DATE: Sun, 04 Dec 1994 00:09:25 CST From: "Steven D. Levine" Subject: Kim Wilson Show
I saw Kim Wilson last night at Tornado Alley, in Wheaton, Maryland. It was an incredible show - one of the best I've seen in a long time. There were many, many harp players in the audience (including Charlie Williams and Randy Lilleston of harp-l fame :)
Charlie Sayles opened, which was a nice added treat. He really go tthe crowd moving with a high energy set with lots of original blues harp. He mostly did originals. I recognized one cover (Jr. Wells' Hoodoo Man Blues). Charlie seems to be doing pretty good. He's being managed by the same guy who manages Bobby Parker and Little Bit A Blues (the duo Jay Summerour plays in). I might be interviewing him someime soon for the DC Blues Society. If I do I'll try to get the interview published by some other publications and probably post it to harp-l. I picked up a copy of his cd "Night Ain't Right." It's pretty good, but I thik he's better live. The vocals are just a little weak on it.
When Kim Wilson and his band got on stage the place was completely packed. He was very happy to see such a large crowd and he told the audience so. He didn't play harp for the first two songs (a couple from Tigerman) but he soon got into some great, great playing. He was playing through an astatic mic through either a Vivroverb or Vibrolux (I forget which it was). The band kept the levels down to a nice level and the audience could realy hear everything well. They got louder as the show went on. Wilson didn't really play anythign flashy or overdone, which is one thing I really love about his playing. He has his own sound and he never overplays. In fact, he could've played more but he could make it just as a singer (which I guess is pretty much what he does with the T-Birds :) ).
Most of what he played was from his two solo albums, Tigerman and That's Life. I don't remember him playing any chromatic, and he did one tune straight through a vocal mic (until his encore - more on that in a minute) - Sonny Boy's "Trust My Baby." Guitarist Rusty Zinn sang one tune and he took a break to let pianist Gene Taylor lead a boogie woogie piano song.
The highlight, for me, was the encore. He and Rusty Zinn came out. Wilson sat behind the drumset with his mic in one hand. He played drums with one hand and his feet and sang and played harp through his Astatic. It sounded like a full band. Then he got behind a vocal mic alone, stomped his foot and sang and played an incredible version of "Nine Below Zero." Up until last night I thought that Rick Estrin did the best Sonny Boy act but Wilson really topped it. It was a truly inspiring moment.
He just gets better and better. See him if you get a chance!