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Willie Farmer

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Willie Farmer

Biography

Little Willie Farmer is living proof that Mississippi continues to produce deep blues. The 62-year-old guitarist is neither a soul modernist nor revivalist, but simply a small town auto mechanic who’s never shaken his love for old school legends like Muddy, Wolf and Lightnin’.

 

How We Helped:

 

Music Maker has helped Little Willie Farmer with career development by producing videos and helping him get his passport so that he can play internationally. Through Music Maker’s connection with Big Legal Mess Records, an independent label based in Oxford, Miss., he was able to secure a record deal and has garnered coverage for his latest album, “The Man from the Hill,” from billboard.com, Glide Magazine and Relix.

 

A lifelong resident of tiny Duck Hill, located in the hills east of the Delta, Farmer grew up on the family farm. He first took up the acoustic guitar in his early teens, and through picking cotton soon saved up enough money to buy an electric instrument.

 

He played for audiences at home and at school events, and learned about blues and R&B mostly through listening to a powerful station out of Nashville.
“John R of WLAC, that’s how I listened to Lightnin’ Hopkins, Howlin’ Wolf. That’s how I got my first album by Lightnin’ [The Fire Records LP Mojo Hand]. I got the address off the radio and they sent it.”

 

“I learned Lightin’ pretty good, and then I went to B.B. I can play all the up-to-date stuff now—B.B., Little Milton—but I like the old stuff, that’s the real blues. The blues they’re singing today, that ain’t blues to me, it just doesn’t have the feel.”

 

Although Farmer is from a musical family, he didn’t learn much directly from his elders. His maternal grandfather had played the fiddle as a young man, but he rebuffed Willie’s offer to buy him a new instrument when he discovered the high cost.

 

Willie’s father Alex, a harmonica player who helped young Willie tune his guitar, had played as a young man with his brothers including Walter, who was recognized as one of the best guitarists to come out of the area.

 

In the early ‘50s Walter played together with Leo “Bud” Welch, who grew up in the region. Sadly, Walter was killed in Chicago in 1964—“a woman liked Walter, and a man got jealous and killed him”—and Willie never heard him play.In his early ‘20s Farmer joined a loose knit band that played at juke joints across the area—in Duck Hill, Grenada, Kilmichael, and down in the Delta in Greenwood and Charleston. He eventually tired, though, of the rough-and- tumble clubs where “people liked to fight like crazy.

 

For about fifteen years Farmer worked regularly with local semi-professional gospel groups, including the Rising Sun Singers, who appeared on TV and over the radio in Greenwood, the Angelettes, and, for nine years, the Grenada-based Silvertone Gospel Singers.

 

Farmer eventually decided he wanted to get back into blues actively. He initially didn’t want to deal with the trouble of keeping together a band, and began playing solo gigs.
In 2003 he helped found the annual Grassroots Blues Festival, staged in a meadow outside Duck Hill. Through the event and he befriended downhome blues players from across the state including Willie King and Leo Welch.

 

“The Man From the Hill” marks the first time that he’s spent serious time in the studio. Recorded over multiple sessions at Producer Bruce Watson’s Memphis based Delta-Sonic Sound Studio. Farmer enjoyed working in a North Mississippi Hill Country vein with Jimbo Mathus and session drummer George Sluppick. He even dipped back into gospel, singing harmony together with Memphis’ Barnes Brothers on [the Sensational Nightingales’] At the Meeting.

 

For the past thirty years Farmer has run his own auto repair shop, and hopes that the release of this record and associated
touring will allow him to retire.

 

“I’m trying to get out of that shop, I’m tried of messing with those cars. It’s been a long time.”

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