The Wilhelms
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The Wilhelms

St. Louis, Missouri, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2013 | SELF

St. Louis, Missouri, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 2013
Duo Folk Singer/Songwriter

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"the Wilhelms are an acoustic duo with a penchant for solid songwriting, intertwining strings and soaring harmonies."

A side project of John Wendland and Andy Ploof of Rough Shop, the Wilhelms are an acoustic duo with a penchant for solid songwriting, intertwining strings and soaring harmonies.
At a glance, the Wilhelms appear to be a simplistic entity: two men playing two instruments, and singing. Only when you really start to listen does it becomes obvious that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Those familiar with Rough Shop will find the same level of musicianship in the Wilhelms.
The stripped-down arrangements show off just how well Wendland and Ploof are able to weave their voices and instrumentation into songs with unique flare. If you think folk music is bland and boring, give the Wilhelms a listen and see if they can't change your tune.
- KDHX-FM


""Far Past the Outskirts" is a laid-back collection of songs that are equal parts country, pop, rock and folk."

"Far Past the Outskirts" is a laid-back collection of songs that are equal parts country, pop, rock and folk. Its 12 tracks emit a kind of Grateful Dead vibe, but the hook-filled tunes and literate lyrics are totally original. Add wonderful playing, and you have a CD that gets better with each listen…Dahm's organ washes and solos add soul and gospel colors to the band's canvas of guitars, mandolins and dobros, especially on the gender-ambiguous "I'm Your Man" …With multiple multi-instrumentalists and singers, Rough Shop is a formidable talent collective that deserves the chance to make a very loud noise. – St Louis Post-Dispatch - St Louis Post Dispatch


"Best of St. Louis, Best Songwriter: Andy Ploof and John Wendland"

When you write for a group of impeccable players fronted by an overpowering singer, you're lucky anyone notices your songs at all. The now-defunct One Fell Swoop wasn't one of St. Louis' best bands because they could pick and sing. They had songs in spades, the kind that stand with the best of our better-known roots-oriented writers. Together Andy Ploof and John Wendland wrote tunes like "Broke Down," "Evening Stranger," "Black Ice" and "Sweet Relief" -- in other words, much of the band's finest material. One Fell Swoop may be no more, but Ploof and Wendland continue to craft careful, wise, even classic songs that finger the edgy line between country, folk and great American rock. ~ Riverfront Times
- The Riverfront TImes


"Best of St. Louis, Best Songwriter: Andy Ploof and John Wendland"

When you write for a group of impeccable players fronted by an overpowering singer, you're lucky anyone notices your songs at all. The now-defunct One Fell Swoop wasn't one of St. Louis' best bands because they could pick and sing. They had songs in spades, the kind that stand with the best of our better-known roots-oriented writers. Together Andy Ploof and John Wendland wrote tunes like "Broke Down," "Evening Stranger," "Black Ice" and "Sweet Relief" -- in other words, much of the band's finest material. One Fell Swoop may be no more, but Ploof and Wendland continue to craft careful, wise, even classic songs that finger the edgy line between country, folk and great American rock. ~ Riverfront Times
- The Riverfront TImes


"The Wilhelms Film at 11: We're Lucky to Listen In"

The appearance of the otherwise unheralded debut by the Wilhelms through my transom was something a surprise. It's not as if the duo's members, Andy Ploof and John Wendland, have lacked an outlet for their collaborations. First in One Fell Swoop and later in the still-active Rough Shop, Ploof and Wendland have traded songs, stories and guitar licks for more than a decade.

You'd be hard-pressed to find two men more entrenched in American songcraft; listen to Wendland's Memphis to Manchester on KDHX (88.1 FM) for a three-hour education each Thursday, or stop in for a clawhammer banjo class at Ploof's Music Folk shop in Webster Groves. But in the years since Rough Shop has swelled to a working quintet and taken on elements of electric roots and soul music, these songwriters haven't lost their love of acoustic folk music. Film at 11 is an unfussy, stripped-down affair made for two voices and two guitars. Both men, firmly rooted in middle age and not pretending otherwise, sing about the past with some hard-won wisdom instead of mawkish nostalgia.

Film at 11 will be available digitally, but it's worth buying the CD if only for the liner notes, in which Wendland and Ploof offer insight into each song's genesis or influence (Dana Smith's cover painting and Nate Burrell's band photo round out a smartly designed package). You won't need to read that Wendland was inspired by Neil Young once "Mr. DJ" starts -- that lyrical harmonica line is a good enough wink -- but it serves as an apt mission statement for this project. The song yearns for a kind of musical honesty, a warts-and-all approach that takes human imperfection as a working definition for "soul music."

That thread is picked up with the closing track, "St. Louis Song," which celebrates Wendland's adopted hometown by taking the refined and the seedy in the same view. As on Rough Shop's LPs, Ploof sings a little lower, a little slower and plumbs deeper recesses of the heart. This simple setup is all the backing he needs for the emotional rawness of "Clean Slate," with Wendland's harmonies tucked in behind Ploof's resonant vocals. Tracks like these, alongside covers by T-Bone Burnett, Norman Blake and St. Louis legend John Hartford, help make the album sound less like a statement and more like two old friends passing songs back and forth. We're lucky enough to listen in.
- The Riverfront TImes


"The Wilhelms' New Album Showcases Their Musical Chemistry"

John Wendland and Andy Ploof have never lacked for an outlet to share their music together. The men, both singers and guitarists, played together in One Fell Swoop in the mid-'90s before joining with bassist and singer Anne Tkach to form the core of Rough Shop. That the band has weathered the tragedy of Tkach's sudden passing in 2015 — a new album is said to be in the offing — is further proof of the pair's musical bond. In the interim, Wendland and Ploof stay busy with their acoustic duo the Wilhelms, whose sophomore album Contortionist Blues was released this month.

In the mezzanine of the Tick Tock Tavern, the musicians muse on the distinctions between their two active bands and what playing as a duo affords them.

"I think some songs lend themselves better to full-band arrangements," says Wendland. "We tend to do those with Rough Shop. But I love a lot of stripped-down, more intimate-sounding stuff, and to me that works really well with this."

"We were at a point with the band where it just seemed harder to get everyone together," says Ploof. "We wanted to play a fair amount still, so we thought, 'Well, it's gonna be a lot easier to get fewer people together and agree to practice and agree to certain dates to play shows.'"

Ploof continues, "It was fun to focus on the acoustic duo now, and since we're songwriters, it's fun to really focus on the songs."

Of those songs on Blues, many show the intricate craft of top-shelf folk music, with finely wrought lyrical detail and sturdy, unfussy acoustic guitar work. When asked to pick their favorite new song written by the other, both men demure slightly.

"Oh man, that's really making it rough," Wendland laughs. "But maybe 'Falling Down Drunk.' That song works so well with a full band, and it works so great stripped down, and it's just narrowed down to the basics and it just really gets across. I don't see a lot of other bands playing stuff like that."

The song rides on a gentle, loping waltz and finds Ploof putting his weathered, husky voice in the guise of a man stumbling through his steps from both too much alcohol and a conflicted conviction. In talking about "Falling Down Drunk," Ploof gives insight to his songwriting process. "I had the melody for a long, long time, and then the title just worked with the song," he says. "From there, the idea of somebody trying to screw up his courage to get something done came about. I have a hard time writing words; I often think, 'OK, do I have enough for a song? Good! I'm out. I'm not writing anymore.'"

For his selection, Ploof gives credit to Wendland's "$500 Funeral," a funny and surreal story-song about sending a loved one to his final reward — on a budget. Ploof calls it a "really good, detailed story laid out in a song form," and Wendland cops that his inspiration came squarely from the Gram Parsons song "$1000 Wedding."

"If he can write a song about a thousand-dollar wedding, I can write a song about a $500 funeral," says Wendland. "That's how I started writing it, simple as that."

Wendland's song is played mostly for laughs, but the track underscores a sense of loss that permeates many of these songs. The album closes with "Meet Me on the Southside," a tribute to the late Bob Reuter, a revered DJ, songwriter and photographer. Granite City native Michael Friedman wrote the lyrics and Wendland provided the music.

"Our relationship with Bob Reuter goes back a long way," Wendland says. "When I first moved here we'd start going to guitar circles hosted by [KDHX DJ and RFT contributor] Roy Kasten. That's where I met a lot of songwriters, including Bob Reuter and Michael Friedman.

"He was a rather prickly character, but I always got along with him really well," Wendland says of Reuter.

The album's most striking song is also Wendland's most personal. "Best Spent Time" is a tribute to his late wife Marie Arsenault, and Wendland wrote it in the month between her passing in August 2016 and her memorial service a month later.

Through the grief, Wendland recalls that the music, a binding force in their relationship, provided some solace.

"It just so happened that Andy and I were supposed to be playing the night before the memorial," he says. "We just decided to do it because she was such a music fan and used to book bands for a living.

"I wrote it pretty quickly," Wendland says. "I had the melody, part of it, already, but once I had a melody in mind it just poured out. It's a hard song to do because you want to do justice to the song, but you're trying not to think too much about what you're singing. You gotta try to disassociate yourself slightly to get through the damn song.

"I wouldn't change a thing about that song, from a lyrics standpoint," Wendland concludes. "Not a thing." - Riverfront Times


Discography

"Contortionist Blues", The Wilhelms, Perdition Records, Release date: June 15, 2018 Fourteen original songs. One Townes Van Zandt cover. Recorded by Gary Gordon. Mastered by Brad Sarno. Songs of love and longing, drinking and desire, poetry and politics, hard dogs and harder truths.   

"Lit Up Like a Christmas Tree", Rough Shop  (2014)
Limited edition vinyl and CD. Thirteen holiday songs, some original, some covers, all played with seasonal soul.

"Film At 11", The Wilhelms, Perdition Records, Released October 5, 2013
Produced by The Wilhelms and Recorded by Gary Gordon
13 Tracks, acoustic duo

Beneath the South Side Bridge, Rough Shop (2012)
Limited edition vinyl and CD. Rock, soul, pop and Americana, across 12 original songs.

Just Because It Was Christmas, Rough Shop (2009)
11 tracks, featuring 8 original songs and 3 covers of Dolly Parton, Alan Sparhawk and Paul Kelly.

Here Today, Rough Shop (2008)
12 original songs, featuring the Rough Shop Trio in an acoustic style

Far Past the Outskirts, Rough Shop (2006)
12 track debut featuring the original electric Rough Shop lineup

Destination Anywhere, Rough Shop (2006)
Limited Edition EP

Photos

Bio

The Wilhelms are Andy Ploof and John Wendland. They are also members of Rough Shop and the late One Fell Swoop, two of St. Louis most celebrated Americana bands. A new book "St. Louis Sound: An Illustrated Timeline" written by Steve Pick and Amanda Doyle has just been published in 2019 which explores the rich heritage and history of St. Louis music. The two songwriters who make up the Wilhelms are the principal songwriters of one band featured in the book - Rough Shop. Both songwriters have been part of the St. Louis Music scene since the nineties and have toured Europe numerous times - most recently in October, 2018.  

The Wilhelms sophomore release, Contortionist Blues, was released in 2018 on Perdition Records. Fourteen original songs. One Townes Van Zandt cover. Recorded by Gary Gordon. Mastered by Brad Sarno. Songs of love and longing, drinking and desire, poetry and politics, hard dogs and harder truths.

The debut album by the Wilhelms, Film at 11, was released by Perdition Records in 2013 and was recorded by Gary Gordon. Ten original songs and three covers by Norman Blake, T-Bone Burnett, and John Hartford.

In their brief time performing as a duo, The Wilhelms have opened for acoustic acts such Slaid Cleaves, Gurf Morlix, Tim Easton, Butch Hancock, and Chuck Mead. 

Andy Ploof and John Wendland have played Farm Aid, SXSW, CMJ, and toured Europe several times (as part of Rough Shop), and showcased at Folk Alliance and toured Europe (as part of Rough Shop).

The Riverfront Times has heralded Ploof and Wendland as among the "Best Songwriters in St. Louis" and "Best Americana/Folk Act."

They received an A List Award from St Louis Magazine for best Established Music Act

“Contortionist Blues”

There are no Wilhelms in the Wilhelms, just a Ploof (Andy) and a Wendland (John). For better than 25 years, these two gentlemen have been making music together, and their partnership has weathered many twists and turns. For their second album, “Contortionist Blues,” the Wilhelms offer up fifteen well-crafted songs of love, of death, of sorrow, and of hope.

The Wilhelms is their acoustic duo – if they feel like giving a song a bigger, electric arrangement, they turn it over to the five-piece band Rough Shop. But here, it’s just Andy and John, taking turns singing lead and offering supportive harmonies. John plays rhythm guitar, the occasional mandolin, and some plaintive harmonica. Andy plays the lead parts on guitar, dobro, and mandolin. There is one guest appearance by Roberta Gordon on backing vocals.

Ploof and Wendland met in 1993, when the latter moved to St. Louis for his full-time job. Their mutual love of folk music forms led them perform together in the band One Fell Swoop, which built an international fan base until it broke up around the turn of the century. Rough Shop followed and continues to perform and record (notably some of the best original holiday music around). The Wilhelms project, however, gives these two friends a chance to gig more often and to prove that their songwriting stands up in simpler arrangements. In 2013, they released “Film At 11,” their debut duo album.

“Contortionist Blues” is more of what made the first Wilhelms record so good. Ploof originals such as “Galloping Gertie,” about the poorly built and ultimately ill-fated Tacoma Narrows Bridge, or “Satan Won’t You Go,” a witty look at the tired nature of evil, or “Falling Down Drunk,” a beautiful and sad tale of failure, are musical examples of packing entire short stories into just a few words and expressive melodies. Wendland alternates between hilarious tales of what can be purchased in a “Five-Hundred Dollar Funeral” and insightful looks at the ways men and women can misunderstand each other in “Came Out of Nowhere.” He also pays tribute to his late wife Marie in the stunning “Best Spent Time.”

Long-time friend Michael Friedman contributes some co-writes with Wendland, as well. “Hard Dog to Keep on the Porch” is among the catchiest songs on the record, while “Meet Me on the South Side” captures the spirit of the singer/songwriter/ photographer Bob Reuter who passed away a few years ago. Friedman and local writer Roy Kasten co-wrote the lovely “Simple Gifts.” Ploof sings a gorgeous version of the Townes Van Zandt song “Snowin’ On Raton.”

Andy Ploof has a lilting tenor voice, and John Wendland sings with a rhythmic playfulness that provides distinctive contrasts as the album goes on. The melodies are not overly complex, but they are all capable of moving the listener, and most of these songs have choruses designed to instill the urge to sing along, and keep you thinking and feeling all the while.

There is not a moment on this album without grace or humor or truth in it. That’s the Wilhelms’ stock-in-trade.

—Steve Pick


Band Members