Legendary Shack Shakers

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  • 07/02/2015
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About

A ghostly man in black haunts our vision, a belled buzzard rings our doom, a creek witch scrabbles in the dirt, an inexplicable glossalia of voices pours out over the CB radio on a dark highway.

These are a few of the images, myths, and stories that infuse seminal punk roots band the Legendary Shack Shakers’ new album, The Southern Surreal. Released September 11, 2015 on Alternative Tentacles Records–Jello Biafra’s record label–this is the Shack Shakers’ first release in five years, lands on the band’s 20th anniversary, and is their Alternative Tentacles debut (following releases on Yep Roc, Bloodshot, and Arkam Records). The Southern Surreal also features guest appearances by actor/musician and long time Shack Shakers fan, Billy Bob Thornton, and Jesus Lizard guitarist Duane Denison. With The Southern Surreal, the Shack Shakers explode the ‘Southern Gothic’ concept, reaching so deep into the forbidden roots of Southern culture that the rich mud they bring forth is almost unrecognizable.

It’s the kind of album that could only have sprung from the mind of frontman/mad genius JD Wilkes, a relentlessly curious Southern renaissance man who’s just as comfortable shredding the hell out of a packed house full of sweaty fans as he is settling in to a late-night jam with an elder mountain fiddler. As the bandleader for the Legendary Shack Shakers, JD has been compared to iconoclasts like David Byrne, Iggy Pop, or Jerry Lee Lewis, and with his small, wiry frame and intense, incandescent performances, it’s not hard to see why. But while he plays the carnival barker onstage, he’s a dedicated lifelong student of true Southern culture. In just the past couple years, he’s released an album of old-time mountain music with lost elder Appalachian fiddler Charlie Stamper, and he’s authored a book on the barn dances and jamborees of Kentucky. As a bonafide Kentucky Colonel (a title bestowed by the state’s governor), Wilkes wears the South on his sleeve, but isn’t afraid to dirty it up a bit, howling from the speaker stack and blasting out explosive blues harmonica lines.

The Southern Surreal marks a return to the Legendary Shack Shakers’ lineup of bassist Mark Robertson, guitarist Rod Hamdallah, and drummer Brett Whitacre. They’re back on the road with a renewed purpose following Whitacre’s miraculous medical recovery–he came back from death three times–and the new album is a launching point for national touring and more. This newfound purpose fuels the raw energy behind The Southern Surreal, which was recorded at the historic Woodland Studios in Nashville, home to classic recordings from artists like Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, and Bob Dylan, and now owned by Gillian Welch & David Rawlings. JD’s recent work with his roots ensemble the Dirt Daubers, helped him push the Legendary Shack Shakers into new territory. On The Southern Surreal, the fire-breathing rockabilly (“MisAmerica”), cautionary crooning (“The One That Got Away”), and punk country (“Christ Alrighty”) the Shack Shakers are known for is still there, but the music has deepened to bring in influences as disparate as Mississippi hill country trance blues (“Fool’s Tooth”), mountain banjo and square dance songs (“Mud”), and Tom Waits-ian barrelhouse piano (“Demon Rum”), not to mention the found sounds that JD slipped into the recording, like crackly radio sermons, trains, coyotes, and ghost story fi eld recordings. It’s a heady brew, and Jd likes to compare it to the medicine shows of old, only this time the snake oil salesman’s peddling mescaline and speaking in tongues!

In the end, you’d think a band with six critically acclaimed studio albums, song placements on shows like HBO’s True Blood, and fans like horror author Stephen King or Americana icon Robert Plant, might take this one a bit easy. But the Legendary Shack Shackers are rolling harder than ever, bringing a new sound tied as much to the South’s haunted folklore as to the wall-rattling live shows that first gave them their ‘legendary’ moniker.

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Rock | Americana/Roots | Blues

Links

Source

Alternative Tentacles
Dominic Davi
510-596-8981
Hearth Music
Devon Leger
206-557-4447

Legendary Shack Shakers To Release New Album "The Southern Surreal", September 11 on Alternative Tentacles

The infamous, explosive Southern wrecking crew the Legendary Shack Shakers are set to release their brand new album, titled The Southern Surreal, on September 11, 2015 via Alternative Tentacles Recordings. Their first release in five years, the album lands on the band's 20th anniversary, and is their Alternative Tentacles debut. In conjunction with the album release, Legendary Shack Shakers will tour across much of the United States and Europe this Fall.

The band's incendiary interpretations of the blues, punk, rock and country are all-at-once irreverent, revisionist, dangerous, and fun. Built upon a haunting, Southern Gothic theme, The Southern Surreal is a 15-track set featuring regular band members Colonel JD Wilkes (vocals, harmonica, banjo), Rod Hamdallah (electric guitar), Mark Robertson (electric and upright bass) and Brett Whitacre (drums), with guest appearances by actor/musician and long time Shack Shakers fan, Billy Bob Thornton, and Jesus Lizard guitarist Duane Denison.

The record comes on the heels of the band's remobilization in the Fall of 2014, after taking more then a year off to work on other projects. "We're pleased our new album, The Southern Surreal, has found a home on Alternative Tentacles," JD explains. "Jello Biafra has been a friend for some time now and we've always been big fans of his.The Legendary Shack Shakers also feel right at home with his other insurgent rockabilly pals, Mojo Nixon and Slim Cessna. The genre has always found an unlikely home in Biafra's San Fran punk rock stable."

Despite the group’s time off, their reputation for intensity has stuck with them. On stage, JD has been compared to the likes of Iggy Pop, David Byrne, and Jerry Lee Lewis. The Nashville Scene named Wilkes "the best frontman in Nashville" in 2002, while Alternative Tentacles owner Jello Biafra has called JD "the last great Rock and Roll frontman." 

Although not legendary upon being named, the band has grown into its reputation due to their six critically acclaimed studio albums, often heavy touring schedule and songs that have been featured on television shows such as HBO’s True Blood. Past tour mates and fans include Reverend Horton Heat, Rancid, The Black Keys, Slim Cessna’s Auto Club, and Hank Williams IIIRobert Plant is also a noted Legendary Shack Shakers fan, and picked the band to open for him on his 2005 tour of Europe. Plant named the band's third album Believe as one of his favorite records of 2005. The list of esteemed admirers goes on to include horror novelist Stephen King, who listed "CB Song" as among his iPod’s Top Five in a 2008 Entertainment Weekly article.

Catch the Legendary Shack Shakers live in concert this Fall, when they will tour much of the continental US with Joe Fletcher in support of The Southern Surreal.

Sep 3 | Memphis, TN
Sep 4 | Cookeville, TN
Sep 18 | Phoenix, AZ
Sep 19 | Long Beach, CA
Sep 20 | Rosemead, CA
Sep 21 | Las Vegas, NV
Sep 22 | San Diego, CA
Sep 24 | Lancaster, CA
Sep 25 | San Francisco, CA
Sep 26 | Santa Cruz, CA
Sep 27 | Reno, NV
Sep 29 | Portland, OR
Sep 30 | Seattle, WA
Oct 1 | Boise, ID
Oct 2 | Ketchum, ID
Oct 3 | Salt Lake City, UT
Oct 4 | Denver, CO
Oct 5 | Fort Collins, CO 
Oct 7 | Omaha, NE
Oct 8 | Columbia, MO
Oct 10 | Rockford, IL

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