Possessed by Paul James: The Texas Schoolteacher Who Goes Wandering

Long before Konrad Wert took the stage name Possessed by Paul James, he was a kid living in what sounds like a fable. Wert grew up amidst the marshes and palmettos of Immokalee, Florida, watchful of “gators” but delighting in a monkey that swung from a mangrove tree near his home. Alongside his sister and the children of Mexican and Haitian immigrants, he attended the small Mennonite chapel his parents founded, worshipping and harmonizing on sturdy, simple hymns at least three times a week.

As a young adult Wert left Southwest Florida and his conservative, religious past. Free to listen to whatever he pleased, he was drawn to punk and the blues. But he set his love of music aside to pursue a teaching career. And for the last 20 years he has devoted his life to teaching special education and advocating for students and teachers.

Several years ago, with two young kids and a meager teaching salary, music became a way of supplementing his teaching income. His energetic, multi-instrumental shows quickly gained popularity and soon Possessed by Paul James (a nod to Wert’s father and grandfather) was born.

It’s been six years since Wert’s last album, There Will Be Nights When I’m Lonely. In that time, he has undergone two vocal surgeries, losing “two whole steps or three half-steps in terms of range,” he says. His latest album, As We Go Wandering, took nearly five years to complete. He would hum his compositions in school hallways, scribble lyrics on scratch paper or napkins and travel two hours northeast from his home in Kerrville, Texas, to Austin to record.

Finding common ground between the instrumental traditions of old-time music and a contemporary call to social action, As We Go Wandering is the collective work of 20 musicians. While Wert stayed consistent on banjo, fiddle, guitar and clogging, he wanted his friends and “picking pals” to add texture and feel on the record by contributing harmonies, mandolin, percussion and guitar.

He explains, “The greatest contribution to the participating musicians were the harmonies and choral effect such as in ‘Be at Rest,’ ‘As We Go Wandering,’ and ‘I’m So Good at Absolutely Nothing.’ … Their contributions added to the texture and feel tremendously. At the end of the day we’re all Possessed by Paul James. I like it like that. It’s not about the ‘me,’ it’s all about the ‘we.'”

BGS: Can you talk a little about the making of As We Go Wandering?

Wert: Our albums are very reflective of where we are in life. As We Go Wandering is really reflective of where we are as a family. My boys are 11 and 9. The kids are healthy, our relationship [with my wife] is strong, but where do we keep going?

I notice you say “we” and “our” when talking about the making of your music. Are you talking about your wife? The musicians you play with?

Yes. I’m a firm believer that the pronoun “we” is far more powerful than “I.” It’s never meant as the third person or some strange pretentious way of thinking. [Laughs] Rather, I can talk about how my family impacts the writing, how our friendships impact the writing, how life impacts the writing. I like to say, “We are Possessed by Paul James,” not “I am Possessed by Paul James.”

In the song “When It Breaks” you seem to be saying that when we hit our breaking points, we need to keep plugging away. What’s the story behind this song?

When I write, I’ll put songs on the shelf, and I’ll let it collect some dust until it feels ready to record it. We originally recorded this track on the album Feed the Family, and it was [recorded] just with me. It was very raw.

The sentiment when I wrote it then, and how we have reinvented it with this composition, has so much to do with, number one, my work as a schoolteacher. I had to take a year off in 2015 just for my mental health. It was starting to beat me down, that [feeling of] we’re not able to help these young people in the way that we want to help them. For me, some of these songs are reflective of, what am I going to do when I can’t take it anymore? What are teachers going to do when we can’t take it any longer? I get emotional about it.

Your performances always appear so cathartic, like you’re really just letting it all out. It sounds like your lyrics are a way of releasing emotions and inner struggles as well?

Oh, yeah. Maybe to a fault. Being raised a Mennonite, you were raised to recognize your weaknesses and your faults. You know the phrase would always be: Remember you’re broken and then you can have healing. Some people say, “When we come to your shows it feels like church.” Well, it’s meant to have people gather around and have a good time, share our burdens and talk with one another.

Many songs on this album feel nostalgic. Is that a reflection on where you are in life?

Yes. I understand how people sort of lose their footing in their mid-40s. There’s the adventures and excitement of your roaring 20s and then you’re balancing out in your 30s and quote-unquote growing up. Then in your 40s, the waters are calm and you’re thinking: What’s next? Am I just counting the minutes before I croak? I think there’s a lot of pondering, wandering in the album. I know I also wanted to slow things down. My wife is like, “Hey, can you have an album without cussing?” We wanted a more folk-y element, along with that theme of advocacy and hopefulness.

Some artists who have to have a day job to survive might compartmentalize those two things. You blend your job and your art together quite a bit.

Absolutely. I truly feel you can’t do one without the other. When I was [teaching] in elementary school, music was always in my classroom. I teach high school now, but on my wall there’s a picture of me teaching, my second-year teaching, with these little guys in school with a guitar. And there’s a little guy with a tambourine in his hand, a kid with Down syndrome, a sweet kid. So, music has always been in the class.

The song “Be at Rest” has been described as a social justice anthem related to education in this country. Is this a song you could’ve written in any other phase of your life?

No. I think with the rise of school shootings, when those tragedies occur, as a schoolteacher or counselor or any kind of educator, you’re literally walking in the same shoes of those that were injured or killed. It takes such a toll on you. You start thinking, whoa, look at this environment we are working in and this is truly now part of our job. This is truly part of our professional development and training — how to handle if someone comes into the school with a firearm. That’s profound when it’s an educational setting and we’re trying to help people learn and grow. The song was a response that came out in a cathartic manner.

My intent is to remind myself to be at rest. To remind myself that I can persevere. Is it specifically about someone coming into my school with a firearm? Yes and no. There are a lot of conflicts right now in public education that we have to focus our energy on. And I think by singing about that — there are battles in these classrooms, there are battles in these hearts — it might just be a reminder. It’s preachy, possibly. But not too preachy. I feel like if I get too preachy I lose the listener. But you have to live your convictions without losing your audience. That’s the balance.


Photo credit: George Blosser

LISTEN: Possessed by Paul James, “When It Breaks”

Artist: Possessed By Paul James
Hometown: Kendall County, Texas
Song: “When It Breaks”
Album: As We Go Wandering
Release Date: January 31, 2020
Label: PPJRECORDS

In Their Words: “When the world comes crashing down around us what will we do? I ask this question when thinking of my children. How will I react when tragedy strikes? I think of this as a teacher, when the systems in place simply are not adequate in meeting the level of need on a day to day basis. Will I quit and move on from the classroom or persevere? The blending of harmonies and the soulful fiddle song take my mind to a place of wonder.

“It’s fitting that this track happens to share the same name of the documentary produced by Milk Products Media of Chicago. In 2015 we took a journey for a full year advocating for the rights of students and families receiving special education services. I was personally at a loss when trying to understand why we simply weren’t doing more regarding resources and supports within the classroom.

“Thus, we loaded up the RV, the two kids, the dog, spouse, supplies, instruments and hit the road for a full year touring and advocating for special ed reform. The children were ‘roam’ schooled, the meetings were plentiful, the message was heard, and the songs were song. Ultimately we chose to return to the classroom at the end of the year while still balancing music performance, yet the ongoing question continues, ‘What are you going to do when it breaks?'” — Konrad Wert, Possessed by Paul James


Photo credit: George Blosser

Country Music Hall of Fame’s Words & Music Inspires Kids and Artists Alike

When Wild Ponies first decided to volunteer with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum's Words & Music program, they had no idea how much that decision would come to influence the direction of their music. The Nashville-based duo of Telisha and Doug Williams fell into the program somewhat by accident, stepping in at the last minute to help out a friend.

"Shortly after we moved [to Nashville], they needed a substitute to come in," Telisha explains. "Normally, you have two weeks with the lyrics, but we only had two days, the first time we did it."

After that one visit, however, the band was hooked. "We did it that one time and absolutely loved it," she adds. "We've been able to do it a couple times each year since we've lived in Nashville."

Words & Music is an educational program at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum available for free (or at a low cost) for kids grade three through 12. The program marries songwriting with language arts for a 10-lesson unit that can take place either in local schools or at the Hall of Fame's Taylor Swift Education Center. Relying heavily on the help of local artist "teachers," the program culminates with student lyrics getting the full Music Row treatment from volunteer songwriters, being workshopped, and eventually performed as full songs. Since its inception in 1979, the program has helped over 100,000 students improve their language arts skills and express themselves through the power of music. 

"A couple weeks before doing the Words & Music program, [the CMHOF] passes along 50 to 75 lyrics," Telisha says. "The kids have been given a six-week course in songwriting where they learn what choruses do or what the verse of a song accomplishes, and a little bit about rhyming scheme and meter, and that's through the school system. Then the kids submit the lyrics of songs after that curriculum, on any number of topics. We get a lot of songs about tacos and Minecraft and unicorns — all kinds of things." She laughs, then adds, "Then, on the day that we go over, the kids are touring the Country Music Hall of Fame and, after they're done with their tour, they come into the Taylor Swift Education Center and we're there and talk a little bit more about songwriting and what it's like to be a songwriter and tour for a living, and we present about an hour workshop. We've taken six or seven of the sets of lyrics that we have gotten and turned them into songs."

Wild Ponies loved one of their finished songs so much that it became the title track for their just-announced album, Radiant, which comes out May 13. The band co-wrote the song with a 12-year-old Shelbyville, Tennessee, student and aspiring musician, Mariah Moore, who will receive co-writing credit in the album's liner notes, as well as royalties from any track sales or licensing thanks to getting set up with BMI. 

"We get a lot of material that we would never necessarily sing at our own shows," Telisha says. "But this one girl, she was in a sixth grade program, and the imagery that she presented in the song was just stunning. When we were sitting down to put it to music, this really, slightly different style of melody and playing came out. We were really excited about this song when we got to the Country Music Hall of Fame that day. We saved it until the end and we announced, 'Is Mariah here today?' and she wasn't even there that day. We were devastated. We just couldn't let it go and, when we got home, we decided that we would keep working on that song." 

In addition to featuring the Words & Music collaboration, Radiant is an especially important release for Wild Ponies because, while being a step forward musically for the band as a whole, it's been an important step in Telisha's own personal healing through music.

"On our last record, I exposed and opened up a lot about my experience as a surivor of sexual abuse," she says. "This record, I feel like it's not a continuation of that. What it feels like, to me, is a person who has healed from that experience. I feel confident and comfortable in myself as an artist and in us as the kind of music we play. It feels more stable and secure as a record. We're exploring a little bit deeper and there are some more universal themes. We're really excited about it."

Learn more about Words and Music here. Pre-order Wild Ponies' Radiant here.


Photo credit: Stacie Huckeba