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An Evening with Keller Williams
Great Northern Bar and Grill
Whitefish, MT
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Event

An Evening with Keller Williams
An Evening With (no opener)
Doors 8 pm/Show 9 pm
$22 in Advance/$25 at door
21 and over
All General Admisssion

Bio

Keller  Williams  released  his  first  album  in  1994,  FREEK,  and  has  since  given  each  of  his  albums  a  single  syllable  title:  BUZZ,  SPUN,  BREATHE,  LOOP,  LAUGH,  HOME,  DANCE,  STAGE,  GRASS,  DREAM,  TWELVE,  LIVE,  ODD,  THIEF,  KIDS,  BASS,  PICK,  FUNK,  VAPE,  SYNC  and  RAW,  those  who  have  followed  his  career  will  know  this.    Each  title  serves  as  a  concise  summation  of  the  concept  guiding  each  project.  GRASS,  for  example,  is  a  bluegrass  recording  cut  with  the  husband-wife  duo  The  Keels.  STAGE  is  a  live  album,  and  DREAM  is  the  realization  of  Kellers  wish  to  collaborate  with  some  of  his  musical  heroes.  THIEF  is  a  set  of  unexpected  cover  songs,  KIDSoffers  Kellers  first  childrens  record,  PICK  presents  Kellers  collaboration  with  royal  bluegrass  family  The  Travelin  McCourys,  and  RAW  is  a  solo  acoustic  album.  Each  album  showcases  Kellers  comprehensive  and  diverse  musical  endeavors  and  functions  to  provide  another  piece  of  the  jigsaw  puzzle  that  is  Keller  Williams.  Kellers  collaborative  and  solo  albums  reflect  his  pursuit  to  create  music  that  sounds  like  nothing  else.  Unbeholden  to  conventionalism,  he  seamlessly  crosses  genre  boundaries.  The  end  product  is  astounding  and  novel  music  that  encompasses  rock,  jazz,  funk  and  bluegrass,  and  always  keeps  the  audience  on  their  feet.Since  he  first  appeared  on  the  scene  in  the  early  90s,  Williams  has  defined  the  term  independent  artist.  And  his  recordings  tell  only  half  the  story.  Keller  built  his  reputation  initially  on  his  engaging  live  performances,  no  two  of  which  are  ever  alike.  For  most  of  his  career  he  has  performed  solo.  His  stage  shows  are  rooted  around  Keller  singing  his  compositions  and  choice  cover  songs,  while  accompanying  himself  on  acoustic  guitar.  With  the  use  of  todays  technology,  Keller  creates  samples  on  the  fly  in  front  of  the  audience,  a  technique  called  live  phrase  sampling  or  looping,  with  nothing  pre-recorded.  The  end  result  often  leans  toward  a  hybrid  of  alternative  folk  and  groovy  electronica,  a  genre  Keller  jokingly  calls  acoustic  dance  music  or  ADM.That  approach,  Williams  explains,  was  derived  from  hours  of  playing  solo  with  just  a  guitar  and  a  microphone,  and  then  wanting  to  go  down  different  avenues  musically.  I  couldnt  afford  humans  and  didnt  want  to  step  into  the  cheesy  world  of  automated  sequencers  where  you  hit  a  button  and  the  whole  band  starts  to  play,  then  youve  got  to  solo  along  or  sing  on  top  of  it.  I  wanted  something  more  organic  yet  with  a  dance  groove  that  I  could  create  myself.Williams  solo  live  showsand  his  ability  to  improvise  to  his  determinedly  quirky  tunes  despite  the  absence  of  an  actual  bandquickly  became  the  stuff  of  legend,  and  his  audience  grew  exponentially  when  word  spread  about  this  exciting,  unpredictable  performer.  Once  he  began  releasing  recordings,  starting  with  1994s  FREEK,  Williams  was  embraced  by  an  even  wider  community  of  music  fans,  particularly  the  jam  band  crowd.  While  his  live  gigs  have  largely  been  solo  affairs,  Williams  has  nearly  always  used  his  albums  as  a  forum  for  collaborations  with  fellow  musicians.  An  alliance  with  The  String  Cheese  Incident  on  1999s  BREATHE  marked  Williams  first  release  on  the  bands  label  SCI  Fidelity  Records,  DREAM,  Kellers  2007  release,  found  him  in  the  company  of  such  iconic  musicians  as  the  Grateful  Deads  Bob  Weir,  banjo  master  Béla  Fleck,  bass  great  Victor  Wooten,  American  musician/poet  Michael  Franti  and  many  others.
That  album  took,  from  start  to  release  time,  says  Williams,  about  three  years.  The  object  was  to  get  people  that  I  admire  musically  to  play  my  stuff,  so  when  Im  old  I  can  crank  this  album  in  my  pimped-out  golf  cart  and  have  something  that  Im  really  proud  of.  I  was  going  for  the  historical  effect  for  my  own  personal  listening  pleasure.Each  record,  he  continues,  is  a  little  snapshot  of  history.  I  like  to  think  of  it  as  a  period  piece  for  an  artist.  Each  record  is  a  little  bit  different  but  all  of  them  have  some  kind  of  common  thread,  which  is  my  musical  ability  as  far  as  I  can  take  it.  I  enjoy  making  records.  In  some  peoples  eyes,  theyre  a  dying  breed,  but  Im  very  passionate  about  it.  They  document  where  my  head  is  at  that  time  in  my  career  and  where  I  am  in  my  songwriting.Williams  story  begins  in  Fredericksburg,  Virginia,  just  south  of  Washington,  D.C.  There  he  was  exposed  to  a  wide  variety  of  music  at  an  early  age,  starting  with  country  and  bluegrass  and  working  his  way  up  through  hip-hop  and  go-go,  a  brand  of  funk  particular  to  that  part  of  the  country.  Once  he  began  playing  guitar,  Williams  sphere  expanded  to  what  he  calls  the  post-pseudo-skateboarder  punk-rock  rebellious  type  of  thing,  Black  Flag  and  Sex  Pistols  and  Ramones,  Dead  Kennedys,  things  like  that.  That  slid  into  the  more  melodic  college  rock,  like  the  Cure  and  the  Cult,  the  Smiths,  R.E.M.s  first  five  or  six  records.Then  came  the  Grateful  Dead,  a  seminal  influence  on  Williams  own  music.  I  studied  and  learned  their  music  and  went  to  the  shows,  he  says,  adding  that  the  impact  of  Jerry  Garcia  on  his  attitude  toward  music  remains  incalculable.  Another  major  influence  was  Michael  Hedges,  the  late  virtuoso  acoustic  guitarist.  He  was  really  excelling  in  a  whole  different  world  from  what  I  knew,  says  Williams.After  relocating  to  Colorado,  further  exposure  to  bluegrass  music  and  progressive  acoustic  artists  such  as  Béla  Fleck  and  the  Flecktones  also  had  a  major  impression  on  Williams.  As  he  began  to  develop  his  own  distinctive  compositional  and  performing  style,  Williams  incorporated  all  of  the  lessons  hed  learned  from  the  long  list  of  artists  whod  found  their  way  into  his  world,  then  filtered  their  music  through  his  own  experiences  until  something  wholly  unique  emerged.  The  list  of  artists  whose  music  he  has  covered  either  in  concert  or  on  his  recordings  constitutes  a  mind-blowing  spread:  songs  originally  performed  by  everyone  from  Pink  Floyd  and  Ozzy  Osbourne  to  Ani  DiFranco  and  old-school  rappers  the  Sugar  Hill  Gang!When  he  first  started  out,  Williams  played  in  regional  bands  but  also  performed  as  a  solo  artist,  me  sitting  on  a  stool  playing  covers,  like  a  happy  hour  situation,  he  says.  Id  get  dinner  and  maybe  tips.  There  were  bands  in  high  school  and  in  college.  But  it  turned  out  I  could  get  the  same  money  playing  solo  that  I  was  getting  with  the  band.  Around  that  time  I  was  also  doing  temporary  jobs  and  I  was  making  the  same  amount  playing  music  as  I  was  scraping  mortar  out  of  the  cracks  of  cinder  block  walls  for  eight  hours  in  the  summertime  at  minimum  wage.  So  it  seemed  like  the  obvious  choice  was  to  play  music.  I  started  to  work  and  over  the  years  I  incorporated  more  technology.  The  looping  thing  started  to  happen  and  tickets  were  sold  and  people  came  to  shows,  so  there  wasnt  any  reason  to  fix  something  that  wasnt  broken.
What  Williams  calls  the  looping  thing  is  actually  a  big  part  of  what  has  made  him  such  a  compelling  live  performer.  Basically,  I  have  these  machines  that  are  essentially  delay  units,  he  explains.  What  I  do  is  step  on  a  button  and  sing  or  play  something.  Then  I  step  on  the  same  button  in  time  and  it  repeats  what  I  just  played  or  sang.  Once  that  initial  loop  is  created,  I  can  layer  on  a  bass  line  or  a  drum  line  and  then  have  this  layer  that  I  just  created  in  front  of  an  audience  that  I  could  sing  over  and  solo  over.  Nothing  is  pre-recorded.  Everything  is  created  onstage  in  front  of  the  audience.If  it  sounds  complicated,  it  is:  but  the  basic  thrust  is  that  the  technology  has  allowed  Williams  to  go  out  on  tour  week  after  week,  year  after  year,  and  play  music  by  himselfwithout  limiting  his  sound  to  what  we  most  often  associate  with  the  solo  singer-songwriter:  a  guy  strumming  a  guitar  and  singing.  With  his  arsenal  of  tech  toys,  Williams  can  expand  his  reach  onstage  by,  in  essence,  jamming  with  himself.As  years  have  gone  by  and  Keller  has  continued  to  evolve  he  has  created  more  and  more  unique  projects  and  collaborations  with  fellow  musicians.  In  2007  Keller  formed  a  band  of  his  own,  Keller  Williams  with  Moseley,  Droll  and  Sipe  which  featured  Keller  on  rhythm  guitar  and  vocals,  Jeff  Sipe  on  drums,  Keith  Moseley  on  bass  and  Gibb  Droll  on  lead  guitar.  After  touring  throughout  2007  -2008,  they  subsequently  released  a  double  live  record  with  a  companion  DVD.  In  true  Keller  Williams  fashion,  its  called  LIVE.The  summer  of  2010  found  Keller  sharing  a  bus  with  two  of  his  biggest  heroes,  former  Grateful  Dead  drummers  Bill  Kreutzmann  and  Mickey  Hart,  as  a  member  of  their  powerhouse  assemblage  the  Rhythm  Devils.  That  was  a  very  surreal  experience,  Williams  says.  We  rehearsed  for  a  few  days  and  then  we  were  on  a  bus  with  12  people,  two  of  them  being  the  original  drummers  from  the  Grateful  Dead.  On  that  tour,  Williams  was  put  in  the  enviable  position  of  singing  many  songs  from  the  Grateful  Dead  catalog  for  audiences  that  loved  every  minute  of  it.    Inspired  by  this  experience  and  his  admiration  for  the  Grateful  Dead,  Keller  added  two  Grateful  Dead  projects  to  his  repertoire:  Grateful  Grass  and  Grateful  Gospel.    With  an  ever-revolving  cast  of  jam,  bluegrass,  and  gospel  musicians,  Grateful  Grass  and  Grateful  Gospel  have  become  fan  favorites  and  festival  staples.Kellers  Grateful  Grass  tunes  can  be  heard  on  two  live  digital  releases,  REX  and  DOS.    Kellers  guests  on  these  recordings  include:  Jeff  Austin  (Jeff  Austin  Band),  Keith  Moseley  (String  Cheese  Incident),  Michael  Kang  (String  Cheese  Incident),  Reed  Mathis  (Tea  Leaf  Green),  The  Keels  and  many  more.Following  the  Grateful  Dead  theme,  Keller  also  released  KEYS,  a  digital  only  release  on  which  Keller  is  at  the  piano  singing  a  collection  of  Dead  tunes.    All  three  of  these  releases  donate  proceeds  to  the  Grateful  Deads  Rex  Foundation.    Williams  has  also  toured  as  part  of  a  string  trio  with  fellow  Virginians,  singer/guitarist  Larry  Keel  and  his  wife,  singer/bassist  Jenny  Keel,  dubbed  Keller  and  the  Keels.    You  can  find  them  hitting  key  stops  on  the  bluegrass  festival  circuit  playing  songs  from  their  two  releases  GRASSand  THIEF.  If  it  seems  as  if  this  is  a  man  who  never  stops,  that  would  be  about  right.  Keller  released  the  amusingly  titled  THIEFhis  all-covers  project  with  the  Keelsearly  in  2010,  and  KIDS,  hissixteenth  album,  in  the  fall  of  that  same  year.  A  father  of  two  himself,  Williams  was,  of  course,  
inspired  by  his  own  offspring  but,  he  says,  some  of  the  songs  were  written  before  his  children  were  born.  When  Not  For  Kids  Only  by  Jerry  Garcia  and  David  Grisman  came  out,  I  knew  that  there  was  hope  for  me  with  kids  music,  he  says.  I  was  really  attached  to  that  record.  The  songwriting  for  KIDS,  Keller  says,  was  not  necessarily  singing  to  the  kids.  A  lot  of  it  was  me  singing  from  the  perspective  of  the  kids.  That  was  my  plan,  to  get  on  their  wavelength,  on  their  level,  and  be  one  of  them,  so  its  kind  of  like  one  of  their  friends  singing  to  them.In  2011,  BASS  found  the  multi-instrumentalist  only  playing  bass  guitar.  BASS  was  also  the  first  album  to  be  recorded  with  Kellers  live  reggae-funk  band  Kdubalicious,  which  in  addition  to  Keller  on  bass  and  vocals,  features  Jay  Starling  on  keyboards  and  Mark  D  on  drums.  On  the  other  end  of  the  spectrum    but  just  as  tasty    is  Kellers  2012  release  PICK.  This  collaboration  featuring  Keller  Williams  with  The  Travelin  McCourys  is  a  classic  case  of  the  whole  being  greater  than  the  sum  of  its  partsalthough  the  parts  are  rather  massive  on  their  own,  to  be  sure.  Performing  with  The  Travelin  McCourys  is  one  of  my  favorite  things  to  do  in  the  world,  Keller  explains.  This  project  has  struck  a  special  chord  with  me  [pun  intended].  It  is  very  addictive.Indeed,  Keller  always  enjoys  working  with  a  band.  For  2013  he  stepped  out  with  a  new  muse,  a  6-piece  funk  band  dubbed  More  Than  A  Little.  Williams  drew  from  the  Richmond,  VA  R&B/gospel  scene  including  a  pair  of  show  stealing  female  singers.  FUNK  a  sexy  live  recording  that  pays  deep  homage  to  the  genres  roots,  Keller  style    hit  the  streets  in  November  2013  and  More  Than  A  Little  made  its  way  around  the  country  becoming  a  festival  staple  all  their  own.    Early  2015  found  Keller  back  in  the  studio  working  on  his  20th  release,  VAPE.    While  mainly  a  solo  endeavor,  it  does  feature  a  few  special  guests  such  as  Sampson  Grisman,  John  Kadlecik  and  a  track  with  the  Travelin  McCourys.  In  Kellers  own  words  Imagine  taking  these  songs  and  blowing  high  pressured  life  through  them  in  a  low  pressured  atmosphere.  Out  comes  highly  concentrated  music  that  can  be  heated  up  and  inhaled  through  your  ears...Vape.  In  2016,  Keller  assembled  yet  another  band,  Keller  Williams  KWahtro.    KWahtro,  featuring  Gibb  Droll,  Danton  Boller  and  Rodney  Holmes,  toured  the  country  throughout  the  winter  and  fall  of  2016.  The  first  KWahtro  album,  SYNC  will  be  released  in  January  of  2017.  According  to  Keller,  SYNCbegan  as  acoustic  dance  music  but  with  the  help  of  Droll,  Boller  and  Holmes  and  special  guests  Mike  Dillon  and  The  Accidentals,  the  album  morphed  into  a  type  of  acoustic  acid  jazz  that  draws  on  imagery  in  both  the  lyrics  and  the  music.As  if  one  album  release  wasnt  enough  for  2017,  Kellers  first  all  solo  acoustic  album,  RAW,  will  also  be  released  in  January  of  2017.  Keller  started  working  on  RAW  in  2011,  but  got  sidetracked  by  a  number  of  other  projects  that  began  to  take  form.  It  was  when  Kellers  2017  winter  tour,  Shut  the  Folk  Up  and  Listen  with  Leo  Kottke  started  to  take  form,  that  he  jumped  back  into  it  and  completed  the  album.  For  Keller  this  album  and  tour  represent  his  roots;  all  solo  acoustic  guitar  and  vocals,  no  looping,  pedals  or  bands.  Two  albums  at  once,  why  not!  Something  different.  That,  we  can  assume,  is  how  it  will  always  be  with  Keller  Williams.

Location

Great Northern Bar and Grill (View)
27 Central Ave.
Whitefish, MT 59937
United States

Categories

Music > Americana
Music > Folk

Minimum Age: 21
Kid Friendly: No
Dog Friendly: No
Non-Smoking: Yes!
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes!

Contact

Owner: Great Northern Bar and Grill
On BPT Since: Jun 20, 2015
 
Great Northern Bar and Grill
www.greatnorthernbar.com


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