Holly Williams
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Holly Williams | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Holly Audrey Williams |
Born | [1] | March 12, 1981
Origin | Nashville, Tennessee |
Genres | Country, Americana, folk |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, musician |
Instruments | Guitar, keyboards, vocals |
Years active | 2003–present |
Labels | Universal South, Mercury Nashville, Georgiana |
Associated acts | Hank Williams, Jr., John Hiatt, Patty Griffin, Buddy Miller, Brandi Carlile |
Website | www |
Holly Audrey Williams (born March 12, 1981) is an American country music artist. She is the granddaughter of Hank Williams, Sr., the daughter of Hank Williams, Jr. and half-sister of Hank Williams III. Williams has released three studio albums: The Ones We Never Knew in 2004, Here with Me in 2009 and The Highway in 2013. The Highway was released on Williams' own label, Georgiana Records and made its debut at number 1 on the Billboard heat-seekers chart.
Contents
Biography
Raised in Nashville, Tennessee, she is the granddaughter of Hank Williams, Sr., the daughter of Hank Williams, Jr., and the half-sister of Hank Williams III. Her mother, Becky, is a native of Mer Rouge, Louisiana, and was married for ten years to Hank Williams, Jr.[1][2] She was born in Cullman, Alabama, and has an elder sister named Hilary. Her parents separated when she was young. At age 17, Williams began playing one of her father's guitars, and soon began writing songs.
Williams graduated from Brentwood Academy and decided to pursue her passion of songwriting and continue playing guitar and piano. She bought her domain name, recorded an ep, started a website, and booked herself all over Nashville clubs. Soon after signing with CAA, she performed many shows throughout the US and usually toured alone with a guitar and keyboard driving her mother's Suburban across the country. She went to the UK to open for songwriter Ron Sexsmith with a backpack full of EPs and a guitar.[citation needed] After the release of her first EP in 2003, she signed with Universal South Records and toured with Billy Bob Thornton, Jewel, Train, Keith Urban, and Kasey Chambers.[citation needed] Universal South released her debut album, The Ones We Never Knew, in 2004.[1][2] This album garnered Williams much critical acclaim[by whom?] and she headlined shows in Germany, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Italy, Spain, Australia, Wales, Ireland, and the US.[citation needed]
In March 2006, Williams was injured in a car crash with her sister Hilary Williams, and canceled her upcoming tour. Her sister was seriously injured, enduring 23 surgeries.[3] Holly Williams' right arm and wrist were broken; she was unsure of when she would play again.[citation needed] She wrote "Without Jesus Here With Me" about her experience during the time of the car accident; it was released on her next record. Hilary Williams wrote a book called "Sign of Life" about her experience.[3] Holly Williams made small musical appearances at this time, one of them joining John C. Reilly in Nashville, Tennessee to sing "Let's Duet" during the release of Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story on December 9, 2007.
After a long break Williams began playing guitar and writing songs again, she signed with Luke Lewis at Mercury Records. Williams' second studio album, Here with Me, was released in June 2009. To promote the album, Williams appeared on The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, Jimmy Kimmel Live! and Chelsea Lately.[citation needed] People magazine named Williams' 2009 album "one of the top ten albums of the year".[citation needed] Billboard said it was "one of the best singer/songwriter albums to come out of Nashville".[citation needed] USA Today said "Hank Williams' granddaughter reveals a heart-on-sleeve intensity that might be grating were it not for the purity and potency of her milk-and-whiskey-kissed singing and the catchy clarity and integrity of her songs".[4] She was married on September 27, 2009 to fellow musician Chris Coleman ( who co-wrote 3 of the songs off of "The Highway") and they settled in Nashville.[5] She filmed a music video for "Alone" & "Three Days In Bed" in Paris, France.
Williams finished a six-week tour in Europe in early 2010, and continued the rest of the year headlining gigs and opening for other artists such as John Hiatt. After Bob Dylan called, Williams added her own music and lyrics to a half written Hank Williams, Sr. lyric for a project entitled The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams that he assembled, released in September 2011. Jack White, Norah Jones, Merle Haggard and Lucinda Williams were alongside Williams for this project.[citation needed]
Williams was also a part of Let Us In, a project produced by Phil Madeira which includes artists singing their favorite Paul McCartney songs in tribute to Linda McCartney. Williams performed "My Love" from the Wings era. Steve Earle and Buddy Miller are also included on the album.[citation needed]
Williams was featured on the soundtrack for Flicka singing "Rodeo Road", written by Tom Douglas and Chuck Cannon. Tim McGraw (who starred in Flicka) named Williams, The Fray and Coldplay as his favorite artists in O, The Oprah Magazine saying "She has the ability to make you believe what she says, to make you feel vulnerable. She's intense and moody; she puts you in a time and place where you never would have imagined yourself—and then you're there."[6] Mel Gibson met with Williams in Nashville and featured her on The Passion of The Christ soundtrack singing "How Can You Refuse Him Now", written by her grandfather.
Williams' store "H. Audrey" is a women's boutique in Nashville,[7] that carries designer clothes. Her store has been featured in Vogue, Elle, Southern Living and Lucky magazine.[citation needed] The upstairs gallery at her store carries music photographs from her favorite photographers including Henry Diltz, Pattie Boyd and Jim Marshall.[citation needed] She also maintains a blog.[8]
Williams' third album, The Highway, co-produced by Williams and Charlie Peacock (The Civil Wars) was released on February 5, 2013. She wrote or co-wrote every song on the album, which is common for her recordings. This album includes Dierks Bentley, Jakob Dylan, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jackson Browne adding backing harmonies. The Highway was released to critical acclaim. American Songwriter magazine said "Williams has recorded her most accomplished, mature and world weary album. Even Hank, Sr. would be proud."[9] The New York Times stated "Williams is often closer to songwriters like John Prine or Bruce Springsteen, than the smiley Nashville mainstream."[10] People Magazine said "it is sure to go down as one of the year's best country albums".[11] A music video for "Drinkin'" aired on CMT networks.
Personal life
Williams is married to Chris Coleman. Their first child, Stella June Coleman, was born in Nashville on September 30, 2014.[12]
Discography
Studio albums
Title | Details | Peak chart positions | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Country [13] |
US | US Heat [14] |
US Indie |
US Folk |
|||||
The Ones We Never Knew |
|
— | — | — | — | — | |||
Here with Me |
|
37 | — | 11 | — | — | |||
The Highway |
|
18 | 146 | 1 | 24 | 8 | |||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Singles
Year | Single | Peak positions | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Country [15] |
|||||||||
2005 | "Sometimes" | — | The Ones We Never Knew | ||||||
2009 | "Keep the Change" | 53 | Here with Me | ||||||
"Mama" | 55 | ||||||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Music videos
Year | Video | Director |
---|---|---|
2005 | "Sometimes" | Kristin Barlowe |
2009 | "Keep the Change" | Philip Andelman |
"Three Days in Bed" | ||
"Mama" | Eric Welch | |
"Alone" | Philip Andelman | |
2013 | "Drinkin'" | John Moessner |
"The Highway"[16] | David McClister | |
2014 | "Waiting on June"[17] | John Moessner |
References
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- ↑ http://www.theafternoonoff.com
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External links
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- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from September 2014
- Articles with specifically marked weasel-worded phrases from September 2014
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 1981 births
- Living people
- American female country singers
- American country singer-songwriters
- Mercury Records artists
- Musicians from Nashville, Tennessee
- People from Cullman, Alabama
- Show Dog-Universal Music artists
- Musicians from Alabama