(Editor’s Note: For a special Artist of the Month feature and op-ed, acclaimed guitarist, composer, and improviser Jackie Venson considers the impact, musicality, and originality of her peer Yasmin Williams. Read more about Venson on BGS here. Explore more AOTM content on Williams here.)
As someone who gets pigeonholed as a blues guitarist, Iâve publicly reckoned with what I feel is an othering of blues as no longer really art, but instead what might be seen as a wax museum-ification of a formerly revolutionary genre. Too many established musicians and fans alike donât want blues to evolve, but to instead be preserved in amber. Yet, its sibling folk music has not only never entirely fallen out of fashion, it has evolved and even prospered specifically because its brightest figures have refused to let tradition and academic codification stagnate the genre. Whether youâre talking about Bob Dylan going electric or Bon Iver collaborating with hip-hop superstars, folk musicians understand that cross pollination and new ideas are vital to growth. To my ears, Yasmin Williams is a proud continuation of that tradition of evolving folk.
To listen to the music of Yasmin Williams is to listen to the thrill of musical mutation in action, to hear and feel playing that is in constant communication, not only with itself, but with myriad styles and personalities. Given how adventurous and playful Williamsâ music is, itâs not too surprising that her gateway to music was in fact a video game, specifically Guitar Hero 2.
In a review of Williamsâ breakout 2021 album Urban Driftwood for taste-making music site Pitchfork, writer Sam Sodomsky connected Williamsâ percussive, tap-heavy fingerpicking style to the mechanics of that game, as well as folk guitar legend John Fahey. Rhythmic intensity and love for the thrill of performance are the unifying elements of Williamsâ otherwise impossible-to-pin-down style; this isnât folk as a study or stuffy examination of tradition, itâs folk as expression at its most pure, music for entertainment, communication, and friendly competition all at once.
Williamsâ latest batch of singles from her just-released album, Acadia, impeccably illustrates this eclectic and freewheeling approach to folk. âHummingbirdâ is a dazzling collaboration with banjo player Allison de Groot and fiddle phenom Tatiana Hargreaves that recalls Richard Thompsonâs lush, melodic picking but marries it to the breakneck intensity of traditional bluegrass.
On the other end of the folk spectrum, âVirgaâ finds Williams teaming up with Darlingside for a gorgeous and stately slice of indie folk that would fit right in with the likes of Sufjan Stevens and Bibio. Somewhere in the middle is âDawning,â a bluesy folk number that features Williams dueting on guitar with Aoife OâDonovan of Crooked Still fame, who also provides enchanting, wordless vocals that give the song an almost ambient quality, as if Sigur RĂłs moved to Appalachia.
Even on songs that are more traditional, Williams playfully inserts pop and experimental elements. Take âSunshowers,â which opens Urban Driftwood with beautiful fingerpicking that in turn gives way to a simple yet addictive bass-like hook that wouldnât be out of place on a Post Malone single. Or, consider the albumâs title track, which features djembe playing by Amadou Kouaye and adds an almost IDM (Intelligent Dance Music) quality to the song. Or, âNova to Ba,â a collaboration with Argentine musician Dobrotto that effortlessly transitions from cinematic grandeur to relaxing ambient textures.
As a musician, I canât help but be entranced by the marvelous skill and tone on display in Williamsâ music. But more importantly, as a listener, Iâm struck by the immediacy and tunefulness of the songs. Like Williamsâ early inspiration, Guitar Hero 2, these songs are hard to put down once you start, and the difficulty never gets in the way of the fun.
âJuvenescence,â one of Williamsâ most popular songs, is a handy representation of her skills â the impeccable picking, the daredevil runs that would impress even Eddie van Halen, the self-dueting in the finale. But itâs also immensely listenable and never a chore. Equally impressive is âSwift Breeze,â where Williams utilizes her guitar as an organic drum machine, getting a booming kick drum sound out of the body and rim shot-like hits out of other components, all while arpeggiating like she just got off a tour as the lead guitarist for a Midwest emo outfit.
It might seem odd to bring up emo in a feature on a folk musician, but there is a considerable amount of drama and theatricality in Williamsâ music, even though most of it is instrumental. âAdrift,â in particular, has just as many emotional pivots and anthemic hooks as a Panic! At The Disco song. Here, the guitar comes in first, then the strings, but the swaggering hooks and melancholic valleys are there. Itâs not hard to reimagine âRestless Heart,â from Williamsâ debut album, Unwind, as an emo anthem either; it has a killer riff to kick things off followed by a pick slide and some heavy ringing chords. Even the title sounds like something the Get Up Kids would have used. If Dashboard Confessional was ever looking for their own Tim Reynolds to do an acoustic tour with, all Iâm saying is Williamsâ name should be high up on the list.
Every genre should be so fortunate as to have an artist like Williams, a performer who challenges herself without losing sight of what makes music a pleasure to listen to. A musician who commits to pushing the boundaries of the genre they call home, rather than maintaining a status quo. No genre should be inflexible and we need more musicians like Williams â period â who push themselves musically just as much as they do technically.
(Editor’s Note: Continue your Yasmin Williams Artist of the Month exploration here.)
Photo Credit: Ebru Yildiz