Status: Single
City: from GA, sky vacuums to be sure! LOS ANGELES
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 1/22/2006
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Thursday, December 03, 2009
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Friday, November 20, 2009
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009
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http://larecord.com/revs/2009/10/12/live-review-drew-dennys-manimal-fest/
I passed up Edward Sharpe to see Amanda Jo Williams, who put on a show that mashed the South and the West into a blissfully psychedelic folk opus that highlighted Amanda’s unbelievable voice—at times a tiny craggly mountain child, and at other times a Goddess—as well as her badass band: Crooked Cowboy, Feather, and 5-track. There should be an illustration of 5-track next to the word “guitarist” in the dictionary! His luscious bush of hair, his chillaxed grin, his gnarly licks, and his all around good vibes makes him an absolute pleasure to listen to and watch. Crooked Cowboy manhandled the bass like a real cowboy rounds up dawgies—courageous but patient, fearlessly meticulous. And then there’s Feather, the percussive siren. She hops and shakes and jangles, commanding silver dangling anklets, an assortment of drums, and sometimes two tambourines at once. Feather’s performance is a modern mating display, and I’m sure she’s credited in the fantasies of many men and ladies who attended Manimal festival. Amanda Jo Williams’ combination of personalities and skills results in the most compelling roller coaster I’ve ridden in years—from the depths of a miniscule cracking whisper weaving tales of trauma, to the soaring heights of elongated elated instrumental breaks, Amanda Jo Williams will stop your heart, show you the light, then bring you right back again…
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Friday, September 11, 2009
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http://naturalismo.wordpress.com/2009/09/01/amanda-jo-williams/
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Wednesday, August 12, 2009
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http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/08/12/amanda-jo-williams-interview-i-saw-him-being-born/
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Monday, August 03, 2009
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it's important to play. too many big people can't do it anymore. remember when you were a kid, before desires got ya down? being in the moment, the mind on the moment. i say bring back the play, even if it's for 2 minutes a day. just try to remember the feeling. of being free.
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Wednesday, May 13, 2009
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can be gotten online: amazon, barnesandnoble.com, etc.
Ginger and Hominy, my twins, did the artwork. Fun read.
http://amandajowilliamsmusic.blogspot.com/
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Sunday, November 23, 2008
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descriptions, reviews, etc. from others (it's a mess):
http://larecord.com/revs/2009/09/23/live-review-cobra-lilies/
http://naturalismo.wordpress.com/2009/09/01/amanda-jo-williams/
http://larecord.com/revs/2009/08/20/live-review-the-cowboy-show-unknown-theater/
http://radiofreesilverlake.typepad.com/rfsl/2009/09/the-la-show-low-down-1.html
When You Awake( i found this online, O'Death made a list of their favorite female singers and i was one. bless them. they are amazing, trust me.) http://whenyouawake.com/2009/01/27/mixin-with-odeath/ 4. Amanda Jo Williams- Any song
Go to www. myspace. com/amandajowilliamsmusic to get a taste of this. one of the most interesting singers out there right now. her songs seem to keep getting better. o’death played with her some years ago and ive been faintly trying to keep track of her since, but really she is unlike anything and worthy of being followed around and documented. someone alan lomax might have fallen in love, she does seem to come from another world. little known, but maybe she’ll get huge soon. id like to book a show with her soon, you out there amanda?
Finally singer-songwriter Amanda Jo Williams is a moonbeam myth-like straw or hay, which is which and why? Or pink lemonade-did it really originate from trough water dyed pink by a sideshow performer's tights and get used by a lemonade seller who ran out of water?-Daiana Feuer for L.A. Record
The opening act was a singer/songwriter named Amanda Jo Williams who sang simple, brutally honest songs about relationships, and 'Ring of Fire' by Johnny Cash, in a voice that seemed to be channeling one of Sybil's 16 personalities (Peggy, I think it was...the little girl one). She also sang one of the most direct songs about fucking that I've ever heard, as if she were singing about washing dishes. Hilarious.
'I caught Amanda Jo Williams a week or so ago opening up for Eagle Winged Palace and, while freak country probably isn't for everyone, I thought it was at times pretty amazing.' -radiofree silverlake
Cokemachineglow: Arm-chair scientists -- hell, probably real scientists, too -- always proclaim that smell is the sense most closely linked to memory, and fine, that's probably true. But I think sound -- or at least the sound of a pleasantly grating voice -- comes a close second. There's no science to that declaration beyond the oxymoronic modifiers, but I can remember those voices in my life that were so weird and yet somehow more clear or descriptive and those are moments that I can return to just by letting their reflective larynx nails and barbs scrape down the chalkboard of my memory.
Lame reveal: Williams' is one of those voices. Which doesn't mean much, given that the history of rock and roll has been one, at least in part, of getting over the novelty of annoying vocal chords. Over fifty years ago, Dylan's popularity made arguments about the power or grotesqueness of a particular voice a fucking crime against intelligent thought, because who cares? Music is a form of expression; expression is free to everybody, bad voices and all, and 3AM cigarettes inhaled between pretentious declarations of 'his voice is so fragile and off-key and that's what makes it so powerful' won't convince me that it's the voice itself that gets that honor. If we can accept Miles Davis warbling through a wah pedal or John Cale's violin or the sonic trickery of Wolf Parade or Deerhoof or all the interesting music beyond those borders then why should I tell you that Amanda Jo Williams' voice isn't good in any traditional sense? I mean, it's not that it doesn't matter, but it doesn't matter, right?
Two things, sort of. One: if you don't think you'd like sweeping country pageants fronted by a voice that sounds like the thick rubber of an eighteen-wheeler's tire being punctured by a rock, this album isn't for you. You won't even get past her first inhalation. Two: except, the other side of the 'voice question' is when singers get pegged precisely because of what their voices sound like. I like Dylan; I like Antony because of the consistently epic delivery; I like Joanna Newsom because I think I could peel husks off the yellow corn of her skittish oration; I like Scott Walker because you could nest in the misery of his dulcet tones. In all of those cases, however, it's the song craft that allows the artist to connect, and the personality that makes it work. People's voices are what they are, and it's the doing that makes it interesting, because you can't climb larynx nodes like a ladder to some mythical state of 'authenticity.' Williams may or may not be able to sing; I don't really know because she's performing the hell out of her lyrics, punctuating and rolling phrases like the traditional epistemology of pop vocalism was written in the leftover fluid from Eric Dolphy's spit valve. When she's at full tilt, which is pretty much always (impressive, because Yes I Will Mr. Man was recorded in a day), strutting through her songs and strangling her own larynx, any conjecture about whether all of her nasty, flagrant emotion is either the direct result of or obstructed by her earthy, untrained voice is going to get drowned in the sheer volume of her words. In fact, forget what I said in thing number one -- back up, buck up and give Williams a try. I dare you. I think if you do make it past her first inhalation, you may just find yourself as giddy as I am.
Because it's not her voice, once you can separate the hurdles in your mind; it's her delivery. The appeal for me is the way she knuckles down into the waft of her backing band, sinking and slinging shots in and out with yelps and whoops, speeding up and slowing down her phrasing, creating epic declarations out of distended single vowels, ignoring apophony and umlauted vowels, breaking those syllables apart, reconstructing monosyllables into multi-syllabic phrases, and repeating single phrases while modifying intonations just to up the ante on the uncertainty she feels with the subjects of her lyrics. Every punctuated cadence miasmas its way into your subconscious; every song is map with lines that intersect her conflicted relationship with the south, her home state of Georgia, politics, her past career in modeling, her spontaneous decision to make music, and her dissatisfaction with things or lovers she loves or wants to love. She switches forms with the ease of a martial master, and while on certain tracks like 'Close Encounters' or 'I Walked Away' it initially sounds like she may just be pushing the country drawl to its illogical extreme, it becomes clear that this inflection is simply part of her overall approach to diction -- another entry in her extensive set of vocal-fight styles. .. Encounters,' casual lines where she expresses high school sentiment and squelches words like 'moon' into the drunk-in-a-flatbed 'moo-oo-oon' suddenly descend into zealot-rap so quick it's hard to make out the words. The song changes pace, but half-time, double-time, or lock-step, Williams doesn't skip a beat, snapping her genre elastic through jazz, rock, punk, out, fucking with conventions as she fucks with our perceptions of what country can be. It's simple and also extraordinary: actors eat scenery, but Williams is chomping through the entire history of music.
Beyond her performance, there's the overall quality of the music. Most country albums (to my untrained ear, anyway) tend to blend on first listen, but like the best (read: Pieces of the Sky and Grievous Angel), pulling the straw of Yes I Will Mr. Man apart reveals a tangled thicket, and in a large part this has to do with her band. Matthew O'Neill's guitar work is one of the oddest I've heard in country -- he flips comfortably back and forth from trad-licks to wild squalls, often mimicking Williams' melodies. Underneath, Andy Martin and Mike Dunn tumble fist over fist to create grooves. Their build on 'Country Boys' gives an otherwise relatively weak song a hollow, pulsating groove that lends Williams' snark weight. Indeed, she couldn't vocalize like she does without such competent backing, and the synergy is immediately apparent from the opening of the album when 'Yes I Will Mr. Man' flips country with a ska twist and she thistles her perfunct delivery into thick chopped phrasings that implode on final syllables. Her tendency to repeat things thrice (which armchair artists or comedians will tell you is the correct amount of repetitions for anything) is first explored when she ends 'how will he fare?' with three different enunciations of a single syllable word, and compounded in the second verse when she does the same thing with 'project.' The stark delivery is suddenly morphed into a beautiful passage featuring Larry Packer's violin and a background chorus of 'da - de - da - day - da - di - da - do' before crunching back into the original riffs.
The breakdown in 'Just Because the Rains don't Fall in Texas' has Williams howling while the band stalls, arcing through her most striking melody; the chorus has her stretching the '-stand' in 'understand' into seven syllables as the band pulses behind her. 'Ohio,' one of the more immediately gratifying tracks, is all onomatopoeic roundabouts, but Williams tends to evoke just as much through noise as she does through English. 'You Don't Even Say' suddenly clears the brambles away for a delicious, mandolin-soaked ballad: 'I thought love could outlast / the attention span / of this man.' Bass and backup vocals pile melodies onto her stark delivery, making pretty what her desolate voice leaves miserable. In all three cases, Williams' delicate treatment of her subjects (or herself, as I assume 'You Don't Even Say' is pretty personal) allows her to hint at more than her lyrics literally convey; there are people here, inhabiting these miserable country delicacies, and rather than old country stereotypes we get three-dimensional renderings of individuals in pain.
Which makes it even more surprising when 'All the Mountains' trills out of the end of 'Country Boys'; after the stark first half, the latter half of the album is revealed to be filled with pleasant, rollicking tunes. The lyrics are still fairly cynical, sure, and 'Nobody Can Love You like I Do' features chilling lyrics like 'kill kill / green dollar bill,' but has them sung in beautiful harmony with Avalon Peacock and O'Neill over the Rolling Stones-do-country fakebook. 'I Walked Away' features Packer's prettiest country-violin melody on the album over the least-country track here; over surging accompaniment Williams seems to offload her entire history, resembling the lovely way the Drive-By Truckers deal with the South, neither exalting or ignoring the past, simply presenting lives as they exist. When the album spins to a close with 'Hey Hey Hey Hey' Williams and her band wrap every idea from the previous nine songs into a tight Devil/Georgia package, and Williams turns her voice inside-out, ferociously biting through the prettier melodies from earlier in the album to get to the core anger that centers Yes I Will Mr. Man as an object of dissent.
You can take what I'm about to say with the appropriate grain of salt, because who am I other than the Glow writer who normally covers the out/experimental/electronica stuff on an indie rock site, but seriously: this is unequivocally the best country album I've heard in years. I get just as much pleasure out of it as I get from Emmy Lou Harris or Gram Parsons or (gasp) Johnny Cash, because Williams has a knack for delivering thickly wound and evocative portrayals of American life filtered through the everyday minutia she recounts. And does so while eschewing any attempts to make her voice sound 'country' (or 'melodic') in the first place, assuming that this genre is far more expansive than is traditionally accepted. Which means this album is pretty experimental, and once you get that, pretty pretty after all. Cop this. And since I know some people see 'country' and wince, we can call this alt-country if that makes us feel more comfortable, or rock-country, or punk-country. Or we can just call it what it is, which is a pretty fucking solid debut. Mark Abraham :: 23 July 2006 |
G. Wood, Mr. Bonobo, wrote the following in response to one of my bulletins: A sexy person, of the female gender, is tall, but not too, with long, richly textured chestnut hair, and the coolest bangs you've seen in a long time. She plays guitar, and has a voice unlike any you've heard before. She writes very unique songs that take a long time to figure out, and even then you're not sure. She is lithe and graceful. She holds her guitar between her knees when she needs to fix her hair, or put her jacket on. Or take it off! She may be married and have a few kids, but that doesn't matter, because sexy is something that transcends status. Yes, she's sexy, even though you don't usually think of her that way. You think of her as an intriging artist that you enjoy. Sorry, no imaginary love affair, must be getting old. You're just sorry she's going so far away, and maybe you'll never see her again. Sniff. Until she gets BIG and goes on tour. But will success change her? No. She is just a country girl, her heart is made of gold. ****************** (not) The End.
-http://feedyourheadtoday.blogspot.com/ Brad
I hadn't been to Spaceland since oh, about 1999! Saw Amanda Jo Williams singin' and playing her kids' guitar. That girl has some balls. Went from singing 'How Much is that Doggy in the Window?' to one that was, ahem, not for the kiddies ('The Sexy Love Song', which can be heard on her myspace page ). Country girl from outer space. -goldenlife blog
Amanda Jo Williams, described by a fan as 'June Carter on acid and helium.' -L.A. Record
A LONG REVIEW - http://www.cokemachineglow.com/record_review/418/amanda-jo-williams
'At times it's difficult to take seriously the first record by Amanda Jo Williams, Yes I Will Mr. Man(Stereotype). For one thing, Williams' voice is coerced into an over-the-top caricature of any number of country queens of old. The songs here veer from rockabilly-cum-indie rock to eighties cowpunk revival to country-chargers a la 'Rawhide.' This establishes a rowdy good-time atmosphere that enters at full tilt, and doesn't relent until the overtones of the last note fade from detection. And in the end, so what if Williams is dripping with irony? She and the band are having such fun with this, it is impossible for the listener not to, as well.' - Skyscraper mag
'You can take what I'm about to say with the appropriate grain of salt, because who am I other than the Glow writer who normally covers the out/experimental/electronica stuff on an indie rock site, but seriously: this is unequivocally the best country album I've heard in years'. - Cokemachingeglow
'Take a woman from Georgia to New York, throw her into the modeling world for a few years, introduce her to a guitar player named Matthew O'Neill, lock them up in a small cabin upstate with a cast of musical compatriots, turn on the electricity and take a walk. Come back and pick up your copy of 'Yes I Will Mr. Man.' Remember I am the one who said you have never heard anything like it. Thank me later.' - offthegrid.com
Ohio - Amanda Jo Williams At this point, it's kind of a risky move to write a song called 'Ohio' that references Vietnam. Especially if you're a former fashion model. And especially if your vocal style could most politely be termed 'Appalachian field recording.' But the nice thing about Amanda Jo Williams is that she doesn't seem to give a damn about seeming ridiculous. She has a lack of self-consciousness rarely found this side of children's records. Take the way she belts 'Ohhiiooo' with gusto and abandon, like she's trying to outshout guitar and fiddle. It reminds me of how my frustrated little brother used to capitulate to/win verbal arguments by yelling 'I can't hear you, I'm not listening, la la la la la.' We can always use more eccentrics. -shake your fist blog
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Thursday, November 13, 2008
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1776 if you catch on fire, you must run. if your leg is broken or you're overweight, you must take your wheelchair cross country. it is imperative you don't sleep. it may feel like the fire is going to eat you, but you must run even faster in that case. until you're out of breath and have punched a way through, where lollipops lick you and starry eyes are your forte.
2223 what to do if you lose your animal: you must call to it. if a man comes hung like a horse, well, send him away.
8898 once upon a time i was deep i could stretch to the bottom of the ocean in one swing now i float too much, i bob around when that fish gets me, i'm going to shout so loud i'm going to scream like you've never heard and make faces like a gypsy who's tired i'll let that fish own me outright, back to my home. to a little home in the meadow, in the dew, where no one's home.
66363 little white doo doo your face is full of shine i wish i had a butt like yours to shake below my spine but alas i am empty with no kettle to heat so i'll just march in April when i'm back on my two feet you see, my heart is mellow my brain a dancing queen they get along so well i think they'll marry in the spring
4344 a stinky crazy goat is never half a man his sorrow welds a million bridges on the land his voice can lay the nation, founded on a rock but we must play him gentle, in case he kills the flock
5522 i sat on Rumi and i don't mean as an obese elephant thing. i mean..... as a lady.
9990 i've been in so many storms my hair is now a myth. i've cradled things, i've stood before God. i've even shaken his big, dirty hand and let him braid my hair poorly. i went back down again, to make things. i've killed and been killed. boredom killed most of us, from the inside out. if i could have a peach today, i would offer it to you, to bless the baby.
75756 i was an 'i' and i was a 'u' then one day, finally, after many years, i became an 'o' a big one that shattered the universe and her babies.
44 a doctor a day keeps an apple away
6431 i want to trade in my nipples, for a fire truck i can push around the dairy farm
8585 The full moon brings me my lover.
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Monday, October 13, 2008
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the new beginning bright those eyes we be
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