William Elliott Whitmore
William Elliott Whitmore is an American blues, country, folk singer and musician. He plays roots-folk music that is often inspired by his life on his family farm in the hills of southeastern Iowa.
Early life and education
Whitmore grew up on a 160-acre horse farm in Lee County, Iowa, not far outside of Keokuk, Iowa. His parents, Elyse Whitmore and Harold Whitmore, were farmers, and the farm had been in his family since his third great grandfather, who was an immigrant from Ireland. After his parents died, he converted the farm to row crops, which he leases to a neighboring farmer so he can be on the road to perform. He has an older brother and sister.Growing up the family was musical, with his dad playing the guitar, his mother playing the accordion and piano, with both his paternal and maternal grandfathers playing the banjo. Charley Pride and Willie Nelson were huge influences growing up. Whitmore always sung but when he was a teenager he began playing guitar, then eventually the banjo.
In addition to playing locally with a cousin, Whitmore, after a short stint in San Francisco, moved to Iowa City and got involved in the punk rock and the DIY scene, forming a band called Lost Cause.
In 1996, Whitmore graduated from Central Lee High School in Donnellson, Iowa.
Career
When he was first starting out, Whitmore was a roadie for an Iowa City punk band called Ten Grand, but he eventually started performing as an opener for the band and toured extensively with Ten Grand. This led to him getting signed to the Chicago-based office of Southern Records. Whitmore said he turned to songwriting as a way to deal with the deaths of his parents, who died within a few years of each other, and the deaths of his grandparents.Whitmore built a long-term relationship with Southern Records, releasing three records on the label. The three records on Southern, 2003's Hymns for the Hopeless, 2005's Ashes to Dust, 2006's Song of the Blackbird, were a trilogy that were focused on death and his experience processing the deaths of those close to him. He recorded the records with Mike Lust at Phantom Manor in Chicago.
In 2009, Whitmore signed with mini-major ANTI-, where he released three records. The first record for ANTI-, 2009's Animals in the Dark, was a concept album. It reached Number 50 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart.
The song, "Civilizations" off his 2015 record, Radium Death, is about how an oil pipeline running from South Dakota to Illinois was going to go through his grandmother's property on their farm.
In April 2018, Whitmore signed with Bloodshot Records, with a new release expected in the fall of 2018.
The 2018 record is a covers record called Kilonova. Covers include songs by Bad Religion, Bill Withers, Captain Beefheart, Johnny Cash, The Magnetic Fields, and ZZ Top.
Whitmore has toured with Chris Cornell, City and Colour, Murder by Death, Clutch, Lucero, Converge, Red Sparowes, Modern Life is War, Frontier Ruckus, Frank Turner, Esmé Patterson and The Low Anthem.
His live act features Whitmore's distinctive deep baritone voice, and features Whitmore playing the banjo or guitar while singing, though on occasion he performs a cappella. He sometimes tours with a full band, but often plays roots-folk music as a solo act.
Whitmore has a long-term musical relationship with his cousin Luke Tweedy, head engineer and producer at Iowa City's Flat Black Studios.
Middle Western
In 2016, Whitmore and musician and producer David Zollo formed the folk band Middle Western. An upcoming record is planned. Other members of Middle Western include Stephen Howard, Stevie Doyle, and Brian Cooper.Personal life
Whitmore is married and lives on the farm where he grew up.Whitmore has stated that he is an atheist.
Discography
Albums
- 1999: The Jarrett Mitchell Demo Album
- 2001: Calendar Club of Danger and Fun
- 2003: Hymns for the Hopeless
- 2005: Ashes to Dust
- 2006: Song of the Blackbird
- 2009: Animals in the Dark
- 2011: Field Songs
- 2015: Radium Death
- 2018: Kilonova
- 2018: When Your Demons are Underground and You’ve Got to Dig Them Up
Singles/EPs
- 2004: The Day The End Finally Came........ 7" – A: "The Day The End Finally Came / B1: "Does Me No Good," B2: "The Buzzard Won't Cry"
- 2005: Latitudes: WEW EP – Latitudes session recordings series
Compilations
- 2013: Early Years – 3 LP set of re-recorded and re-mastered versions of Whitmore's first three albums
Collaborations
- 2002: After The Gold Rush – music and book collaboration with artist Jeremy Deller
- 2004: Flaccid Trip / William E. Whitmore split – William Elliott Whitmore, "Somebody's Been Usin' That Thang" / FT, "Clique Track"
- 2006: Hallways of Always EP – with Jenny Hoyston of Erase Errata
- 2010: Murder by Death & William Elliott Whitmore split – Murder by Death, "One Man's Shame" / William Elliott Whitmore "Dynamite Mine"
- 2011: William Elliott Whitmore / P.O.S. with Big Cats 7" vinyl split – William Elliott Whitmore, "Country Blues" / POS with Big Cats "Crack A Window"
- 2015: No Eminent Domain 7" vinyl split – William Elliott Whitmore, "Civilizations" " / Hallways Of Always, "You Never Even Called Me by My Name"
- 2016: Play Each Other's Songs 7" split – William Elliott Whitmore, "Elysium" / Esmé Patterson, "Not Feeling Any Pain"
Contributions
- 2004: No Laws: Keep the Fuzz Off My Buzz 12" compilation – with Paradise Island, Let's Be Active, and FT ; tracks: "I'm Building Me A Home" and "Farther Along"
- 2005: When the Cat Returns the Mice Are Fucked compilation – Various artists; track: "Midnight"
- 2009: Hiram and Huddie – Vol. 1 & 2 – 2-CD tribute to Hank Williams and Lead Belly; tracks: "Mother Is Gone" and "The Gallis Pole"
- 2010: Red Dead Redemption video game soundtrack – track: "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie"
- 2010: Germs of Perfection: A Tribute to Bad Religion – track: "Don't Pray on Me"
- 2012: Iowa City Song Project – track: "Run Johnny Run"
- 2014: While No One Was Looking: Toasting 20 Years of Bloodshot Records – track: “I Wish I Was the Moon”