At least once in every man's life everything seems to come
together magically. When the road leading to such times is
long and grueling, the zenith becomes exponentially more
rewarding.
Bill Homans a.k.a. Watermelon Slim is the extraordinary
wheel man behind this redemption story road trip.
In December 2006 Watermelon Slim
garnered a record-tying six 2007
Blues
Music Award nominations
for
Artist, Entertainer, Album, Band,
Song, and Traditional Album of the Year. Only the likes of
B.B.
King, Buddy Guy and Robert Cray have ever landed six. His 2006 self-titled
release was ranked #1 in
MOJO Magazine's 2006
Top Blues CDs,
won the
2006 Independent Music Award for
Blues
Album of the Year, hit #1 on the
Living
Blues Radio Chart, debuted at
#13 on the
Billboard Blues Radio Chart ahead of both
Robert
Cray and
North Mississippi
Allstars, and won the
Blues
Critic Award for
2006 Album
of the Year.
In April, 2007 Watermelon Slim
and The Workers released
The
Wheel Man, his second for NorthernBlues
Music and his fourth album in five years. Jerry Wexler, a
huge Watermelon Slim fan after hearing Slim's 2005 self-titled
release, eagerly offered to write the liner notes upon listening
to early tracks saying Slim
"is a one-of-a-kind
pickin' 'n'n singing Okie dynamo."
The CD hit #1 on the
Living
Blues Radio Charts, #2 on the
Roots
Music Blues Charts and
debuted in the Top 10 in
Billboard's
Blues charts.
The
Memphis Flyer led it's terrific
CD review with the question "
Does
anyone in modern pop music have a more intriguing biography
than Bill "Watermelon
Slim" Homans?"
Slim was born in Boston and raised
in North Carolina listening to his maid sing
John
Lee Hooker and other blues songs around the house. His father was a
progressive attorney and ex-freedom rider and his brother
is now a classical musician. Slim dropped out of
Middlebury
College to enlist for Vietnam. While laid up in a Vietnam
hospital bed he taught himself upside-down left-handed slide
guitar on a $5 balsawood model using a triangle pick cut
from a rusty coffee can top and his Army issued Zippo lighter
as the slide.
Returning home an fervent anti-war
activist, Slim first appeared on the music scene with the
release of the only known record by a veteran during the
Vietnam War. The project was
Merry
Airbrakes, a 1973 protest
tinged LP with tracks Country Joe McDonald later covered.
In the following 30 plus years
Slim has been a truck driver, forklift operator, sawmiller
(where he lost part of his finger), firewood salesman, collection
agent, and even officiated funerals. At times he got by as
a small time criminal. At one point he was forced to flee
Boston where he played peace rallies, sit-ins and rabbleroused
musically with the likes of Bonnie Raitt.
He ended up farming watermelons
in Oklahoma - hence his stage name and current home base.
Somewhere in those decades Slim completed two undergrad degrees
in history and journalism.
While roommates, buddies and musical
partner with the heavy drinking Henry 'Sunflower' Vestine
of Canned Heat, Slim was able to finish a masters degree
and member of
Mensa, the social networking group reserved
for members with certified genius IQs.
Throughout his storied past, it
has always been truck driving that Slim returned to. While
trucking and hauling industrial waste for thankless bosses
at hourly wages to support himself and his family, his id
yearned for release of the musician inside. Many of Slim's
current songs began a cappella in his rig keeping him awake
and entertained.
In 2002 Slim suffered a near fatal
heart attack. His brush with death gave him a new perspective
on mortality, direction and life ambitions. He says, "
Everything
I do now has a sharper pleasure to it. I've lived a fuller
life than most people could in two. If I go now, I've got
a good education, I've lived on three continents, and I've
played music with a bunch of immortal blues players. I've
fought in a war and against a war. I've seen an awful lot
and I've done an awful lot. If my plane went down tomorrow,
I'd go out on top."
If it's any indication from raving
reviews and features in
Guitar One,
HARP, Blues Revue, Toronto Star, Chicago Sun-Times, NPR,
House of Blues Radio Hour,
BBC's World Service Programme, XM Satellite
Radio and others,
Watermelon Slim may have finally settled in on his chosen
vocation.
On tour with the new cd "
No
Paid Holidays" released in
2008 by
Northern
Blues label
.
The Workers
Michael Newberry
On drums, we have Michael Newberry. Michael has been
a part of the mid-western music scene since his early
days as drummer for the legendary
Fortune
Tellers. After
a long stay and four French records for the
New
Rose label, Michael took over the drummer's chair for Norman's
short lived but highly explosive roots-rock band the
Ban-Lons.
After recording their album for
Lunacy
Records,
Michael joined San Diego's
Forbidden
Pigs for a few tours
before coming home to form
The
Deviants with Scott Keeton.
Michael has played drums a dozen times for
Bo
Diddley and for Bob Margolin, Carey Bell, Hubert Sumlin and
Robert
Lockwood Jr.
Ronnie Mack
Ronnie McMullen Jr played his first gig when he was
15, his mentor Norman Atherton introduced him as "
Little
Ronnie Mack". "
Norman
was my dad's childhood friend, he taught me to play guitar,
and we all shared a love of the blues."
In 2002
Ike Lamb introduced
Ronnie to Sweet Brenda. Ronnie played with Brenda's band
for a total of 4 years. In 2006 they participated in
the International Blues Challenge
in Memphis.
Ronnie
has also been a member of the
Scott
Keeton Band. Ronnie
has shared the stage with many great artists but here
are a few:
Bo Diddley, Big George
Brock, Magic Slim, Jimbo Mathus, and most recently Buddy
Guy. Ronnie has
been traveling the world as a member of Watermelon Slim & The
Workers since 2006.
"
I thank God for giving me
the gift of music, and all of those who have given me
the oppurtunity to play the blues."
Cliff Belcher
On the electric bass, we have Cliff Belcher.
Born and
raised in Fort Worth, Texas, Cliff started playing bass
at 15.
In 1974 Cliff went to a Lynyrd Skynyrd concert
in and saw The Texas Cannon Ball, Freddie King, "
kick
the crap out of those young white boys."
In 1984
Cliff moved down to Austin and got to see and play with
some of the world's best blues players. While in Austin,
Cliff was fortunate to be a part of recording projects
that included
Doyle Bramhall Sr. as producer. Next came
more time touring and recording with bands in Austin,
Fort Worth, Dallas, and Colorado Springs.
In 1988, Cliff
moved to Oklahoma City where he has stayed busy recording
and touring with the best bands in the area such as
Big
G, The Snakeshakers, and now Watermelon Slim & The
Workers.