Will Oldham | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Palace Brothers Palace Music Palace Songs Bonnie "Prince" Billy |
Born | Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. | January 15, 1970
Genres | |
Years active | 1993–present |
Labels | |
Website | bonnieprincebilly |
Joseph Will Oldham (born January 15, 1970) is an American singer-songwriter and actor. From 1993 to 1997, he performed and recorded in collaboration with dozens of other musicians under variations of Palace (Palace, Palace Brothers, Palace Songs, and Palace Music). [3] After briefly publishing music under his own name, in 1998 he adopted Bonnie "Prince" Billy as the name for most of his work.
Oldham was born on January 15, 1970, in Louisville, Kentucky. [4] His mother, Joanne Lei Will Tafel Oldham, was a teacher and artist. [5] His father, Joseph Collins Oldham, was an attorney and photographer. [6] Oldham graduated from the J. Graham Brown School in 1988. He attended Brown University sporadically while pursuing a career as an actor, and living between Brooklyn, Los Angeles, and Bloomington, Indiana. [7] He began making music during this time, initially as a project for his professor Jeff Todd Titon, an ethnomusicologist at Brown University. [8]
Oldham is known for his "do-it-yourself punk aesthetic and blunt honesty", [9] and his music has been likened to Americana, folk, roots, country, punk, and indie rock. He has been called an "Appalachian post-punk solipsist", [9] with a voice that has been described as "a fragile sort-of warble frittering around haunted melodies in the American folk or country tradition." [9]
Oldham first performed and recorded under various permutations of the Palace name, including Palace Brothers, Palace Songs, Palace Music, and simply Palace. Regarding the name changes during this period (1993–1997), Oldham said:
I guess the idea is that when you have a name of a group or an artist, then you expect that the next record, if it has the same name, should be the same group of people playing on it. And I just thought we were making a different kind of record each time, with different people, and different themes, and different sounds. So I thought it was important to call it something different so that people would be aware of the differences. [10]
Will stated in a 1995 interview with KCRW that the name Palace Flophouse was inspired by reading John Steinbeck's Cannery Row . Beginning in 1998, Oldham has primarily used the moniker Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, which draws inspiration from several sources:
[T]he name has so many different references that it could almost have a life of its own. Bonnie Prince Charlie has such a beautiful ring to it, and I was very conscious of appropriating that mellifluous sound. And I was also thinking about the name Nat King Cole. But it wasn't until later, and this may have been subconscious, that I remembered that Billy the Kid was William Bonney or Billy Bonney. [10]
He has explained that "the primary purpose of the pseudonym is to allow both the audience and the performer to have a relationship with the performer that is valid and unbreakable." [11]
Some of his albums, such as There Is No-One What Will Take Care of You (1993), [12] Viva Last Blues (1995), [13] and I See a Darkness (1999), [14] [15] [16] have appeared on greatest albums lists.
Johnny Cash recorded a version of "I See a Darkness" on his American Recordings disc American III: Solitary Man (2000). Oldham provided backing vocals. Spanish singer Rosalía also recorded a version of "I See a Darkness" for her debut album Los Ángeles . Marianne Faithfull included Oldham's "A King at Night" on her 2003 Kissin Time tour. Steve Adey also covered "I See a Darkness" on his 2006 LP All Things Real . Mark Kozelek recorded a version of Oldham's "New Partner" on his 2008 disc, The Finally LP . Katatonia covered "Oh How I Enjoy the Light" on their 2001 EP Tonight's Music , and their song "Don't Tell a Soul" is about and contains an interpolation of the Palace Brothers song "You Will Miss Me When I Burn". In 2009 Mark Lanegan and Soulsavers recorded a cover version of "You Will Miss Me When I Burn". The release is a split single, backed with the Lanegan-penned "Sunrise" featuring vocals by Oldham. In 2011, Deer Tick's cover of Oldham's song "Death to Everyone" appeared in an episode of Hell On Wheels . Cadaverous Condition covered "Black" on their To the Night Sky album (2006).
Oldham's first film acting role was as the teen preacher in John Sayles's film Matewan (1987), a dramatization of the life of Appalachian mining community in the 1920s and the Battle of Matewan. Following this, he moved to Hollywood to pursue a career as an actor. [17] He played the role of Chip McClure (father of Baby Jessica) in Everybody's Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure (1989), and the role of Miles in the film Thousand Pieces of Gold (1991). Oldham also played minor roles in Julien Donkey-Boy (1999), Junebug (2005), and The Guatemalan Handshake (2006).
In 2004, Oldham appeared as himself in the short documentary film Tripping With Caveh, wherein he took psilocybin mushrooms with autobiographical filmmaker Caveh Zahedi. [18] [19] The project was intended as the pilot episode of a reality/documentary series, with the concept being that Zahedi would take psychedelics in the company of a different celebrity in each episode. [18] The project was never picked up by a television network, but the short with Oldham finally saw official release in the 2015 retrospective box set Digging My Own Grave: The Films of Caveh Zahedi. [20]
Oldham played a lead role as Kurt in Kelly Reichardt's film Old Joy (2006), and had a brief role in the director's next film Wendy and Lucy (2008). Oldham played Pastor Pigmeat in the "Horse Apples" episode of the second season of the MTV children's show parody Wonder Showzen and appeared in an episode of Chatman and Lee's subsequent television show, Xavier: Renegade Angel as a Reverend. [21] In 2007, he starred alongside Zach Galifianakis in a music video for Kanye West's "Can't Tell Me Nothing". [22]
Also in 2010, Oldham appeared in Jackass 3D as a gorilla trainer. As part of an agreement to play that role, he wrote a theme song, in the style of a Saturday-morning cartoon show, for filmmaker Lance Bangs. [23]
In 2011, Oldham played a father telling a bedtime story to his son in David Lowery's short film Pioneer. [24] In 2017, he appeared as "Prognosticator" in the feature film A Ghost Story , also directed by David Lowery.
In 2009, Oldham narrated Madam and Little Boy, a documentary film about atomic weapons, directed by Swedish artist Magnus Bärtås. In 2010, Oldham narrated Music Makes a City , a documentary about the formation of the Louisville Orchestra, directed by Owsley Brown III and Jerome Hiler. [25] Oldham provided voice work and inspiration for the character "Will" in the video game Kentucky Route Zero , released in 2013. [26]
Oldham married the textile artist Elsa Hansen in 2016. [27] [28] They had a child together in 2018. [29]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | What Comes Around | Young Tom Hawkins | |
1987 | Matewan | Danny Radnor | |
1990 | Thousand Pieces of Gold | Miles | |
1999 | Radiation | Will | |
1999 | Julien Donkey-Boy | Uncredited | |
2005 | Junebug | Bill Mooney, scout | |
2006 | Old Joy | Kurt | |
2006 | The Guatemalan Handshake | Donald Turnupseed | |
2008 | Wendy and Lucy | Icky | |
2010 | Jackass 3D | Himself | |
2011 | New Jerusalem | Ike Evans | |
2014 | Eden | John | |
2017 | A Ghost Story | Prognosticator | |
2023 | The Bikeriders | Bartender |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | Everybody's Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure | Chip Mcclure | Television film |
2006 | Wonder Showzen | Pastor Pigmeat | Episode: "Horse Apples" |
2007 | Trapped in the Closet Chapters 13–22 | Sgt. Platoon | Video |
2008 | Xavier: Renegade Angel | Reverend | Episode: "Signs from Godrilla" |
2018 | Animals | Father Ferret | Episode: "At a Loss for Words When We Needed Them Most or... The Rise and Fall of GrabBagVille" |
2020 | The Midnight Gospel | Bubble Max | Episode: "Vulture with Honor" |
Buffalo '66 is a 1998 American independent romantic comedy drama film directed by Vincent Gallo, who co-wrote the screenplay with Alison Bagnall, starring Gallo, Christina Ricci, Ben Gazzara, Mickey Rourke, Rosanna Arquette, Jan-Michael Vincent, and Anjelica Huston. The plot revolves around Billy Brown (Gallo), a man who kidnaps a young tap dancer named Layla (Ricci) and forces her to pretend to be his wife to impress his parents after he gets released from prison, while also seeking revenge on Buffalo's kicker who he blamed for losing a championship game.
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I See a Darkness is the sixth album by American musician Will Oldham, released on Palace Records on January 19, 1999, as the first album under the name Bonnie "Prince" Billy. The album features appearances from Bob Arellano, Colin Gagon, Paul Oldham, David Pajo, and Peter Townsend.
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Heart Food is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Judee Sill, released by Asylum in March 1973 to acclaim but minimal sales. Sill wrote, arranged, and produced the album. As with her debut Judee Sill, it was reissued by Rhino Records in 2003, featuring new liner notes and extra demos and unreleased tracks.
Bonnie 'Prince' Billy Sings Greatest Palace Music is a 2004 studio album by Bonnie 'Prince' Billy. It features new recordings of songs from his Palace Music era (1993–1997), recorded in Nashville, Tennessee with a large group of country session musicians. Guest musicians include Eddie Bayers, Stuart Duncan, Mark Fain, Mike Johnson, Hargus "Pig" Robbins, Andrew Bird and Bruce Watkins.
Master and Everyone is a 2003 studio album by Bonnie 'Prince' Billy. It was released on Drag City.
Ease Down the Road is the seventh studio album by American musician Will Oldham, and the second under his moniker Bonnie 'Prince' Billy. It was released on Palace Records on March 19, 2001.
Caveh Zahedi is an American film director, actor, and educator.
This is a list of recordings by American singer and actor Will Oldham.
The Letting Go is a 2006 studio album by Bonnie "Prince" Billy. It was released on Drag City.
Joya is the fifth studio album by American musician Will Oldham. It was released on Drag City in 1997 as the first album billed to his name, rather than the Palace or Bonnie "Prince" Billy monikers. It also features Bob Arellano, Colin Gagon, and David Pajo.
Steve Adey is an English musician and singer-songwriter. His music is characterised by slow tempos, minimalist arrangements, underpinned by piano and a rich baritone vocal. As of 2018 Adey has released three studio albums and various EPs and singles.
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Among The Gold is a six-track EP by Will Oldham and Cheyenne Marie Mize of the band Arnett Hollow. It features the duo's renditions of six classic American parlor songs which were originally written between 1864 and 1915. Mize plays the instruments while Oldham provides vocals.
Broken is the third full-length studio album by English-American production team Soulsavers, and their second album predominantly featuring Mark Lanegan as lead vocalist. The album was released by V2 and Cooperative Music in the UK on 17 August 2009, and released by Columbia Records in the US in September 2009 as a digital download.
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What the Brothers Sang is an album by Dawn McCarthy and Bonnie 'Prince' Billy. The album was released on February 19, 2013. The album features covers of songs that appeared on albums by The Everly Brothers. The duo preceded this album with the "Christmas Eve Can Kill You" 7" single in late 2012, also featuring two covers of songs earlier performed by the Everlys. What the Brothers Sang was the first of three major albums released in 2013 to feature Everly Brothers covers in their entirety, the second being A Date with the Everly Brothers by the Chapin Sisters and the third being Foreverly by Billie Joe Armstrong and Norah Jones.
I Made a Place is a 2019 album by Bonnie "Prince" Billy, the stage name of American indie folk musician Will Oldham. It was released to positive critical reception.
Keeping Secrets Will Destroy You is the twenty-first studio album by Bonnie "Prince" Billy, the stage name of American indie folk musician Will Oldham. It was released on August 11, 2023, through Drag City. The album was recorded in Oldham's home in Louisville, Kentucky, and preceded by the lead single "Bananas".