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Tim Wilson: Hillbilly Homeboy
Georgia-born country comedian Tim Wilson was a born funnyman, delivering dead-on impressions of his
teachers while still in elementary school; he later emceed his high school's talent shows, but after taking up guitar
as a teen he instead aspired to a career in music. While in college he accepted a job as a sportswriter, later
convincing his editors to allow him to review local concerts as well; at an Atlanta Rhythm Section date, Wilson
passed along his demo tape to the group's drummer Roy Yaeger, who agreed to produce a session at his Georgia
studio. The resulting demo went nowhere, however, and so Wilson instead turned to comedy; immediately he
earned a devoted local following, and soon after won a Cinemax stand-up competition. A series of television
spots followed, including an appearance on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno; in 1990, he also teamed with the
duo of Pinkard & Bowden to write the song "Arab, Alabama," and its success convinced him to include music in
his stand-up act. In addition to a series of LPs for the independent Southern Tracks label, Wilson scored a hit single with his
"Garth Brooks Ruined My Life," also co-writing Jeff Foxworthy's smash "The Redneck Twelve Days of
Christmas." Upon signing to Capitol, he released his major-label debut It's a Sorry WorldGettin' My
Mind Right followed later that same year. In 2000 he issued Hillbilly Homeboy which was helped by the success
of its first single, "The Ballad of John Rocker."
--Jason Ankeny, All-Music Guide
Levon Helm contributes harmonica, drums and mandolin on Hillbilly Homeboy.
The recordings took place in late February 2000 at the Muscle Shoals Sound Studios.
Below is an excerpt from an interview with Wilson published at
the Capitol Records Nashville web site, where he talks about working
with Levon:
Tim Wilson
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"I’m not writing to please people in New York," Wilson says proudly. "I’m Southern, like Elvis was Southern. Skynyrd was Southern.
That’s what I know. And if you’re going to write a NASCAR song, it better be Southern as hell."
Notice the references to musicians. Wilson takes his music seriously. His last two albums featured players from the Atlanta Rhythm Section
and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. This time out, his usual drummer wasn’t available. "I wanted a back-porchy, stripped down sound
on this record," he says. "Levon Helm, from The Band, plays like that and it was always a dream of mine to work with him. So I took a shot
that I could find him and get him to play on the record." Wilson asked someone who knew someone, who knew someone else who knew
Helm to play on the record. Helm said yes, came down from his home in upstate New York and contributed drums and mandolin to the
songs.
He may, in fact, be the first person to play mandolin on a rap-style song. The title track, "Hillbilly
Homeboy," is a cultural mish-mosh about a gangsta rapper who goes hillbilly. "I thought it would
be funny to mix the two cultures," says Wilson. "The song is stereotypical inner city homeboy and
stereotypical redneck." (He left the inner city and moved to the hills/ Traded in his crack pipe on a
moonshine still/
His gang bandana sure looked bad/ but it’s the only color that the bait store had)
Other selections from Wilson and his songwriting partner Danny Simpson include "Ugly Country"
(I liked country better back when it was ugly/ Girls never threw panties at David Allan Coe),
"Ballad of John Rocker" (John Rocker your proctologist called/ They just found your head), "Talladega" (Ain’t never gonna take your family back to Talladega again/ They steal enough stuff
to start a race team every time we been); and "Learn To Ride" (Kawasaki was a cuss word/ In our
Harley home).
"Musically, this album is better than my last," Wilson says. "I really concentrated on getting the
music right." Just as he did with his last album, Wilson took on the job of producer. "I’m sitting
there in the vocal booth, looking out at Levon Helm in the drum booth, asking me, 'Is that okay with you?’" Wilson recalls with a laugh.
"That’s a dream come true."
Tracks
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Hillybilly Homeboy (Simpson/Wilson)
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Chattanooga (Simpson/Wilson)
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Fireworks in Tennessee (Simpson/Wilson)
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Ringold,Georgia (Simpson/Wilson)
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Monteagle Cop (Simpson/Wilson)
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Baptists & Catholics (Simpson/Wilson)
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That Wuttin' a Marlboro (Simpson/Wilson)
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Earnhardt (Simpson/Wilson)
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Tide & Skittles (Simpson/Wilson)
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Chad Little (Simpson/Wilson)
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Talladega Song (Simpson/Wilson)
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Michael McDonald Had a Farm (Traditional)
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Ballard of John Rocker (Simpson/Wilson)
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Uncle B.S. 1865 (Simpson/Wilson)
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Uncle B.S. 1876 (Simpson/Wilson)
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Uncle B.S. 1492 (Simpson/Wilson)
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Learned to Ride (The Motorcycle Song) (Simpson/Wilson)
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Back When Country Was Ugly (Simpson/Wilson)
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Darryl Strokes (That Dumb Sonofa) Almost... (Simpson/Wilson)
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19-Year-Old & The Go TH Hell Store (Simpson/Wilson)
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Living on Gas Card (Simpson/Wilson)
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Uncle B.S. 1647 (Wilson)
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Uncle B.S. 1969 (Wilson)
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Family Reunion (Wilson)
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Ballard of John Rocker (Simpson/Wilson)
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Relationship Humor (Simpson/Wilson)
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Love Songs for Losers (Simpson/Wilson)
Sidemen
- Dean Daughtry
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Keyboards
- Carlton Davis
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Art Direction
- Carlos Grier
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Digital Editing
- Levon Helm
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Harmonica, Mandolin, Drums
- David Hood
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Bass
- Clayton Ivey
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Piano, Organ (Hammond), Wurlitzer
- George Lawrence
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Drums
- Steve Melton
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Engineer, Mixing
- Denny Purcell
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Mastering
- Tim Wilson
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Producer
- Danny Simpson
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Associate Producer
- Denise Jarvis
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Production Assistant
- Eric Conn
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Digital Editing
- Charles Hart Jr.
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Assistant Engineer
Tim Wilson - Hillbilly Homeboy - 2000 - Capitol 25930
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