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Willie Nile is a veteran rock & roll singer and songwriter who emerged from New York's Lower East Side during the late '70s with poignant, rousing, energetic songs that were at once literate and passionate. When his self-titled debut album appeared in 1980, and especially its lead single, "Vagabond Moon,"
Nile's frenetic, rootsy attack drew comparisons to everyone from
Bob Dylan and
Bruce Springsteen to
Tom Petty and
John Mellencamp, but he carved out an identity of his own with a passionate stage attack that combined the urgency and energy of punk rock with the polish and finesse of classic rock's best writers. After a similarly celebrated sophomore outing, Golden Down, in 1981,
Nile struggled at the hands of the music business and was forced to take a performance and recording sabbatical for nearly a decade. When he did re-emerge with 1991's
Places I Have Never Been, it was celebrated as his best work to date. While he released few albums during the remainder of the century, he toured, played larger and larger rooms, and wrote constantly. When he returned to recording with 2006's
Streets of New York, it ushered in a period of prolific activity that made up for lost time; he has issued at least an album a year since that time, including 2013's
American Ride and 2014's
If I Was a River, mature music with his passion and pathos intact.
Willie Nile was born in Buffalo, New York on June 7, 1948 into a musical family -- his grandfather was a vaudeville pianist who played with
Bill "Bojangles" Robinson and
Eddie Cantor, and his uncles played boogie woogie.
Nile's older brothers, meanwhile, brought home the music of
Elvis Presley,
the Everly Brothers,
Buddy Holly, and
Fats Domino, all of whom he heard from the time when he was three or four years old.
Nile himself began playing piano at age eight and took classical music lessons until he was a teenager, when he taught himself his first rock & roll song. He soon began to compose short songs and continued the habit into his college years, when during the summers he made trips into New York City to frequent hootenanny clubs like Folk City and the Gaslight. After graduation,
Nile took an apartment in the heart of Greenwich Village; however, during his first winter in New York, he contracted pneumonia, which put him out of commission for about a year, although he continued writing songs while recuperating. After regaining his health, he began hanging out at clubs like CBGB, where he would see acts like
Patti Smith,
Television,
the Ramones, and
Talking Heads.
Upon establishing a residency at the Village club Kenny's Castaways,
Nile began drawing ever-growing crowds, which in turn led to his first record deal. Following a flurry of critical acclaim, he found himself courted by representatives from almost a dozen record companies; he chose Arista Records and went into the studio with a band that included
Jay Dee Daugherty from the Patti Smith Group. After two acclaimed albums, a self-titled 1980 effort, and 1981's Golden Dawn,
Nile fell prey to protracted legal problems that derailed his career for a number of years; although he continued to write, he did not perform live or record again until a 1987 performance in Oslo, Norway with
Eric Andersen.
A videotape of
Nile's performance in Norway prompted a
Columbia talent scout to sign him to the label in 1988. Production on
Nile's album didn't start for two more years; issued in 1991,
Places I Have Never Been featured guest appearances by
Richard Thompson,
Loudon Wainwright III,
Roger McGuinn, and members of
the Hooters and
the Roches. The album received strong reviews but sales were unimpressive, and
Columbia dropped
Nile. The independent Polaris label issued the four-song EP Hard Times in America in 1992, but
Nile didn't release another studio recording until
Beautiful Wreck of the World in 2000. (In the interim,
Nile issued 1997's
Live in Central Park, a document of a 1980 performance in New York.)
Nile played Europe and toured the East Coast as he waited until the time was right to go back into the studio. He finally emerged re-energized on 2006's
Streets of New York, with guest appearances by
Larry Campbell and
Jakob Dylan, which marked the beginning of a regular recording schedule. He issued two concert offerings in 2007,
Live at the Turning Point (his first release for River House Records, which would become his steady label) and Live from the Streets of New York. In 2009,
Nile released a new studio set,
House of a Thousand Guitars, and beefed up his touring schedule. He issued the acclaimed
The Innocent Ones in 2011 and followed it two years later with the rocking and street-smart
American Ride in 2013. Early 2015 brought a change of pace for
Nile with the release of
If I Was a River, a primarily acoustic set dominated by his piano work.
World War Willie, his tenth LP, arrived in 2016.
In May of that year,
Nile was invited to sing four songs at an N.Y.C. celebration of
Bob Dylan's 75th birthday. Moved by how timely so many of the songs performed that night were -- some more than 50 years old --
Nile was inspired. He undertook a PledgeMusic campaign and made an entire album of
Dylan covers. The finished offering, titled
Positively Bob: Willie Nile Sings Bob Dylan, was released during the summer of 2017. A portion of the proceeds was donated to Light of Day, a charity he was long affiliated with which raises money for Parkinson's research.
Nile undertook a PledgeMusic campaign to fund his next set, a collection of powerful, energetic neo-political rock & roll songs entitled
Children of Paradise. Cut with his road band and co-produced with
Stewart Lerman, the album contained songs of recent and distant vintage, unified thematically by a desire to transcend the tension of the times. It was released in the mid-summer of 2018. 2020's
New York at Night was a tough rock & roll album devoted to songs about the city that had been
Nile's home for most of his life. ~ Richard Skelly