
Th' Legendary Shack*Shakers started their hell-for-leather, Penta-caustic
roadshow just over three years ago and in a short time have earned
quite a name for themselves with their unique brand of American
Gothic that is all-at-once irreverent, revisionist, dangerous,
and fun. Led by their wildly charismatic rail thin frontman, the
blues-harpist J.D. Wilkes, th’ Shack*Shakers are a four-man
wrecking crew from the South whose explosive interpretations of
the blues, punk, rock and country have made fans, critics and
legions of potential converts into true believers.
Described as "...the
last great Rock & Roll frontman"
by Jello Biafra (of the Dead Kennedys), Shack*Shakers front man
J.D. Wilkes began yelpin’ the blues through a ham radio
microphone at his boyhood home of Paducah, Kentucky—a short
farmer's blow away from where his future bassist Mark Robertson
was cutting his teeth on punk rock and gospel in Nashville, Tennessee.
When their paths crossed a few years later in the lawless honky
tonks of music city’s “lower broadway scene,”
they found their individuated styles and common interests meshed
and that’s when the like-minded, red-headed musical misfits
began their crusade. With the recent addition of guitarist extraordinaire
David Lee (South Carolina's preeminent bad-ass and "Illustrated
Man") th' Legendary Shack*Shakers have quickly become know
for providing some of the
best entertainment—live or otherwise—that you can
get for your hard-earned money.
Following
critical accolades from Mojo, Q Magazine and Billboard with their
first two albums Cockadoodledon’t and Believe, th’
Legendary Shack*Shakers will release their third-full length recording
Pandelirium this February, their second LP on YepRoc Records (home
to artists such as Paul Weller, Bob Mould, John Doe and the Reverend
Horton Heat).
Pandelirium is a collection of twelve songs that continue the
band's tough-love affair with America's demons and explore the
dark underbelly of our nation’s most primitive and stripped-down
musical histories in a way that is both reverent and confrontational.
Drawing from the rustic charm of cotton-field hollers, funeral
marches and murder ballads and the unhinged energy of Texas polkas,
spaghetti western anthems and gritty, punky sound bombs, Th' Legendary
Shack*Shakers break
American music down to its essentials—only to rebuild it
into their own monstrous abomination.
With tracks such as “Ichabod!” “No Such Thing,”
and “Somethin’ in the Water,” the result is
the hoarse, echoing battle cry of an underground nation embracing
musical traditions centuries old and paying homage to the dirty
work and gallows humor found in their forefathers' freight yards,
coalmines and tent shows. Haunted places grown over with the darker
roots of our unique yet somewhat God-forsaken heritage. The album
also features guest performances by Jello Biafra and The Reverend
Horton Heat.
“Thus completes the second installment of the unfolding
trilogy of our new American gothic. Huzzah! Huzzah!” said
J.D. Wilkes.
For the uninitiated, the band’s debauched live show is the
necessary counterpart to their hard-hitting recordings. Hillbilly
royalty, Hank Williams III once said after touring with them that
it was "like having SLAYER open up for you every night,”
and called J.D. Wilkes and his crew, “the
best damn front man and band in America."
On stage, J.D. Wilkes is like a mad southern preacher with a bible
in one hand and a glass of strychnine and a lit cigarette in the
other. Meshing Pentecostal themes with pained lyrics and show-stopping
moves that draw comparisons to Tom Waits and the grotesque facial
and bodily contortions of Iggy Pop, the band has developed a
live show like none other.
Having
toured both the U.S and Europe relentlessly for the past two years,
the word of mouth on the live Shack*Shakers experience is so strong
that it reached the likes of Robert Plant, who made it a priority
to see them at this year’s SXSW Music Festival in Austin,
TX. One performance was all it took for Plant to join the converted.
After seeing the band’s show at SXSW, Plant invited th’
Shack*Shakers to support him on his upcoming European tour, which
will kick off in Paris, France on November 9th. "It's F***ing
Great,” said Robert Plant on th' Legendary Shack*Shakers.
"We try to tap into basic primal instincts," said Wilkes.
"Rock ’n’ roll
is a cathartic release. Anything that doesn’t realize that
bestial nature isn’t rock ’n’ roll."
In addition to his musical accolades, J.D. Wilkes has also been
recognized as an accomplished illustrator and painter whose sketches
further the band’s mission of celebrating and honoring the
tradition of the American south. Alarm Magazine recently featured
Wilkes’s elaborate sketches ala Thomas Nast in a four-page
spread describing him as the “Ambassador of Genuine Traditional
Southern Culture” and compared his unique storytelling abilities
to that of other Southern voices such as William Faulkner, Johnny
Cash and Muddy Waters.
Brothers and Sisters, discover Pandelirium, the sound of your
black-sooted Village Smithee, as he smites away your shackles
with one mighty, crushing blow. Shuck them off and join us, won't
you? For the already initiated, Pandelirium is
the new wave of old school and the brave new sound
of brave old america in all its horrific
detail and mystical blur.
Simply put, this is
the new AMERICAN Gothic…Steely eyes,
white knuckles, pitchforks… and a beginning to life as we
need to know it!
DIG
IN.
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