* En anglais uniquement
One of singer/songwriter
Will Oldham's many aliases,
Bonnie "Prince" Billy is the most prolific, with Oldham releasing nearly all his material under the moniker since 1999's breakthrough album
I See a Darkness. Whether known as
Bonnie "Prince" Billy,
Palace,
Palace Brothers, or
Palace Songs,
Oldham always uses vintage folk and country influences as a framework for his songs about the joys and failings of human nature. His voice can be clear or creaky (his best vocal work often appears on interpretive albums such as 2017's Best Troubador, or 2021's
Blind Date Party), and the arrangements may be full-bodied or spectral (the evolution from
Palace Brothers' 1994 album
Days in the Wake to 2004's Bonnie "Prince" Billy Sings Greatest Palace Music is instructive), but the literacy and emotional power of
Oldham's songs are a constant in his work, and he's grown from an intriguing alt-country outlier to a respected figure in folk and roots music circles.
The Louisville, Kentucky native worked as an actor during the late '80s and early '90s, starring in John Sayles' 1987 mining film Matewan, appearing in the 1989 TV movie Everybody's Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure, and the 1991 big-screen film Thousand Pieces of Gold.
Oldham debuted as a musician in 1992 with the
Drag City single Ohio River Boat Song, which he released as
Palace Songs; his debut album,
There Is No-One What Will Take Care of You, arrived the following year as a
Palace Brothers offering. By 1995's
Viva Last Blues, he was beginning to work as
Palace Music, a name that stuck until 1997's Joya, which
Oldham released under his own name.
However, with 1998's Black Dissimulation and the following year's
I See a Darkness, the
Bonnie "Prince" Billy name seemed to stick, for the most part: Aside from the soundtrack Ode Music and Guarapero: Lost Blues 2, the majority of
Oldham's work from then on was credited to
Bonnie "Prince" Billy.
Ease Down the Road arrived in early 2001, featuring collaborators David Pajo, Catherine Irwin, Mike Fellows, and
Harmony Korine.
Master and Everyone appeared two years later. In 2004 came the release of a rather surprising project for
Oldham -- Bonnie "Prince" Billy Sings Greatest Palace Music, in which his usual collaborators were joined by a band of Nashville session musicians for a set of polished re-recordings of songs from his back catalog.
Oldham's next project found him collaborating with guitarist
Matt Sweeney (who had previously worked with
Chavez and
Zwan, as well as playing banjo on
Ease Down the Road) for the evocative January 2005 release Superwolf. Reflective, bittersweet, and achingly melodic, it was praised as one of the year's first truly strong albums.
Oldham and
Sweeney followed up Superwolf that July with an extended single, I Gave You, featuring two non-album tracks.
Sweeney was also on hand for the live album Summer in the Southeast, issued by Sea Note in November 2005.
Oldham and
Sweeney were joined by a full band for the shows. The singer released another solo album,
The Letting Go, in September 2006 and followed it up with an EP of cover songs titled Ask Forgiveness in November 2007.
Oldham was especially prolific in 2008, beginning the year with the live album Wilding in the West, an Australia-only release recorded in California during his 2007 tour. That spring,
Oldham returned with
Lie Down in the Light, one of his more polished efforts, which he followed that fall with
Is It the Sea?, another live album recorded on his 2006 U.K. tour and released by Domino. Just a few months later in spring 2009, Beware, an ambitious effort featuring contributions from Rob Mazurek, Azita Youseffi, and
the Mekons'
Jon Langford, arrived, and yet another live effort, Funtown Comedown, appeared before the year was up. His next project involved
the Cairo Gang, loosely a solo project for guitarist
Emmett Kelly (who had often played with
Oldham). The co-billing produced a record in early 2010 entitled
The Wonder Show of the World, followed by the similarly themed
Wolfroy Goes to Town in 2011.
Marble Downs, a collaboration with the like-minded
Trembling Bells, appeared in 2012, as did
Now Here's My Plan, a six-song EP under the
Bonnie "Prince" Billy moniker that included reworkings of older tunes. The EP served as a companion piece for
Oldham's book Will Oldham on Bonnie "Prince" Billy, a collection of conversations between
Oldham and experimental sound artist
Alan Licht. In 2013,
Oldham re-teamed with
Letting Go guest vocalist and
Faun Fables frontwoman
Dawn McCarthy for What the Brothers Sang, a collection of
Everly Brothers covers. That same year, he self-released an unannounced self-titled album on his Palace Records imprint.
Oldham took the grassroots approach on the album very seriously, going as far as hand-delivering copies to record stores as a means of distribution. In 2014, the 11th
Bonnie "Prince" Billy album, Singer's Grave/A Sea of Tongues, materialized. Though
Oldham had been constantly prolific, the record was his first substantially distributed original material since 2011's
Wolfroy Goes to Town, though much of the album reworked songs from that era with different arrangements.
In early 2016,
Oldham took a look back with the album
Pond Scum, a set of live-in-the-studio recordings originally cut for
John Peel's BBC radio program, which included a number of
Palace/
Bonnie "Prince" Billy favorites and an idiosyncratic cover of
Prince's "The Cross." That same year saw
Oldham collaborating with Krautrock revivalist
Cooper Crain's
Bitchin Bajas on the LP Epic Jammers & Fortunate Little Ditties, as well as releasing a second album with
Trembling Bells,
The Bonnie Bells of Oxford. In May 2017,
Oldham issued Best Troubador, a tribute to
Merle Haggard in which
Bonnie "Prince" Billy and his friends covered 15 songs written or recorded by the great country star.
Oldham returned in 2018 with another album of covers. On Wolf at the Cosmos he interpreted every song from Norwegian singer
Susanna's 2007 album Sonata Mix Dwarf Cosmos; "People Living" was released as the album's lead single.
In 2019,
Oldham collaborated with
Bryce Dessner and
Eighth Blackbird on When We Are Inhuman, which was part of
Dessner's Murder Ballades series. By the end of the year,
Oldham released
I Made a Place, the first collection of brand-new original
Bonnie "Prince" Billy songs since 2011's
Wolfroy Goes to Town. In the summer of 2020,
Oldham contributed four new songs to
Hello Sorrow Hello Joy, a split release with
Three Queens in Mourning. The project from
Alasdair Roberts, Alex Nilsen, and
Jill O'Sullivan (longtime friends and collaborators of
Oldham's) found them covering many of the best-loved
Oldham-penned songs, while he offered up three cover tunes and one country romp in the style of his most recent album. In 2021,
Oldham and
Sweeney regrouped for Superwolves, the sequel to their 2005 album Superwolf. Like its predecessor 16 years prior, Superwolves was a spare, haunting set of songs that highlighted the specific chemistry between
Oldham’s unvarnished voice and
Sweeney’s masterful guitar playing. That December saw the digital release of
Blind Date Party, an album of duets with labelmate
Bill Callahan. A sprawling set of covers including songs originally by
Billie Eilish,
Steely Dan, and
Leonard Cohen and featuring contributions from other
Drag City artists such as
Azita,
Six Organs of Admittance, David Pajo, and
David Grubbs,
Blind Date Party was released physically in January 2022. ~ Heather Phares & Stephen Thomas Erlewine