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Virginia musician
Keller Williams has a couple feet's worth of toes in a wide variety of musical ponds -- bluegrass, jamband, jazz, folk, to name a few -- and he's just added family music to that list with the release of
Kids. Williams chatted by phone last month about
Hee Haw, the unplanned appearance of his daughter on the new album, and the relative merits of being a musician versus doing temporary construction work.
Zooglobble: What are your musical memories growing up?
Keller Williams: There are many... the first real musical memory was watching
Hee Haw. You know, I get asked that by college papers and I tell them that and they've never heard of it.
Really?
Yeah... Twenty-something, it's frustrating trying to explain to them, it had Buck Owens, Roy Clark...
Anyway, by the age of 3, I'd convinced my parents to buy me a guitar. Then it was Kiss -- I used a hockey stick in lieu of an electric guitar. I remember listening to 8-track tapes of John Denver, Neil Diamond, Barry Manilow, Willie Nelson, driving around with my parents.
I sang in church choir, the Fredricksburg Children's Theatre, high school choir, but by tenth grade, when I was 15 or 16, I was playing guitar a lot. I got paid for the first time at age 17, playing in the backyard of a restaurant.
When did you decide you wanted to make music for a living?
When I tried to get jobs when I was 15, 16, 17 years old. The minimum wage was $3.50. I did a little temporary construction work where I mostly would sweep or scrape mortar out of cinder block cracks for 40 hours a week. I realized that I could get a day's pay for 3 hours work, sit while I was doing it, and maybe even get a date out of it.
What led you to making this album for families, Kids?