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high times presents

Hank Williams III - Smoking Good Time

Tue, Jun 30, 2009 4:47 pm

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Hank III

There are many artists clamoring for the now-vacant title of Hardest Working Man in Show Business, but my vote goes unquestionably to Hank Williams III. The reason is simple: I've never seen another performer play three completely different (yet equally raucous) sets without taking a break in between. So when his tour pulled in to Brooklyn's Music Hall of Williamsburg on the eve of my birthday, I knew I had to be there.

Williams has always been a creative soul with an identity crisis, balancing his love of heavy metal and punk rock with his country pedigree. His approach to expressing these genres is a methodic one: tackle each style, one at a time. Starting off with a traditional country set and a band that included fiddle, banjo, stand-up bass and steel guitar players, Williams took the audience on a musical tour of the American South, churning out both original and classic yarns based on tales from West Virginia, Georgia, Texas, and Tennessee. The most rancor was reserved for the latter, particularly Nashville's Grand Ol' Opry for refusing to grant his grandfather, the country legend Hank Williams, a posthumous reinstatement. [For more info or to sign the online petition, click here.]

Hank III/Hellbilly set

From there, he ramped things up by changing hats (literally) and going into the Hellbilly part of the night with Assjack, bringing out singer Gary Lindsay to help belt out rockers like "Six-Pack of Beer," "Country Heroes" and "Life of Sin." Of note: after many years of circulating official bootlegs, Assjack will finally be releasing their official debut on Curb Records, due out on August 4.

Hank III's Metal/Punk set

It really wouldn't be a Hank III show without a final punk rock set, though at this point most of the crowd had cleared out. Paying particular homage to GG Allin and the Murder Junkies (GG's brother Merle and drummer Dino took the stage for a song), the band went through several hellacious, industrial-strength tracks and teased the audience with riffs on Slayer's "Reigning Blood" and Ministry's "Stigmata." After much sound and fury—not to mention equal parts spilled beer and blood—the show came to a frenzied, sweaty end.

Shades of GG Allin

For more photos, check out the gallery here.



» add a comment

scott

Sep 29 2011, 12:21 am

If this guy was at the show and was gonna write something about it, I would've mentioned Hank hangin' around after the show talking to his fans. After both shows I was at I made sure to let him know I appreciated a great show. I think this guy probably did see a short bit of the show. Not enough to know what it's really like.

scott

Sep 29 2011, 12:08 am

I guess that wasn't bad press, so it's all good in the long run as far as exposure. But what a pathetic piece of writing. I don't even think this guy saw the show. I've only seen two shows, but I'm pretty sure I could give a lot better run-down of the shows I've seen, which, regrettably, has been five and six years ago.

» add a comment

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