Willi Carlisle is a man of many angles. Call him a folk singer, a raconteur, a humorist, a poet, or a punk, and youโre speaking equal amounts of truth. Thoughtful and impulsive, hilarious and heart-wrenching, bluntly profane and profusely kind, the Ozark nativeโborn in Missouri, now residing in northwest Arkansasโhas spent the last decade perfecting a raucous blend of old-time tradition and modern vernacular.
His best songs bounce between belly laughs and tearjerkers, just as the virtuosic Carlisle glides between acoustic guitar, banjo, fiddle, accordion, and harmonica. Potent quotables litter the lyric sheets of his three albumsโ2016โs Too Nice to Mean Much, 2018โs To Tell You the Truth, and 2022โs Peculiar, Missouri. But itโs the wild-eyed emotion baked into his baritone boom that has Carlisle catapulting to success.
Early singles like โCheap Cocaineโ and โBoy Howdy, Hot Dog!โ celebrated the unhinged side of Americana, but Carlisle flipped that script with a compelling mix of originals and arrangements on last yearโs release on Free Dirt Records. He voices complicated queer desire on โLife on the Fence,โ authentic acceptance on โYour Heartโs a Big Tent,โ and the tragicomedy of the open road on โVanlife.โ
He charts a neurodivergent performerโs poignant rise and fall on โTulsaโs Last Magicianโ while retrofitting everything from conjunto classics to cosmic cowboy laments and the absurdist verse of e. e. cummings. He even anchors Peculiar, Missouri with a titular seven-minute talking blues about suffering a panic attack in the cosmetics aisle of a midwestern Walmart.
Carlisleโs sharp character studies reshape the way we view Americaโs misfitsโthose tender hearts and tough cases so often left behind while struggling to learn to love themselves. Itโs an iconoclasm that comes easy for the former football player turned theater nerd, who makes it clear that you can revere rural life while rebuking its revanchist tendenciesโand celebrate urban inclusivity while bemoaning its performative radicalism.
But all this brainy folk-geek arcana buries the lede about Willi Carlisle: heโs one of the most dynamic live artists operating in America today. Last year, he was playing house shows and dive bars, admitting in a moving personal essay for No Depression that โdown and out is only a few mistakes away in this profession.โ
This year, heโs selling out midsize venues on a marathon two-month run, even as his concerts promise live-show fellowship and communalism. Ahead of his March 12 stop in Durham, INDY Week caught up with Willi Carlisle on the telephone one Friday afternoon in February as he prepared for his whirlwind tour.
INDY WEEK: How are you getting ready for the road, Willi? Youโve said you donโt like to take days off.
WILLI CARLISLE: Well, last night I was up all night. I have not yet gone to sleep. I was working on the next recordโIโm in the studio. Thereโs a song on it thatโs an epicโit might even be seven or eight minutes long. [Itโs] a bad man ballad thatโs a true story. We did some interviews, talked to some strangers, heard some gossip, and read a couple books about this marijuana moonshiner in rural Arkansas maybe 20 years ago. So yeah, I should be getting ready for tour, but you know what? Thatโs a form of getting ready. Weโll stuff our clothes into a bag right before we head out the door [laughs].
Thatโs a perfect example of how you interpret older folk traditions through a contemporary lens. Has that blend of the old and the new changed as youโve grown?
Thatโs a great question. Thank you for it. Me and my buddies used to just sing the Pete Seeger songbook cover to cover. I also used to just play old-time music, period. If it wasnโt old-time fiddle music, it was like, โWhat are you playing? What is this garbage Americana music?โ And then I started to play something closer to Americana a year, maybe two years, before Jason Isbell made Southeastern [in 2013]โbefore one of the other Americana booms we keep having.
So it has been really twisty, and the combination comes out differently every time. A lot of times it comes down to a right-hand or left-hand technique, or a chord voicing being more strictly traditional or more modern sounding. I try to do a little bit of both every time. There are always a few folk songs that Iโm obsessed with that find their way into the lexicon. If you sing โSkip to My Louโ 10,000 times, eventually youโre gonna write a song that goes, โDa da-da-da da-DUH.โ Iโve got my finger in the new and old as often as I can.
You can take melodies that feel so primitiveโlike, for instance, Clarence Ashleyโs 1929 version of โThe Coo Coo Bird,โ which you turned into โThe Cuckooโ on your 2018 album To Tell You the Truthโand make them sound so modern.
Iโm no Clarence Ashley. I remember the first time I heard the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music [originally released in 1952]. The social dance [record], you know, I really thought, โWhat is this garbage? Who could possibly listen to this?โ Especially the Cajun stuff that was on there. And now I canโt get enough. It really is funny how you get used to a melody, and then suddenly you begin to hear it everywhere. Even if itโs not a cover, [it] is the same modal scale or whatever.
How about your craft as a songwriter? You did get an MFA in poetry, so youโre probably used to the workshop model. How has that changed for you over the years?
Damn. Another good question. I do everything. I did poetry in school, [but] I donโt always love to give it as the byline. If somebody says, โGuy with grad degree in poetry decides to become a folk singer,โ thatโs a lie. I went to grad school for poetry because I wanted to be a folk singer and didnโt know what else to do. I did a lot of workshops. I also have had a commonplace book ever since I was maybe 14 [years old]. And itโs really messy. Iโve tried to switch online a little bit, to iPad and phone, but what it ends up being is handwritten journals, pocket journals, sticky notes.
A concise way to say this is that some songs take years to germinate based around random notes in commonplace books that eventually coalesce by accident around a melody. Or theyโre the intentional work of a few days or even just a few minutes of manic energy that occur unbiddenโthat we get lucky to have. I think Iโve done just about everything.
Some people do uppers, and some people go to the gym. I will take a walk, and then slug a whole pot of coffee, and then do too many push-ups, and then take a four-hour nap, and thenโฆ yeah. Just trying to keep myself interested. I tend to work on other hobbies, too. I fix accordions, and I like to read about things totally unrelated to folk music. Iโm very disorganized in that way.
Different types of inspiration probably emerge from those different experiences.
Yeah. Some of it has to be grit, too. You have to get in your own wayโand let other people get in your way. Which is to say, you need to be interrupted. There needs to be too little time [laughs]. It really helps when thereโs a deadline for me.
Letโs talk about performance style and stage confidence. You clearly know how to command an audience. How long did it take you to reach that pointโand how much self-doubt and uncertainty did you have to push through to get there?
My parents wanted me to go to business school because they said I had a line of shit a mile long and an inch deep. I was always doing the classic performer kid thing where you realize that if youโre funny or charming, you can get love. To tell the truth? Thatโs scary. Thatโs the part thatโs always been hard. It was way easier to write it down than to say it without rehearsing it.
So, for me right now, itโs just trying to stay surprised and stay interested. Stay off-balance so that the truth is still real, and itโs not just some truth-y shit that Iโve grown accustomed to saying. Actually be honest and maintain a purposeโa โwhyโ for being there. Usually, that โwhyโ is in search of excellent energy and maybe some equity and togetherness at its most hoity-toity.
I hope I donโt go on too long, but something thatโs really helped me is that I love vaudeville and silent films and clowns and stuff. I say this a lot, โI like clowns,โ and it gets written up because that seems surprising. But all humorists are interested in this kind of thing, and clowns reached me at the right time. [Thereโs] something about people that can make you laugh without saying anythingโsomething about being able to command an audience just by doing something stupid. And then also creating some deep pathos with that is really striking to me. Iโm informed by the calculated stupidity, I guess.

You toured a one-man folk operetta called โThere Ainโt No Moreโ to fringe festivals around the country, so youโre clearly not afraid of challenging people, either.
Iโm not afraid of that kind of thing. I like that I have theater in my blood and that Iโve worked on it a lot. Because in theater, you make a whole world, right? Sometimes in music, for whatever reason, we believe that just creating the sound is enough. And I like to build a whole damn thing. Thatโs what makes the truth real, if you try to bring the whole of yourself, right? Whew! I donโt know. Thatโs pretty heady. I donโt know if I believe that [laughs]. Iโll tell you what does scare me is performing for kids. They can tell instantaneously if it doesnโt have that slap or whatever. Iโm just trying to use kidsโ lingo.
Youโve admitted to code-switching for different audiences in different placesโsay, celebrating your rural Arkansas life when you play in New York or talking about climate justice and systemic racism when you play in small-town America. Will that continue as your tours and your audiences get bigger?
You know, I feel lucky that Iโve gotten to the point where I get some flak and that some people just want me to shut up. Iโm learning that some words are literally just so infuriating. Like, on one side, the word โAntifa,โ or, on the other side, โBlue lives matter.โ Iโm trying to lean away from being actively inflammatoryโunless Iโm making fun of the audience that Iโm front of in good faith.
We all are here to get along. I do think that thereโs a shitload of misunderstanding and that everybody has so much more in common than they have apart. Thatโs really common to say. Itโs often meme-ified. But when weโre talking about folk music, everybody has access to their historyโto a vernacular that theyโve been deprived of by the moneyed interests of corporations that want you to buy who you are instead of just being that thing.
Even leftist ideas about authenticity as coinciding with a form of identity politics are marketable norms that people want to establish in order to corner certain areas. Like a company that deals with Halliburton quite regularly will sponsor a Pride float, right? Or a queer festival thatโs hosted by Ticketmasterโbecause Ticketmasterโs partially owned by Saudi oil rigsโis also complicit in this shit. Which is to say thatโฆ Oh my God, like I said, I havenโt slept Nick, Iโm sorry.
It’s great, Willi, keep going!
When we get convinced that somebody is really against us, we can get our heckles up. I want our explorations of history to look with revision and revulsion and reverence at old things with an eye toward taking them on fully. Loving your grandfather and being like, โAnd he also said this,โ right? These reckonings that happen internallyโespecially if you can sing themโI personally find that healing, revealing, and wonderful. Itโs something that I want to be able to give to people.
So yeah, I will absolutely code switch. But thatโs because in New York City Iโve been at a poetry reading where somebody finds out Iโm from Arkansasโsomebody that would be incredibly offended at half of my jokesโand asks me if I fuck pigs or own shoes. Iโve also, oppositely, [heard], โYouโre a communist and Iโm surprised you donโt have blue hair.โ Thereโs just no reason for any of us to put up with any of that shit. I want to tease everybody about it. I find it really fun. Especially as a huge white guy, Iโm not afraid of anybody, and I donโt have to be. I want to use that as a superpower instead of a blind spot.
I wonder what kind of commentary youโd deliver on North Carolina, a Southern state where rural reverence, deep musical history, and rapid urbanization often rub shouldersโmany times at the same concert.
To start off, I owe a huge amount to a good number of incredible North Carolina traditional musicians. That goes as far back as the Harry Smith Anthology as well as to people who were kind to me like David Holt [host of the NC PBS series Folkways], who does a marvelous Fred Cockerham interpretation. North Carolina is also one of the only states besides Arkansas and Tennessee where I can find square dances with any regularityโwell, and Minnesota, oddly enough, and Louisiana.
As far as that mixture goes, it is wild as hell. In Asheville, for example, Iโve got somebody who accidentally saw Tyler Childers when he was just starting out in my audience, and it was that experience that got him hooked on Americana. And then thereโs somebody else there who comes up and says, โThis is our first concert in town.โ
One of the things that happens when gentrification occurs is that people start doing NIMBY-ism. They donโt want there to be a big public park and a bunch of public transportation directly on top of their apartment. Or public amenities change and nobody wants the homeless nearby. Or people continue to get displaced. Or God, in Raleigh, itโs like all these weird high-rises downtownโminiature downtowns springing up all over downtown, with only chain [restaurants].
A beautiful thing about North Carolina is that all the venues are old. Going to a concert that isnโt at an arena, youโre getting a cross-section of interested and interesting people. It is one of the placesโitโs taken me a while to get here, and I apologize for thatโwhere there actually is, quite naturally, a plurality of people. Whereas playing in San Francisco, not a single person there was in an income bracket that I can understand [laughs]. I actually feel like I can be myself in North Carolina.
Itโs the same show as I do at home in Arkansas. I donโt have to do that code switch really hard. Honestly, I would live in the Triangleโor just outside the Triangle, โcause I couldnโt afford to live in itโif I wasnโt already in a very quickly gentrifying Southern area on the outskirts of town where I am in Northwest Arkansas.
Tatiana Hargreaves is one of your labelmates on Free Dirt Records. Do you know her well?
She is just about the best. I do not know a better fiddle player. My favorite record last year was Mamaโs Brokeโs Narrow Line, but only because theyโre political punks in didactic ways that Allison [de Groot] and Tatiana donโt have to be. Theyโre just doing it rhetorically with a whole style of music. I mean, the things that theyโre doing, Iโm blown away. Theyโre so good. And Tatiana is becoming a librarian and an archivist! What bigger gift could you give with your ability to know hundreds of fiddle tunes and play them perfectly than work at a library and help people find stuff?
What gift do you hope to bestow on the next generation of folk musicians who may look to you for that kind of inspiration? Especially as 2023 really feels like a pivotal year for the development of your career. How are you dealing with that, and how have your future plans changed because of it?
The growing pains for me have been real. I canโt always respond to every message. I was so proud for years that I got back to every email. Iโm changing gears instead. If I canโt respond to every email, what I can do is a pay-what-you-can songbook so that anybody who really wants to learn the songs can. Iโm making zines to sell at shows because I want to be able to talk to people more. It used to [be I] was just trying to write to get something off my chest. Now I feel like I get to do it because I can be of service to people, and thatโs a huge honor. Thatโs what makes me hungry.
The growing pains also have to do with the BS, which is that every person in the industry that isnโt literally an artist is a parasite. It can get exhausting working around that. Iโm very lucky. I have managers now, and Iโve even waited for them to do somethingโto make a comment about a piece of my work and see if their guiding hand comes in. See if the hand of the market just sort of accidentally falls into this batch of songs. And theyโve literally been like, โWhat are you doing? Why are you waiting for us to say something?โ Thereโve been green flags, but that doesnโt mean that the red flags wonโt emerge. I should answer your question, Nick, and Iโll stop apologizingโthatโs my way of apologizing without doing it.
But to answer your question directly, in the next couple of years, I want to make a couple more records. The next one is going to be darker and, I think, more intense. More heavily in the direction of folk music with a capital F. Then I hope to follow that up with a record that is more country with a capital C, then Americana with a capital A. I want to continue to be a shapeshifter. I want to keep keeping it weird. I want to make music that people have to actually engage withโnot something thatโs just catchy. Which I know limits your audience immediately. And thatโs OK.
I want to build community. I got to see this [touring] with Amigo the Devil, where heโs got a room full of people saying, โWe are absolutely not all in a cult together.โ I watched people use this as a backbone to their social lives thatโs one of those third places that we keep getting divested of in late capitalism. You gotta spend $3.50 to be at the Starbucks so youโre not at home or at work, but you also can go to this thing for a modest ticket price and have it really be a mixer for new friends and family.
Seeing that done practically, thatโs the thing Iโd like to build the mostโand try to have it be based around compassion and mutual aid. I hope I can figure that aspect out. Who knows? It may just be that Iโm alienating the general public. Weโll see.
Is there a folk tradition youโve dabbled in where you thought, โI just canโt master this oneโ?
Oh Lord, God. So many. I cannot play Swedish music with any facility, especially on the fiddle. On the button box, I find it very difficult, too. I really love conjunto and norteรฑo, but I donโt have the chops, and my language skills are too poor to really interpret it. Iโm working on it, but itโs the kind of problem that a Cajun performer whoโs never been to Louisiana has. And I want to rectify it with visits.
The way that I learn is by apprenticeship, so thereโs lots of traditions that I have an interest in that I havenโt undertaken practical apprenticeships in so that my knowledge feels deep enough to be comfortable. Iโm just now, for example, like, โOoh, Round Peak fiddling!โ [from Mt. Airy, NC]. Because for years I was like, โI am interested in Southern Missouri and Boston Mountain string band music,โ right? Keeping it hyper-local or focusing on one player or one mentor. I also donโt really understand contra dancing. A lot of people find that really easy. I like square dances, not contra dances.
โEste Mundoโ is a pretty good take on conjunto. I feel like weโll one day hear Willi Carlisleโs full conjunto albumโwith a capital C.
That would be so cool! That really is a dream. Itโs what I listen to at home, honestly. Iโm too crazy about it. You get me on a diatribe and weโll never stop.
As an interviewer, I wouldnโt mind that. One last question, about identity. Youโve been vocal about creating a more inclusive space for people traditionally excluded from folk and country music. But youโve also said, โI donโt enjoy saying Iโm queer in public other than to show others that it can be normal.โ Given the opportunity, how would you define yourself today?
A friend of mine interviewed Ramblinโ Jack Elliott a bunch, and he said, โIโm a bullshit artist.โ Iโm comfortable writing down โbullshit artist,โ then crossing it out and writing โfolk singerโ above it. Thatโs where I hope to leave it. Thatโs what I hope ends up on my tombstone.
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