Music Review: Watermelon Slim And The Workers - No Paid Holidays

You ever wonder what people are implying when they refer to a band or a performer as "hardworking"? Don't all bands work hard in one way or another? Sometimes I think it's almost an insult implying that the act in question doesn't have very much talent but they sure do try hard. Other times I wonder if it's an attempt to make them sound like "regular folk", who, like the rest of us, have to work for a living instead of leading the life of glamour.

The irony is that the majority of musicians don't lead anything remotely resembling a glamourous life style. If they're lucky they make enough money that they don't have to take a second job to make ends meet. Even to do that means spending large amounts of time being away from home, living out of motel rooms, setting up and taking down their equipment for each gig, and spending long hours on the road driving between shows. Sometimes that will mean not getting to bed until three in the morning after a gig and only getting a few hours sleep before having to spend hours driving to the next town.

On the other hand, there are some bands, and some individuals, who are able to to connect to their audiences in a way that others can't because of the feeling they generate. Sometimes it's the topics of the songs they choose to sing about, sometimes it's the way they sing them, and even rarer still are the ones who feel like they are singing with the voice of the audience. It's not much of a surprise that most of those who fall into the latter category are also blues musicians, as a great many of those performers have lived the hard scrabble lives that give them the experience required for that voice to ring true.
Watermelon Slim And The Workers.jpg
William P. Homans, better known as Watermelon Slim, front man of Watermelon Slim And The Workers, is a veteran of the Vietnam war who worked as everything from a journalist to a truck driver. He's not some pretty boy rock star, in fact you'd be generous to call him road weary and shop worn. His voice isn't what you'd call melodious, but it is the voice of a man who has experienced any number of ups and downs on the road that's carried him to his current destination, and the voice of a man you feel you can trust.

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Article Author: Richard Marcus

Richard Marcus is the author of the forthcoming book What Will Happen In Eragon IV? and has had his work published in print and on line all over the world. The not so long-haired Canadian iconoclast writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Joanie

    Jun 23, 2008 at 5:01 pm

    As good as Slim is on disc, just remember this: he's even better live!

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