Lamar Williams
Lamar Williams (January 14, 1949 – January 21, 1983) was an American musician best known for serving as the bassist of The Allman Brothers Band (1972–1976) and Sea Level (1976–1980).
Lamar Williams | |
---|---|
Born | Gulfport, Mississippi , U.S. | January 14, 1949
Died | January 21, 1983 34) Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged
Genres | Rock, Jam, Alternative rock, Southern rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Bass guitar |
Years active | 1972 - 1983 |
Associated acts | Sounds of Soul The Allman Brothers Band Sea Level Wayne Sharp and The Sharpshooter Band |
Early years
Williams was born in Gulfport, Mississippi, and grew up in nearby Handsboro, Mississippi.[1] He also spent time in Newton, Mississippi.[2] A self-taught musician, he was attracted to the bass lines in songs and so sought to master that instrument.[2] Beginning at age 14 he played with Deep South, a gospel music group that his father sang with.[2]
Around 1965 he met drummer Jai Johanny Johanson (later to be known as Jaimoe) in high school and began played in bands with him.[2] They played in a number of groups along the Gulf Coast, the most known of which was George Woods' Sounds of Soul[1] with whom Williams played from 1965 to 1967.[2] Williams was influenced by bassists from James Jamerson in R&B to Stanley Clarke in jazz,[2] and in turn Williams' R&B playing helped Jaimoe gain a better understanding of how to play the bass drum and where to place the beat.[3]
Military service
In 1968, Williams was drafted into the United States Army.[4] Initially he was assigned to a Special Services band,[4] which performed for Army basic training recruits, for non-commissioned officers' clubs, and for local townspeople.[2] They played material from many different genres, including country and western and ragtime.[2] Williams later reflected that it had been an interesting time musically and that, "I think it's important to have perspectives on different types of music and not let yourself get into a rut by playing only one style. I like to keep track of all of it."[2]
Williams was then shipped overseas to South Vietnam, during the Vietnam War.[4] He was opposed to this war in particular and was a pacifist who was opposed to killing in general.[4][5] According to Willie Perkins, the Allmans' road manager, "one day when his unit took a column left, Lamar took a column right into the countryside."[5] According to author Scott Freeman, who wrote a history of the Allman Brothers Band, Williams related that he went AWOL as soon as he arrived at an airbase in South Vietnam, running between two barracks and into the jungle.[4] He wandered around the countryside for several months, occasionally joining a new unit and giving a story that he had become separated from his previous unit.[4] Williams' story continued that he was arrested at one point but got free, and then after that, several black members of the Military Police let him know whenever the MPs were getting close to finding him again.[4]
Williams was given an honorable discharge in 1970[4] with the rank of private.[6] He went through a period of formal "processing out" of the Army and then adjusted to civilian life, including letting his hair grow longer.[7] He jammed with a Biloxi group known as the Fungus Blues Band.
Musical career
The Allman Brothers
By then The Allman Brothers Band had achieved significant success, with Jaimoe as one of their drummers, but had just suffered the death of original bassist Berry Oakley. Brought in based upon the Jaimoe connection, Williams was one of several possible replacements that group tried out.[3] During the Williams audition, the band's other drummer, Butch Trucks, suddenly declared after three songs, "Enough of this tryout shit, let's rehearse." Williams thus joined the Allmans in late 1972.
Although rooted in the contrapuntal fluidity of Jamerson's style, Williams' style was more traditional than Oakley's lead guitar-like approach, freeing the band's drummers to be more adventurous.[8][3][9] The Allmans found the peak of their commercial success during this time period. Williams played on most of the tracks on the group's best-selling album, 1973's Brothers and Sisters, and was with them as they played arenas and stadiums on tour and performed before 600,000 fans at the Summer Jam at Watkins Glen.
Williams, like the other new member, pianist Chuck Leavell, was a salaried employee of the corporation formed by the surviving four members of the group.[10] The group did not handle fame well and began to disintegrate in the mid-1970s. During this period, Leavell, Williams, and Jaimoe felt a tight bond with each other, while Trucks, Gregg Allman, and Dickey Betts went their own ways.[11]
When the Allman Brothers Band reformed in the late 1970s, consideration was given to Leavell and Williams returning, but the two wanted to keep Sea Level going rather than give a full-time commitment to the Allmans and so they declined.[12]
Sea Level
After the Allmans dissolved in 1976, Williams founded Sea Level with Johanson and Leavell of the Allmans.[13] In Sea Level he played in a looser, jazzier fashion. Sea Level became moderately successful.[14]
Williams left Sea Level in 1980, shortly before that band broke up.[15][16]
Wayne Sharp and The Sharpshooter Band
Soon after, Jaimoe and Lamar were asked to join longtime friend from Mississippi, Wayne Sharp and his band, The SharpShooter Band, in California. The SharpShooter Band went into the studio and then went on tour. Lamar became ill while touring. In January 1983, Lamar died, and the band went on hold.[17][18][19]
Personal life and family
Williams married Marian Belina in 1974 and they had two children.
One child, Lamar Williams, Jr., is also a musician and currently plays with the Athens, Georgia-based band The Revival. From 2015 to 2017, he also performed with several Allman Brothers alumni, including Johanson, Trucks, percussionist Marc Quiñones and bassist Oteil Burbridge, as a vocalist in Les Brers. The short-lived band (envisioned as a continuation of the Allman Brothers Band's stylistic approach) fulfilled its final engagement in August 2017 following Trucks' death in January of that year.
One of Williams' brothers, James Williams, is also a bassist. He is a founding member of the Lansing, Michigan-based blues band Root Doctor.[20][21]
Illness and death
Williams was found to have lung cancer in 1981. His doctors believed that the disease was derived from exposure to Agent Orange during his Vietnam service.[14] He had extensive surgery and underwent chemotherapy.[14] He spent much of his final year at Veterans Affairs medical facilities in the Los Angeles area.[22][14]
He died less than two years later, seven days after his 34th birthday, on January 21, 1983 in Los Angeles.[22] Funeral services were held back in Gulfport.[14] He is buried in Biloxi National Cemetery in Biloxi, Mississippi.[6]
The non-profit Lamar Williams Foundation For Agent Orange Research was established after his death, with monies from some benefit concerts in 1985 and 1986 going to it and other Vietnam War related organizations.[23][24] The foundation was subsequently merged into the larger Welcome Home, Inc. organization, which was concerned with a variety of challenges facing Vietnam veterans.
In 2015, the Mississippi Blues Trail placed a historical marker titled "Gulfport Boogie" to honor Jaimoe, Williams, and others from the immediate area who had left their mark on the American musical landscape.[1]
Discography
- The Allman Brothers Band
- Brothers and Sisters (1973) tracks 3–7
- Win, Lose or Draw (1975)
- Wipe the Windows, Check the Oil, Dollar Gas (1976)
- Sea Level
- Sea Level (1977)
- Cats on the Coast (1977)
- On the Edge (1978)
- Long Walk on a Short Pier (1979)
- Ball Room (1980)
References
- Leggett-Brown, Karrie (January 9, 2015). "Mississippi Blues Trail to unveil marker honoring Gulfport musicians". Laurel, Mississippi: WDAM. Visit Mississippi.
- Schwartz, Jim (January 1980). "Sea Level: Rock, Funk, and Blues from the South". Guitar Player.
- One Way Out: The Inside History of the Allman Brothers Band, By Alan Paul - pages 199–200
- Freeman, Scott (1996). Midnight Riders: The Story of the Allman Brothers Band. Little, Brown and Company. p. 144. ISBN 978-0316294522.
- No Saints, No Saviors: My Years with the Allman Brothers Band, By Willie Perkins - Page 82
- "Nationwide Gravesite Locator » Search Results » 1. Williams, Lamar". U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Retrieved August 16, 2020.
- Monroe, David (Spring 2014). "Rock Doc: Dr. Craig Clark". Leflore Illustrated. Greenwood, Mississippi. pp. 28–29 – via Newspapers.com.
- Bman's Blues Library - A tribute to Lamar Williams
- No Saints, No Saviors: My Years with the Allman Brothers Band, By Willie Perkins - Page 82 21 A New Beginning
- Perkins, No Saints, No Saviors, p. 83.
- Perkins, No Saints, No Saviors, p. 86.
- Perkins, No Saints, No Saviors, p. 130.
- The Artificial Southerner: Equivocations and Love Songs, By Philip Martin - Page 77
- "Bass Guitarist Lamar Williams Dies of Cancer". The Press Democrat. Santa Rosa, California. Associated Press. January 27, 1983. p. 15A – via Newspapers.com.
- Bman's Blues Library - A tribute to Lamar Williams
- The Shed Barebeque & Blues Joint - Bands, Wayne Sharp and The Sharpshooter Band
- The Allman Brothers Band Website - Family Tree
- Jaimoe
- The Shed Barebeque & Blues Joint - Bands, Wayne Sharp and The Sharpshooter Band
- All About Jazz, October 15, 2008 - Greg Nagy: Our Time Has Come - By David King
- Insurgentcountry.net - Root Doctor featuring Freddie Cunningham, 'New Attitude' by Johanna B. Bodde
- Kaye, Roger (February 9, 1983). "Ex-Allmans Bassist Dies". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. p. 7D – via Newspapers.com.
- Rogers, Bill. "Country-rock concerts OK'd at regional park". The San Bernardino County Sun. p. B-1 – via Newspapers.com.
- Kirby, Kip (February 22, 1986). "Nashville Scene" (PDF). Billboard. p. 48.
External links
- Lamar Williams Biography. Interview by Jim Schwartz in Guitar Player 1980 in www.allmanbrothersband.com
- Lamar Williams Tribute - Out Of The Shadows by John Lynskey in www.allmanbrothersband.com
- Rootdoctorband.com
- Findagrave.com memorial page