When Jack Williams plays, he plays
all. out His voice soars and cracks, his guitar strings bend and snap and the
driving rhythm of his right hand on the steel strings creates something that
sounds like blues, country. rock and soul. That's just one guy and a guitar!
An insatiable traveling performer and prolific songwriter, Jack Williams has
released two recordings simultaneously- one live and one from the studio.
"Walkin' Dreams" is a fascinating collection of 13
original songs that favor the theme of honoring friends and heroes. It opens
with an infectious tribute to blues man and nightclub singer Josh White and
continues with musical nods to the late Al Grierson and Mickey Newbury. Jack's
rare gift of turning stories into songs is evident throughout this CD.
I was listening the day Jack called up the NPR show Car
Talk and let go his woes of car dependence and ignorance. if you missed it, the
story is told here in hysterical detail on "Me And My Automobile" with a cameo
appearance by, none other than, Click and Clack themselves.
"Live and in Good Company" combines some of
Jack's standards like "Mama Lou" with some great covers of Mickey Newbury, Chuck
Brodsky. and a hauntingly convincing re-creation of "Long Black Veil." These
were recorded both live in a Nashville studio and at the International Guitar
Festival of Great Britain. The performances are high spirited and .soulful. I
was especially blown away by Jack's song "Outlaw's Dream." This lament would
have fit perfectly into the repertoires of Patsy Cline or Marty Robbins. Jack
nails it.
Listen to these two recordings and you will get a sense
of why Jack Williams is among the most respected songwriters and performers on
the circuit today.

Excerpt from an interview by Stephen Ide in The Patriot Ledger
...His two new CDs, "Walkin' Dreams" and
"Live & In Good Company" on Folk Era's Wind River label...are unabashedly
Williams - pure, emotive guitar picking, weathered sliding baritone/tenor vocals
in deftly crafted songs that draw from many styles and from his many years as a
performer.
Add a pinch of self-deprecating humor, which
makes Williams instantly endearing.
The songs on his new CDs include dedications
to admired folk singers, from the reverent "A Natural Man", about Josh White
Sr., to a comical romp about Al Grierson, "In the Texas Sky", in which the
singer's ashes are mistaken for nose candy.
In "Shoeboy's Son", Williams shows
admiration for former slave George McJunkin, who eventually discovered the
fossil remains that proved humans existed during the Ice Age.
With backing from a white gospel quartet,
Williams decried hatred in the anger-laden "Mr. Cherry", about the 1963 church
bombing in Birmingham, AL, that claimed the lives of four black children.
On the lighter side, he sings of how he is
an "automotive doofus" and of the joys of cat companionship in "Micky's
Song"...Williams paints a musical landscape. In "Big Muddy", he sings to
rollicking guitar licks of the desolation along the Mississippi River.