Will Knaak in the house! Part 1 - podcast episode cover

Will Knaak in the house! Part 1

Feb 19, 202423 min
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Episode description

Guitarist Will Knaak join Bob and Monte at historic Broken Spoke. Did you know Will started playing at the Spoke when he was only 12 years old? Listen and learn more about Will's amazing musical journey.

Transcript

Hey, it's Bob Pickett. We are on our way to the legendary Broken Spoken. Come on, let's get out the truck and head inside, and damn you're proud of it. Come on, it's going side, getting ready for another Tale from the Broken Spoke. Back once again, we got more tales, Bob Picket. It's Tales from Broken Spoke, from the world famous historic Broken Spoke on South of mar In Austin, Texas. Moni's grinning at me right now. What's going on? I'm just happy that Will's here.

Yeah, how y'all doing. I'll let you introduce Will and tell everybody about him, because I'll tell my story about We'll after you. All right, Well, this is one of my dear, dear friends, a dear brother in one of and I've been doing this since I was fourteen years old, NonStop, only thing. It's one of the most talented people I have ever known in any genre. Plays guitar plays, steal guitar play, anything in front of him, and he's an even better human being. Will Mack Willnack.

Now, Okay, I guess both you and Will went to daycare right here at the Broken Spoke exactly right. I grew up here. What's the first time you picked here? I was? I was fourteen twelve, right, see, I'm twelve years old. I listed. I listed on social media and Facebook for a while as my high school because you neither one of us ever saw a high school. Right, I was eighth grade? When did you quit going to school after eighth grade? I'm like, Billy Joe

Shaver got me in eighth grade? Education too, good Christian raising. I don't know if I got that, but I'm working on it, I said, Man, I graduated the shit out of the eighth grade. Yeah, so I have a gd greatly educated dude. You know I got all I need? And you were held back at the broken spoke. I think it's okay, right, that's yay, man, So twelve years old broken spoke, explain that to us now. So and actually in this, I'll just

get heavy and get deep right away, Get deep right away. My mother got drunk and set our house on fire when I was real young eleven, and uh I woke up and rescued my dad. Anyway, the house was burned down, so they moved us across town to Oldworf. And when I was stuck in this apartment all summer, and I like to play sports. I like to play football well outside with my friends, but I couldn't get

there. They lived ten miles away or five miles away or whatever. So all summer I was locked in this apartment while he was at work, playing video games and guitar. And I loved Kurt Cobain and I got into Jimmy Hendricks and all sorts of other stuff. Later, but we started going to Spoke to listen to bands. My dad saw that, and I met Patty

David and Michelle Murphy. Patty introduced me to Michelle, and she introduced me to guitar Lynd, who taught me a blue skill right on the floor, right there on her knees about yes, and told me, if you can learn this scale, you can play on any song in any key. And so I went home and it's just like just over and over and started playing with some people here, sitting in with Patty David and Debora Peters, who was like an accordion player. She did a lot of zydaco and country.

She's great, Yeah, she's amazing. Boomer Norman was her guitar player. He gave me a lot of instruction I met Johnny X through Michelle Murphy, who had the National Music camp that they got me into, and Johnny started mentoring me, but he would also let me sit in with his bands in addition to what he was doing at the school, and so they would notice,

like when I think this is how to have it? I never got told, but you know, if the kid played Johnny be Good behind his head, there's fifties and hundreds that started getting dropped in the tip jar, so like maybe we should hire him sometimes, you know. So as like I had this naive perspective, like I didn't know what I was even doing, but I was already doing it. And they were then teaching me more

material. Johnny Wuld teach me venture songs, chitt Santo and Johnny how to play exactly Stormy Monday, Bobby Bland the solo note for note, and I played with Paul Ray and the covers when I was like thirteen, and he was blown away by the Wayne Bennett solo I did because he's it sounded wow, how you thirteen and you can play Wayne Bennett? And I didn't even know what I was doing. Seriously, I still had no clue, but they were giving me these opportunities and I just kept going, you know,

I had nothing else, and so yeah, broken Spoke. It really did start here, and I was playing with Alvin Crow by the time I was fifteen. But you realize how lucky you were at the time. You didn't it was just another everyday currency. Well. But also, let me just say this, there's a lot of kids that listened to Jimmy Hendrix and Kurt Cobain and Johnny be Good millions. There are hundreds that can play that stuff.

And also, you know so many if you're not a picker. It's like the notes, well you can learn the notes, you can even learn how to play, but you can't learn talent. And like when I first started hearing about Will was that there's like there's this kid and he's got a tone like Denny Freeman, and nobody says nobody says yeah, they said, you know Denny Freeman, and it was like, okay, well, how's that happening? Goo He plugs in and it just sounds that way. You

know. It's one of those things where people like the old joke, you know, you're playing a guitar and goes man, that guitar sounds good. So then you hand it to him and go, well, how does it sound? Now? You know, right, that's a good one. So and it's just like Will, It's just uh. And and also you have to remember the uh, the the Texas club tradition, you know, you know, back in the early fifties. I think the first little we had

was little Dougie Song. I think that I think he was the first little Then we had little Jimmy Vaughan, the little Stevie vaugh And then you know in Charlie Charlie in the in the eighties, you know. And so just that, and and the thing is it's not so much the novelty of that kids can do it. It is this thing that is only in Texas that I have found that they really don't care your age, or if you're white or black or Hispanic, or if you're just good or if there's the potential

for you to be good. Because I know, like when I started picking, my whole thing was I could. I wasn't very proficient on the guitar, but I've always been able to write songs people wanted to hear. And I was fourteen and doing it. All these people that said Will had something going on, said, I had something going on, even though it was you know, ten fifteen years apart. They just recognized here's a youngster that

we're probably going to want to pay attention to for a long while. And you know, and Will has played, you know, not in just country. He was how long were you with Blue October? For five years? He was with Blue October multi platinum rock band for five years. He was their cat, you know. And so you don't get that on accident. You don't get that from being lucky. You get that from being great. And I've known Will a long time. He and I didn't even meet three

music, but I heard of him through music. But we've met through mutual friends. And now he's with Parker McCollum. And of all the crew, you and I've had this conversation, I think of all the acts that have come up in the last ten years, I think Parker is the one that's going to be in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Is just amazing. Yeah, he's a superstar, said, I'm just grateful to be there, but yeah, he's he's the best human ever. Man. I'll say that

about the boss. Thank you, boss. Amen. Well, we hope he listens to this podcast. Well, but I mean, but look, he's got you, you know what I mean. He's got he's got JR. Producing him, John Stewart and uh uh John Randall Stewart, and he's just got just a great group of humans. You can find great pickers. There's the name musicians, Gune. It's like easy to find a picker than it is a plumber. But it's about finding great people that you with whom

you want to create. Well that's you know. When I got hired on, I was talking to just hey, thank you so much. I'm a join it, love it man, and uh, He's like, brother, there was no one else I was going to hire. My biggest fear is that I get up on stage doing this in front of ten thousand people with a bunch of guys from Nashville and I don't even know and he's like,

I can't, I can't do that. And it does his culture like seeps down to the crew where it's a family man, you know, and that's a blessing, Like you don't get that by someone who's not running it. Right. So the leadership is really great there. Man. Let's talk about the relationship with you guys. Do you guys meet when he was playing over at the Saxon when he was playing there. I didn't meet him at Saxon.

I met him before blow October. I was playing with Wade Bowen and then uh Wade Boone and Randy Rogers on the whole my Beer record, that first one. I cut guitar on it and played the tour right and he would open shows for us, and I remember seeing it. I was like ten years a little plus ten ten or so years ago and uh, man, good looking kid, great voice, good songs. He's he's got. So I told him up at uh Ron Brothers my last year with Wade,

I was like, where you want, Parker is upstream. I'm gonna be downstream right here, and I see it's all coming for you, son, and he can't be you really catch it all. And I'm just gonna be doing good, uh knowing you you're up there? You know so uh And we all laughed about it, but yeah, it was it's it's it's amazing.

Sounds like a pretty good gig. Now let's talk about you. Mentioned Alvin Crowe also now Alvin Crowe. I wouldn't be who I am day without Alvin and Johnny and speaking like, yeah, kids listening to Jimmy Hendricks and Kirk cob and it's easy to grab onto pop culture right and whatever gets you started. But they're like, oh, you like Jimmy Hendricks, What do you think about Freddie King? What do you think about Elmore James? Well, why don't you learn some buck Owens legs? Why don't you learn some

Haggard songs? How about Bob Wills? You ever heard out of? To play western swing? A western swing Elden Shamblin, you know, play some of that rhythm. I'm not a master of any style, but I'm just having to grow up and hustle for gigs, like I have to play in

the authentic style whatever that song is. So if it's a Latin jazz too, and you use a harmonic minor skin, I learned a bunch of playing from Ernie Durrawa to playing with a different guest every week for ten years at one point, and that would be you'd have a tehana artist and a blues artist, and then an R and B artist and Latin jazz, and it was just like you had to go quick every week and learn and so That's That's how I'm trying and keep it as like you just have to play a

song authentically the way the song needs to be played, nothing more, nothing less, No ego licks. Used to have ego licks, sometimes still got them. But you know, give me a fuzz pedal, I'll show you what I'm talking about. But yeah, that's a you know, that's all it is, and lifting up that song, telling the story of the song

through the music. And I try and think about that on stage. I read this Inner Game of Music book that some of Morgan Wallin's camp introduce me to when we're in the gym together on the tour we did last year, and uh, he as opposed to thinking about execution, you think about what's the story of the song. You can think about how it makes you feel. You can think about I'm just looking at my hands, I'm just hearing it. All these different senses that aren't self one talk saying hey, hit

the tenth threat B string a note on this solo. And you know what I mean, Like there are if you're think don't mess up. If you think don't mess up, you're already messing up. So it just gets you in a flow, stay a little better. But uh, that's a real truth of it, like what the music should be played, how the song is sounds and it the music should represent the story of the song. So

I'm really trying to get that down. I feel like I'm starting to starting to see it a little more, you know, was it also It's like John Lee Hooker said, they ain't but twelve notes, you know, And it is just what I was taught because I was taught not by pickers but by songwriters. You know, that was the culture in which I came up, and they said, man, this song is the dictator. It's a benevolent dictator, right, but it is a dictator, and that is the

boss. Whether you sing it, you pick it, what type of solo you play, whether you show out a little bit, or whether you lay back. The song is the dictator. And so often writers forget that, pickers forget that. But I tell you who never forgets it is the audience. The audience never forgets that the song is the dictator. And you have got to always listen to what moves them because they will never lie to you

or and they will never get it wrong either. You know, the collective of three hundred people, thirty thousand people that you're going to ask you, is it almost like a runner. It's that certain zone when you're on stage. Do you get in that certain zone where oh, it's just you know you're there, you just can't think about It's like what he said, if you think about it, it's like a quarterback saying, don't throw an interception. The next pass is intercepted. You know, you just got to flow.

But there again, Will has the natural you know, the day he was born, God gave him that talent to where he can flow. If you put his guitar in my hand, you go, man, that's money Ward and he sold a zillion records and you're going to wait a long time for that flow to start because I'm not that type of musician. And the moment, whether he's picking with Alvin Crow or Parker McCollum or Bracken Hell or Blue October or Wade Bowen, the minute Will starts picking with somebody, immediately

their music is elevated. Well, I'll take that, man, I appreciate That's what that's what I intend to do, and that's what I try to do. And yeah, that's that's why I'm so hooked. It's not about the money. It's not about some people think it's fame. You know, it's none of that. And it is living in that where you lose sight of self consciousness. And it was when after my mother died, I was really angry at God. Right, had a huge bone to pick. I

started playing guitar. I remember when I was like sixteen at the Hole in the Wall playing a residency I was doing, and we were playing a song and I started ripping. It's like I went out of my body and I could play these things that I had never learned and that I'll never be able to remember or repeat again. And I was like, God, oh, that's it. And it's not every time. You know, you practice diligently so you can play par musically, the worst I can do is give you

a good show. The best I can do is beyond me, and that's not me. And that's where I'm connected, and it's vital. I would play on the street if I lost everything, I'd still be playing, right, that's right. Because you talk about it's not about the money, let me just ask you a question. Playing before there was money, yeah, yeah, and you played differently now that there is money. Now, you

hope not. You know, I as a writer, but I was around enough successful writers to know that the second you have a hit, do nothing different. The worst thing you can do is try to write what made you successful, because then what you've done is you have removed God from the equation and put yourself in the equation. And I was blessed to get out of the God business almost nineteen years ago. That position has been filled by someone

far more qualified. And that's what Will and I are talking about is just if you can get to a place to always let him in, that's a good place. Amen. Yeah. On your days off, do you pick

up the guitar every day or pretty much? And there's a balance there, Like some days I'm real diligent, and I'll be like, I'm clocking in two hours on steal today and I'm doing an hour on guitar, and then some days it's twenty thirty minutes, you know, And you have to balance it out because the flow, when you overdo it, the flow is interrupted because you're trying to perfect it, and it gets stale and it's not fun anymore, and you're so you're losing sight of it. Right, You're going

for perfection, which isn't achievable anyway. But yeah, finding that balance of like keeping the urge and it's fresh versus being refined. So it's like it's a little bit each way, you know, every time it shifts a little bit. But you do things when when you're in the tour season and the shows are happening, Like I have routines that I do daily out there.

Me and Parker started picking guitars about an hour before every show. I'll go warm up on my steel parts for at least twenty thirty minutes, you know, stuff like that. And yeah, and also you got to take care of yourself, gym running, all that sort of stuff. You know, I'm sober, so I'm not putting poison in my body. All that keeps me maintained. And if you play differently before the money or whatever, it's it is just a little differences, like, well, you've got this and

I can do this. How do I maintain this right? And that's the main goal. If I can maintain this, that's the bottom line. And then how do I get a little bit better? You know, that's always on the agenda too. But you can't burn out, you know, I've been doing it a long time, twelve to I'll be forty soon. So almost twenty eight years, you're forty. I'll be forty this year. I'm thirty nine. I'm not. Don't sound forty, No, no, no, no, I'm kidding. Alternative. I was thinking, like twenty eight,

twenty nine. I've been doing this a long time, brother, Yeah, a long time. So I might not be as talent as money says. I just never quit. And you tell a lot, but you still poisoning yourself almost nine years ago too, and that yeah ten, no, I'll tell you like almost Yeah, life got better super quick, right, And really the journey started about thirteen years ago. I had a bad breakup and I went off the rails for two weeks, got back on the horse,

and it's it's been good ever since. But uh yeah, that's how that goes. So it was the breakup. Get do you know why I took dope because I'm a drug addict? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'll blame it on the breakup though, you know. Okay, Now, what would you tell any twelve year old kid who's just picked up a guitar? What advice would you give? You can give advice to a younger you, what would you say, First of all, listen, just listen

to what they're telling you and what they're playing. You know, that's the biggest way you learn is listening, and that's the best way you play too. Is like everybody's always worried about their tone and how they sound, then you're already not going to fit in with the band. If you're listening to the drummer and the bass player, you're gonna feel it and you're gonna play the right things, just as a reflex. So listening is the most important

skill that you can probably learn. And I know some musicians read and that's great. I can read charts. I can do that and that's great. His reference. But the other day we were working up a song, we did a Toby Keith song because he died, you know, and we're working up a soundcheck. My guitar tech comes out with the chart. He's like, you want this. I'm like, no, I'd rather mess it up

without a chart than play it stale. And so I try and get you know, with doing that Earni gig, I got to where I could listen to a song about three times and be able to and had the arrangement had

it down, you know, then you got to go into detail. How far detail you know that there's there's different degrees of every gig that you have to realize they might be paid to kind of improv, improv a little bit more and do my own thing over this, or is there record licks that this one has to go there and knowing how to how to do that.

But also, I mean, if you're trying to do an established gig, there's a lot of rehearsing that goes in, and there's lighting cues and there's like pyro cues and all this stuff that if you play a different part, it doesn't go with the cue of the deal. And we don't play the tracks and we don't do none of that. The lock Sums band's really into an arrangement. But I mean you've got to you gotta have some of that. So different gigs require different skill sets. But if you listen, you'll

you'll know. But also like pickers, they come to depend on your licks and you come to compair on their licks, not that you're playing a record, but just to show them the respect of the of the show that Okay, we hit a big crash here and so you got to hit that big power chord that goes with the crash. And if you decide not to, it just it just it disrupts the flow. But but also it's like,

you know about reading charts, It's like that's like reading the map. You know, it's like, yeah, that will show you how to get from here to there, but that has I will say this about charts, and I don't. I don't read shape notes. I just read number of charts. Uh. I'm not great at shape notes either. I can do it a little bit. I can't. It's really stupid. Not stupid. Sheet music, okay, like in the church sheet music, I have no those

are dots. Looks like somebody dots and lines. O'kay somebody spilled some mank. But I can read nationale number charts. I'm real good at that. But but no magic is derived from the chart. That's only that's from God. And that's the pickers relationship with God. Yeah, yeah, yes, where do we go? And most of the time you can pretty much prickling country and blues. You can smell where it goes. Jazz sometimes you need

to. There's a difference between the one and the one major seventh but you learn to kind of smell it or feel it if you're worth a damn, you know, but we'll okay, I mean from the Broken Spoke to the Moody Center, that's an entirely different style of playing. I mean, here, you've got the crowd Moody Center. The last time I saw you play with Parker. I mean, like I say, you've got the fireworks going off, you've got the lights, you've got everything that doesn't distract you at

all. You can't let it wait. Well, sometimes you know that's just what you know, that fire goes off behind you two feet and you're like, oh, we flinched a little bit. I didn't miss a note. Okay, you know it's a it's so yeah, some of that can, but it's more show business, is what I'm saying, than here at the Spoke. Oh for sure. No. And then that's all part of it, you know, engaging fans and creating an experience, and that's what people

are doing. You know, they're paying their harder and money to see something and feel something different. And the more elements you can use to evoke that emotion of the music, than all the better. And that's all that is it's just enhancers. But you know, we had a show happened. It was rainy. They couldn't do lights, they couldn't do the video walls, they couldn't even do our risers. So we just set up like a band

of a club and we played the music and the people loved it. And like, if you can't do that, then all that stuff, don't don't start there, you know, don't go get the fancy leather jacket and the sleeve of tattoos. Moved to La with a Les Paul and think you're gonna be Slash. Learn to play like Slash first, then start dressing like him, you know, And that's you know, I keep itself up. I'm

a black T shirt Levi's boots kind of guy. When I played with October, I where Converse or Doc Martin sometimes because they're a little edgier, you gotta look look the part a little bit. Bill Ham I worked with him when I was twenty, and that was when I first started doing like some arenas and bigger shows, from doing clubs to that. And he was easy Tops manager and producer for like almost forty years. And he would always tell me, like, you know, when you go out look, be ready

to play on stage like everything. And so to me, that's like some guys take that over the top and they're wearing feather bow is out and Doyle does this thing. I love it. He only he can pull that off. But me, it's like, what can I dress in every day? That's simple. I can still get up there. I got my black teacher

jeans, right yeah. And it's me so simplicity in that. But uh, you know that's something too, you know, it's it takes everything, Like you can't go up there unkempt, and people take you seriously, you know, with an attitude and guitar and like be a professional, show up, like brush your teeth, cut your nails, you know, be ready, like show them you're ready and they'll they'll respect that. Such a great conversation with Will, and we'll continue with part two for conversation with Will Neck

on Tales from the Broken Spoke next week. In the meantime, listen to some past episodes are all waiting for you right now where their free iHeartRadio app. Tales from the Broken Spoke is recorded live at The Broken Spoke in Austin, Texas, hosted by Country Radio Hall of fame broadcaster Bog Picket and Monty Warden, recorded, mixed down and produced by Mike rivera

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