Hank Williams III
Shelton Hank Williams (born December 12, 1972), known as Hank Williams III,[3] is an American musician, singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, known for his fusion of traditional and honky-tonk country music with rockabilly and punk rock.[1] He was the drummer of hardcore punk band Arson Anthem, and bassist of Phil Anselmo's band Superjoint Ritual. He has released eleven studio albums, including five for Curb Records.
Hank Williams III | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Shelton Hank Williams |
Also known as | Hank Williams III |
Born | Nashville, Tennessee, U.S | December 12, 1972
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Williams is the grandson of Hank Williams and the son of Hank Williams Jr. He is also the nephew of Jett Williams, the half-brother of Holly Williams, and the father of Coleman Williams.
Music career
Early career
Williams spent much of his early career playing drums in punk rock bands during the late 1980s and early-to-mid-1990s. During this time frame, Williams was informed that he had fathered a son, Coleman Finchum, who was five years old by that time; a family court judge ordered Williams to find more stable employment so that Finchum could receive child support.[4]
Williams later played bass guitar in the heavy metal band Superjoint Ritual, now renamed as Superjoint for legal reasons, led by former Pantera vocalist Phil Anselmo. Williams also played drums for Arson Anthem, formed with Anselmo and Mike Williams of the sludge metal band Eyehategod.[5]
Recordings for Curb Records (1996-2010)
Capitalizing on his family name and resemblance to his grandfather, he signed a contract with Nashville music industry giant Curb Records. Three Hanks: Men with Broken Hearts was issued shortly thereafter, which spliced together recordings to make it seem that three generations of Williams men were singing alongside one another. In the late 1980s, upon first meeting Hank Williams III, Minnie Pearl, a friend of the late Hank Williams Sr., reportedly said "Lord, honey, you're a ghost", as she was astonished by his striking resemblance to his grandfather.[6]
Hank Jr. and Hank III, due to the success of the Three Hanks album, would receive a Vocal Duo of the Year nomination by the Academy of Country Music in 1997.[7]
Williams' first solo album, Risin' Outlaw, was released in September 1999 to respectable sales and strong reviews, despite Williams's own hatred of the record.[8]
In 2003, Williams recorded This Ain't Country for Curb, who chose not to release it. On May 17, 2011, Curb released the album under the title Hillbilly Joker, without the consent or input from Williams after his contract with the label had been terminated.
In 2006, after resolving a contractual dispute with Curb Records, Williams released Straight to Hell on Curb's rock imprint, Bruc. Battles with Walmart delayed the appearance of this album, which was released on February 28, 2006, as a two-disc set in two formats: a censored version (for Wal-Mart), and an uncensored version that was the first major-label country album ever to bear a parental advisory warning. Straight to Hell was also the first release through Curb's Bruc Records imprint. However, the uncensored version was released through Bruc, and the clean version was released through Curb. One of the songs, "Pills I Took", was written by a little-known Wisconsin group called Those Poor Bastards, who originally released the song on their 2004 CD Country Bullshit.
Williams released Assjack's self-titled debut album on August 4, 2009, through Curb.
His next album, Rebel Within, was released in May 2010, and was his last album with Curb Records.[9] It charted at number 20 in Billboard magazine.
Between 2012 and 2017, Curb would release a series of unauthorized compilations of Williams' music. In 2012, Curb released a Williams album titled Long Gone Daddy, marking the second album the company has released under his name since his departure. In 2014, Curb Records released a new album under Hank Williams III's name titled Ramblin' Man. The album contains previously unreleased material that Williams recorded while on their label. The following year, Curb released another Williams album of previously unreleased songs titled Take As Needed for Pain. The album is mostly a rock album but the single released was a country song titled "Ruby Get Back to the Hills". In 2017, Curb released a Greatest Hits album featuring select tracks from Williams' first four albums, mostly from Straight to Hell.
Independent releases (2011–2014)
Williams released four new CDs in September 2011. Ghost to a Ghost/Gutter Town (a 2-disc country record with some ambient and folk influences), 3 Bar Ranch Cattle Callin' (a metal record in the newly anointed cattle core genre) and Attention Deficit Domination (a doom-rock record), were released under his label Hank3 Records through Megaforce Records, and featured guest appearances by Tom Waits, Les Claypool (Primus), Alan King (Hellstomper), Ray Lawrence Jr., Troy Medlin (Sourvein), Dave Sherman (Earthride) and Williams' dog, Trooper.[10]
In 2013, Williams two new albums: a country album Brothers of the 4×4 and punk album A Fiendish Threat, under the band name "3".[11]
In 2018, Williams was featured on DevilDriver's cover of his song "Country Heroes", which appears on their album Outlaws 'til the End: Vol. 1. In 2021, he released a cover of the David Allan Coe song "You Never Even Called Me By My Name" on his YouTube channel.[12]
Music style
Williams' music is a mixture of traditional country music, rockabilly and punk rock.[1] His music has been classified as alternative country,[1] cowpunk[13][14][2] and psychobilly.[1][13][15] They fuse the "tempo and structure of bluegrass" with the "attitude and swagger of heavy metal".[16] Williams' lyrical themes include drug use, hedonism and the outlaw life, as well as criticism of the mainstream country music industry.[16][17][18]
Williams' live shows typically follow a Jekyll and Hyde format: a country music set featuring fiddle player David McElfresh and steel guitar player Dan Johnson, followed by a "hellbilly" set of cowpunk and psychobilly songs, and then an Assjack set, which consists of death metal and metalcore songs.[19]
The lineup for Assjack includes the addition of supplemental vocalist Gary Lindsey and the departure of his fiddle and steel guitar players. McElfresh's predecessor was fellow-fiddle-player Michael "Fiddleboy" McCanless, who would play all three sets, adding traditional violin for the country set of the concert before turning on different effect pedals for later sets. Fiddleboy died on February 1, 2003. Another former band member was guitarist Duane Denison, previously with The Jesus Lizard, who left The Damn Band and Assjack in January 2001 and later that year formed Tomahawk.
Discography
- Studio albums
- Risin' Outlaw (1999)
- Lovesick, Broke and Driftin' (2002)
- Straight to Hell (2006)
- Damn Right, Rebel Proud (2008)
- Rebel Within (2010)
- Hillbilly Joker (2011)
- Ghost to a Ghost/Gutter Town (Hank3 Records, 2011)
- 3 Bar Ranch Cattle Callin' (Hank3 Records, 2011)
- Attention Deficit Domination (Hank3 Records, 2011)
- Brothers of the 4×4 (Hank3 Records, 2013)
- A Fiendish Threat (Hank3 Records, 2013)
References
- Busdeker, Jon (January 14, 2019). "Hank Williams III and his psychobilly band to play Huntsville's Crossroads". The Huntsville Times. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
For more than 10 years, Williams III has been recording his brand of alternative country music that mixes elements of punk and rockabilly with traditional country and honky-tonk.
- Abbott, Jim (October 21, 2008). "Honky-tonk hard-core from cowpunk Hank". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- "The official website". Hank3. Archived from the original on August 10, 2019. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
- Trigger (March 7, 2021). "The Hank Williams Lineage Continues with Hank3's Son "IV"". Saving Country Music.
- "Metal News – Superjoint Ritual Is No More". Metalunderground.com. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
- Harris, Will. "A chat with Hank Williams III, Hank Williams III interview, Damn Right Rebel Proud, Tyler Torreance was his manager". Bullz-eye.com. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
- "Winners database". ACM Country. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- Netherland, Tom (September 7, 1999). "Hank Williams III: Like grandfather, like grandson". Rockabilly.net. Retrieved April 20, 2012.
- "Hank III & Assjack ::: The Official Website". www.hank3.com. Archived from the original on December 5, 2008.
- "Hank 3". Facebook. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
- "Hank3 ::: The Official Website". Archived from the original on October 9, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
- IV and the Strange Band. "IV and the Strange Band".
- Gilbert, Elizabeth (August 8, 2010). "Hank Williams III: The Ghost". GQ. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- Wolcott, Mike (October 5, 2014). "Hank 3: Grandson of 'Hillbilly Shakespeare' pulls off the impossible". Tahoe Onstage. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- Ollison, Rashod (June 19, 2014). "Hank Williams III's country blood and psychobilly soul". The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- Hanover, Nick (July 2, 2012). "Rediscover: Hank III: Straight to Hell". Spectrum Culture. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- Deming, Mark. "Straight to Hell". Allmusic. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- Murray, Noel. "Hank III: Straight To Hell". AV Club. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
- Jurek, Thom. "Assjack". AllMusic. Retrieved August 26, 2021.