CONTRIBUTED BY SUNDILLA

AUBURN ––

Sundilla will welcome a true traveling troubadour to town when Nicholas Edward Williams plays on Friday, July 15. Showtime at Pebble Hill is 7:30 p.m., and advance tickets are available for just $15 at Spicer’s Music, Ross House Coffee and online at sundillamusic.com. Admission at the door will be $20. Weather permitting, this will be an outdoor show.

Williams has his own brand of satire, simple honesty and vivid imagery that translates into energetic live shows, harnessing rhythmic fingerpicking, soaring vocals, rolling harmonica, heart-thumping stomp box and charismatic whistling. All of which is backed with engaging descriptions and infectious personality between songs.

More than ever before, a wealth of people are writing songs and playing the acoustic guitar. So much so, that it can be perceived as a tired idea. But every once in a while, there are artists that come into the fold who are living the unique music they create. Such is the case with Williams, a Seattle-born fingerpicking stomp box rover.

Williams was injected with a bohemian lifestyle during a nomadic childhood. By the time he was 12 years of age, his family of four had already moved across four states and nearly ten houses from the west to the east coast. He had no idea that he was being unconsciously groomed to live the Kerouac condition one day; destined to ramble, tell stories of nature, moral ground and singing about the great people and the multiple levels of the human experience in travel.

“My Grandparents took my sister and I from California to Hershey, Pennsylvania, and back a few times through the summer, and we took different routes each time to see various landmarks and plenty of gravestones of people I’d never met,” he said. “Needless to say, the desire to move around is in my blood.”

Williams began living a life on the road full time in 2012 to pursue his music. First in a Honda Element, and later a self-converted Sprinter Van, carrying everything he owned inside a 20-foot vessel with his wife for three years. The simplistic lifestyle of spending ample amounts of time in nature and meeting various characters enabled Williams to focus his writing on the evolving self and observations of his surroundings, as opposed to the over-saturated topic of love and heartbreak that have dominated airwaves for decades.

“For me, there is an unrivaled freedom in allowing life to unfold in front of you, rather than trying to grab life by the horns so you can feel like you’re in control,” Williams said. “There are hardships of course on the road, but nothing that isn’t already a part of the process if you’re a career musician. You just have to adjust accordingly if you want longevity.”

The sound that you hear from Williams now isn’t exactly the same as it used to be. The bones were there, though the style he was destined for has only been recently discovered.

From 2007 to 2018, Williams performed under the folk-soul moniker “Whetherman”. During those years, he independently released eight full-length albums while continuously touring across the U.S., as well as throughout the U.K. and Western Europe. Williams was also afforded opportunities to open for acclaimed acts such as Taj Mahal and The Wood Brothers. He owes his success to being exposed to roots and string music early on, forever shaping his career.

“I essentially ‘grew up’ as a musician at a very special place called The Spirit of Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida,” Williams said. “I had the pleasure of performing at roots music festivals there since 2010, and that’s where I was first exposed to Bluegrass, Old Time and Traditional Folk Music.”

This opened his eyes to a whole new world of possibilities for the direction of his music, though it wouldn’t be fully realized until many years later.

By mid 2017, Williams had hit a wall in his personal life and musical career, after nearly six years without a reasonable break. He decided to cancel two months of tour and move to Central America for seven months, by far the longest step back since launching the project. His goal was to reframe his mentality, and find a spark. This led to an evolution in musical style, dropping the “Whetherman” moniker and a desire to set forth under his full name starting in 2019.

With a fresh thirst for learning fingerpicking techniques, Williams dove in depth to school himself in the history of American music, from Appalachian folk, country blues, Piedmont Blues and deep rooted Mississippi Delta blues from the likes of Doc Watson, Mississippi John Hurt and Elizabeth Cotten. His affinity for songwriting also grew and matured from an unfeigned love for storytellers like John Prine, Paul Simon and Jim Croce.

“I’ve become a student again,” Williams said. “I’m absolutely fascinated with tracing American music back to its immigrant roots, and how these styles have woven the fabric of roots music as we know it today.”

The troubadour tells stories of the silent, simple perils of the average Joe. He plays on the cliché rhythms of married life, the age of convenience, the footprint of our generation, paying homage to his musical heroes, imagery of men drinking to the follies of America and good old-fashioned murder ballads.

Williams has his own brand of satire, simple honesty and vivid imagery that translates into energetic live shows, harnessing rhythmic fingerpicking, soaring vocals, rolling harmonica, heart-thumping stomp box and charismatic whistling. All of which is backed with engaging descriptions and infectious personality between songs.

For more information, go to www.sundillamusic.com.