http://www.chireader.com/hitsville/990319.html
Peter Margasak
March 19, 1999
Nashville Calling

    The third Chicago appearance by Hank Williams III--the grandson of
Hank Williams and the son of Hank Jr.--which was slated for March 6 at
Lounge Ax, was a pretty hot ticket. The Reader and the Tribune ran
positive previews, and Rolling Stone had just published a splashy
five-page spread on the 26-year-old, who doesn't even have his own
record out yet. But Williams was a no-show.

    Two days before the show, he'd been summoned to the offices of his
Nashville record label, Curb, ostensibly to discuss artwork for his
upcoming debut album. But when he arrived, he was greeted by his parents
(who are divorced), producer and A and R man Chuck Howard, and an
ex-girlfriend, who teamed up to persuade him that he needed to enter
drug rehab. By Saturday he was in a Los Angeles treatment center that
he'd later describe to his bassist of five years, Jason Brown, as "a
cross between rehab and jail" where he had to scrub toilets and mop
floors. Last Saturday, March 13, he walked out, called Brown, who
happened to be visiting family in LA, and returned to Nashville, where
on Monday he checked into a two-week treatment program.

    It's hardly news anymore when a musician or an actor shows up in
rehab to get off heroin or cocaine. But by all accounts the only
substance Williams indulged in consistently was marijuana. According to
Maureen Herman, the former Chicagoan and ex-Babes in Toyland bassist who
now works for Williams as a publicist and booking agent, the
intervention was less about substance abuse than about "a clash between
two worlds: Nashville versus indie rock."

She says Williams, who used to play drums in a rock band called Buzzkill
and whose current stripped-down honky-tonk style is more No Depression
than contemporary country, is interested in entering the mainstream
through the alternative-country market. But Curb, a label in the belly
of the beast known as Music Row, has other plans. According to Herman,
Curb wants to market Williams through the Nashville machine, booking him
into traditional country venues and angling for a hit on country radio. 

Curb signed Williams in 1996, and the same year released Three Hanks:
Men With Broken Hearts, an exceedingly tacky album on which all three
Hank Williamses sang together through the miracle of modern technology.
Hank III recorded his own album in early 1997 but it still hasn't shown
up on the label's release schedule. In the Rolling Stone profile, by
Mark Binelli, he drank till six in the morning and talked about swinging
by his weed dealer's house, bragged about making a porn video with a
girlfriend, and admitted that he'd turned to country music to chip away
at mounting child-support costs. (Herman explains that he has two
children out of wedlock.) And he told Binelli that the record he made
for Curb "sucks." Brown speculates that the intervention was in part
intended "to do damage control for the article."

Merle Kilgore, Hank Jr.'s personal manager, told me, "He's in rehab and
we're very happy he decided to go. He's a strong-headed kid, always has
been, and he decided, Well, I guess you're right, I need help, I guess.
They convinced him he really did need help. That article in Rolling
Stone, Christ! We hadn't even read that, but we knew that stuff was
happening. . . . We saw his health just completely disappearing. God, he
looked awful. He looked just like a skeleton."

When I asked Kilgore--who also happens to be the guy who wrote Johnny
Cash's "Ring of Fire"--what Hank Jr. thought of his son's music, he
paused and said, "Well, we haven't heard his music. I think he's getting
the syndrome of his grandfather. Every country star goes through the
Hank Williams syndrome: I've gotta get on drugs, I've got to get messed
up so I can be like Hank Williams. The problem is that if you die and
become a legend you don't get to enjoy it and then everybody fights over
the estate."

Hank III's mother, Gwen Williams, didn't return several phone calls.
Hank III himself confirmed that he'd been in treatment in LA and that he
was heading into the program in Nashville, but declined to comment
further.

But Brown and Herman say Williams doesn't have a big problem with pot,
that he was naively exaggerating for the Rolling Stone reporter. And Bob
Campbell-Smith--Howard's head engineer and, more significant, the person
who actually called Williams to get him to come to Curb's offices--says,
somewhat ambiguously, "It's not like he has a serious drug problem. He
has decided, along with his family, that it's now or never."

Williams did enter treatment voluntarily, according to everyone I spoke
with, but he told Brown that he was under intense pressure. "They needed
him to make a decision very fast or they weren't going to back the
album," says Brown. "He was very upset about missing the Chicago gig,
and he pushed to enter rehab after playing there, but they gave him half
an hour to make up his mind."

In fact Williams had to cancel a seven-day tour to enter rehab, but
Brown says the Chicago show was particularly important to him. Not only
does the city have a thriving alt-country scene, but local booking agent
Boche Viecelli--who also handles the Jesus Lizard, Freakwater, and the
Jon Spencer Blues Explosion--was supposed to come to the gig to see if
Williams was right for his roster.

"When we first played in Chicago we played in front of people who were
our age, who like rock 'n' roll and punk rock and different kinds of
music that we like," Brown says. "The feedback we got from them was
exhilarating.  Hank likes performing, but he feels like he's missing his
time with his own people." 

Brown says that when Williams finishes his treatment in Nashville, "he
wants to sit everyone down at one table and tell them to stop messing
with our business."

Postscripts

  Jesus Lizard guitarist Duane Denison was set to back Williams on the
tour that was canceled. 
  The Improvised Music Workshop, currently curated by Michael Colligan
and held every Monday night at Myopic Books, celebrates its fifth
anniversary on Monday with performances by the quartet of Colligan,
Kevin Drumm, Liz Payne, and Josh Abrams; the duo of Jeb Bishop and Helen
Mirra; and a third act to be announced. The free series has been a
crucial incubator for Chicago's thriving improv scene. 

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