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Billy King
Homegrown
When I'm checking out local performers, I so enjoy seeing
their parents or grandparents in the audience. The evening feels
somehow more wholesome and meaningful with the older folks tuning
in to the next generation's artistic expression.
In Ann Arbor, you can't get a much more family feel than at
a Billy King show. Billy, son of Frog Holler organic farmers Ken
and Cathy King, came to the local music community's attention
almost twenty years ago as a child rockabilly sensation with his
brother Kenny. The precocious King Brothers followed in their
father's songwriting footsteps, learned to play instruments and
sing, and rocked the house beyond what should be expected of
preteens.
In the years since, Kenny has gone on to art school, and Billy
has continued to play guitar, write songs, and work on the family
farm. I've bought lettuce and tomato seedlings from the Kings
at the Ann Arbor Farmers' Market for years. So I recognized
Mom and Dad immediately at a recent Billy King show at Crazy Wisdom
Tea Room, radiating pride for their finest produce their
grown son.
Now thirty, Billy has left rockabilly behind for warm, acoustic
folk-rock originals. He has produced three solo CDs and performs
regularly alone or with his band Billy King & the Idylls. His vocal
delivery is simple and straightforward, floating comfortably at
higher ranges, and he blends beautifully with Idylls vocalist Kristen
Uthus, who sat in on the Crazy Wisdom gig.
Billy's songwriting is easygoing and pleasant, with pretty,
slow melodies and comfortable structure. The lyrics generally
express universal human feelings about place, relationships, and
the desire to be greater than we are. Particularly lovely is
"Home Sweet Home," from Billy's 2006 self-produced
release Overdue:
When I'm old and weary
Returning from afar
The whole world will hear me
When I cry, "Here we are"
Where nothing's unfamiliar
And everything is known
I can't wait until we're home
sweet
home.
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After getting a feel for his compositions, I was unsurprised to
hear him reprise some Paul Simon tunes, Al Anderson's
"What's a Thousand Miles," and "Copper Kettle,"
a Bob Dylan favorite. He included a couple of his father's
original tunes, lovingly rendered.
Billy looks the part of a healthy farm boy strong and
lean, clean shaven, with a shy smile. He holds his worn guitar
like an extension of his arms; you can just imagine him cradling
it on the couch or porch anytime his hands are out of the dirt. He
also enjoys experimenting with other instruments. He's written
some lovely songs on the keyboard, including "That Way"
a witty lament that sounds like something Harry Connick Jr.
would perform:
When we walk down the street, we might hold hands
But to anyone we meet, we're only friends
Yes only friends and nothing more, that's what you say
Yes we've been over this before and my baby doesn't like
me that way.
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Billy also plays twelve-string guitar, and he can pull off songs
on the banjo, too, though
I'm not sure people should bother with banjo if they're
not gonna pick it.
But it hardly seems fair to criticize, when I was so taken with
Billy King's earnest effort to make beauty and share it with
family, friends, and strangers alike. I wanted to hug him like a
mother and tell him to keep at it. But he's already got a
mother. And I'm sure that's exactly what she does.
Billy King is at Crazy Wisdom Tea Room on Saturday, September
29.
Stephanie Kadel-Taras
Photo by Griffin Reames
[Review published September 2007]
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