released Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone, an ambitious two-disc set that appeared in September 2014. Apparently inspired by her new independence, Williams released another double album, The Ghosts of Highway 20, through her own label in February 2016, only a year-and-a-half after Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone. In 2017, Williams marked the 25th anniversary of Sweet Old World with the release of This Sweet Old World, in which she recorded new and sometimes revised versions of the songs from the 1992 album, accompanied by her road band. Williams collaborated with venerable jazz saxophonist Charles Lloyd for his 2018 album Vanished Gardens, a collection steeped in blues and country flavors. In 2020, Williams and Highway 20 presented Good Souls Better Angels, a stripped-down and often rollicking effort that included the fierce political broadside “Man Without a Soul.”
The following year she kicked off a new series called Lu’s Jukebox, that saw her recording live versions of themed tribute sets with proceeds going to benefit independent music venues. The first volume, Runnin' Down a Dream: A Tribute to Tom Petty, arrived in April 2021. The second installment in the series, Lu's Jukebox, Vol. 2: Southern Soul: From Memphis to Muscle Shoals, appeared in July 2021, and was primarily devoted to covers of classic soul and R&B tunes, though she also found room for Bobbie Gentry’s “Ode to Billy Joe” and her own “Still I Long for Your Kiss.” The third installment, appearing in October 2021, bore the self-explanatory title Lu's Jukebox, Vol. 3: Bob's Back Pages -- A Night of Bob Dylan Songs. Williams dug deep into her country influences on Lu's Jukebox, Vol. 4: Funny How Time Slips Away -- A Night of '60s Country Classics, which also appeared in October 2015, and ended their series on a festive note in November 2021 with Lu’s Jukebox, Vol. 5: Have Yourself a Rockin’ Little Christmas with Lucinda.
The Jukebox albums were released while Williams was recovering from a stroke she suffered in November 2020. Doctors discovered a blood clot on the right side of her brain, which impacted her mobility on the left side of her body, making it difficult to play guitar. Her ability to sing was not seriously impaired, and she was sufficiently recovered to play a tour opening for Jason Isbell in July and August 2021, as well as lending backing vocals to Robert Plant & Alison Krauss’s 2021 LP Raise the Roof. In 2023, Williams published her memoirs, Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You, where she wrote openly about her difficult childhood, the ups and downs of her career, her struggles with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, and how her best-known songs came to be. Two months after the book appeared in stores, Williams released a new studio album, Stories from a Rock ‘n’ Roll Heart, a tough, impassioned set with a number of songs drawn from the lives of people she’s known. The album included guest vocals from Bruce Springsteen, Patti Scialfa, Margo Price, and Tommy Stinson. The release was followed by a concert tour that took her across the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom. ~ Steve Huey & Mark Deming