It's late evening in Nashville, Tennessee. An ambulance
has pulled up to the front of a club. The owner rushes
out. The EMTs speak
to her. She laughs and leads them over to Brooks Williams, who has just left
the stage. While cruising around in the ambulance, they heard Brooks' previous
set live on the radio and they had to come to meet the man who, one says,
is the best damn guitar player I've ever heard. This isn't promotional hype,
just the facts. Brooks' music stops you in your tracks. You have to hear more.
Critics and writers hail Brooks "an acoustic guitar
god‚" and a "fret monster," saying his music is "electrifying,"
"dazzling," and "breathtaking," and that he sings like
the "Angel of Soul." Since Brooks has been a presence at Image's
Glen Workshop, and a valued contributor to our pages, we are in no position
to disagree with these sentiments....
Click here to read his personal essay from Image #29.
Brooks Williams' Current Projects
There are many sides to Brooks' work as a musician. He
tours, as time allows, in a critically acclaimed duo with Rani Arbo. His slide
and acoustic guitars shimmer and pulse between news segments on NPR, PBS-TV,
or the BBC. He has produced CDs by Salamander Crossing, Rollyn Zoubek, and
Spinoza, to name a few. He's done a few gigs for us here at Image, and will
probably do a few more before too long. A respected teacher, you can find
him conducting sold-out workshops on fingerstyle guitar at the Club Passim
School of Music in Cambridge, Massachusetts, or songwriting
workshops at the
University of Virginia or the New England Young Writer's Conference. Recently
his local PBS-TV affiliate,WGBY, filmed Brooks with his trio for the live
concert program, Caught in the Act.
Biography...
Born in Statesboro, Georgia, Brooks took up the guitar
at age 10 (he had been playing violin since the age of three) and had a hunger
for music that was never satisfied. He crept into his older brother's rooms,
when they were away, and secretly listened to their albums: Hendrix, Tuna,Yes,
Clapton and Morrison, to name a few. Brooks listened with all the naivete
of youth and taught himself to play the overdubbed parts on a single guitar.
You're not supposed to be able to do that, but Brooks did. Still
does. Audiences
hear it: Brooks with one guitar comping chords, walking bass lines and chiming
in lead riffs. One instrument. One player.
Click here to visit Brooks Williams' official website.






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