
Tuesday 15th April 2025
The Deaf Institute, Manchester, England
“Yes,” says Coleman Williams from the stage as he introduces the final song of a blistering set. “I am the firstborn of the fourth generation of the Hank Williams family. Do not ever make the mistake to tell me how to show respect and love to my family, because I would never disrespect you and tell you how to love your own.”
Known as ‘IV’ (Four) as a nod to his heritage, Coleman is making his final, successful, effort to address the elephant in the room. His Strange Band wait patiently behind him. One gets the sense they have heard this speech before, but to those of us in the crowd, on the first night of the band’s first ever UK tour, it is a revelation.
“Remember, the real importance sometimes about having family, and understanding where you come from, is NOT just to do something because you come from somewhere. It’s to be able to have the respect to understand you can do it your own way to show love to where you come from.
“My great-grandfather, who I have seen on a million bar stools and pictures and t-shirts, he died when he was 29, folks. I’m 35 years old. I am six years older than my great-grandfather. And that’s not fucking cool.
“Yes, the man was a legend. Yes, the man wrote great songs. He did not fucking O.D. like half those other dudes. He worked himself to death and died from exhaustion. He broke his spine at 27 and wasn’t even allowed to sit in a fucking chair, because the Opry said his job was to dance and sing. And they fucking killed him. And they won’t even give the man a statue, or give him credit, and he built the goddamn building.
“My father is a man named Hank the Third but his real name is Shelton Williams. That is his real name. And for a lot of people, they don’t know that about him, and that’s a big thing in my opinion. I wanted people to know my name. And it’s MY name. And the reason I think it’s so important to have my name is because I wouldn’t be worth shit if I stood up here and played for y’all just because I’m related to somebody in country music.”
One wonders if playing for the first time for a British audience, where the crowd speaks the same language but there is an ocean separating you from your family’s ghosts and your country’s expectations, has emboldened IV to loosen his tongue. At the Deaf Institute, we hear it all. What becomes clear, and increasingly remarkable, throughout the night is that this is no rant, no jeremiad, no polishing of the chip on one’s shoulder. Coleman doesn’t lean heavily on the Hank Williams legacy, but nor does he reject it. This isn’t a man refusing to reach for the crown, but a man refusing the notion that crowns should be bestowed by birthright. This is a man who has thought about his burden and learned how to bear it. And it’s because of this growth, this conceptual breakthrough Coleman made in his life, that we can experience a night of excellent original music with not a cheatin’ heart or a bucket with a hole in it in sight.

“Don’t ask me to play Hank songs,” Coleman says after tonight’s first number, “or I’ll make you look stupid.” It’s a warning, but also a self-fulfilling prophecy: anyone asking would automatically look stupid, because they’d be throwing away the chance to get some Strange, to hear some damn fine original IV songs before tonight’s 10 p.m. sound curfew. Most people would want Coleman to sing Hank songs, as some sort of jukebox tribute act, but then most people have no imagination. Most people aren’t willing to grant artists – any artist – the opportunity to show them something they might not have even realised they wanted. And those people would be missing out, if they had their way, because Coleman Williams has his own vision. IV and the Strange Band, while surrounded by ghosts, are their own beast.
Thirteen stops into their European tour, and smelling the blood of Englishmen for the first time, that beast is lean and eager to pounce. The band – Ethan “Big Frog” Salas on lead guitar, Hunter Mellish on bass, Alex Bizzarro on pedal steel and Hunter Edwards on drums – play IV up onto the stage, where he leads them into a new, unrecorded song. Lyrically strong and honky tonkin’, the song also announces Coleman’s independence. While he possesses that distinctive reedy tone in much of his singing, which works excellently to deliver his lyrics, IV is also capable of the heavy, ominous growl that delivers “I thought you knew” to tonight’s crowd.
The band follow this up with another unreleased song, rocking out on ‘E-450’, a song about the Ford “short bus” they use to tour America. It’s a straight-up country song cutting loose, and for all their versatility tonight the Strange Band also show they could be a damn fine cut-and-dry country band if they wanted to. Whether it’s the country blues of ‘Today’, the honky-tonk familiarity of ‘Drinking Sad’, or the pedal steel run on the Stonewall Jackson cover ‘Why I’m Walkin”, a fun and warm old-timer song, the Strange Band are perfectly willing and able to “pay what’s due”, as Coleman sings in the opening song. For a good chunk of this they can thank Alex Bizzarro, bearer of the finest handlebar moustache this side of the 1860s, whose pedal steel soars around the room. When IV tells his band to “make ’em cry, boys!” during ‘Drinking Sad’, it’s Bizzarro who can.
But where IV and the Strange Band really deliver is when, with practised ease, they clear a path through the swarm of country, punk, metal, rock and God knows what else they’re influenced by to deliver songs that are quintessentially Strange. “The most punk and metal shit’s been done by country boys,” Coleman says, introducing their third song of the night. ‘Son of Sin’ is the closest thing IV and the Strange Band have to a signature song, and it’s a heady rush of heavy metal crunch, booming drums and bracingly clear-eyed country lyrics.
It’s for songs like this we should be grateful Coleman managed to maintain the will to forge his own path, even after making peace with his family name. It’s not the only song in which they achieve this – ‘Inbred’, later in the set, is infused with a heavy chugging guitar sound, while the stop-start ‘Diddle’ manages to be both fun and foot-stomping, marrying straight-up country lyrics with a band that follows Big Frog’s lead guitar into a free Zeppelin-esque rock jam. There’s a synergy between the new and the traditional here; bona fide country with just enough punk and metal and general strangeness brought into the musical gene pool to keep it fresh and stop things getting, well, inbred.

“Part of the reason I make country music, folks,” Coleman explains, before introducing another genre-bender, a raucous country translation of the frantic hardcore punk song ‘Sailin’ On’ by Bad Brains, “is, well, when you grow up in a family where you’re told to do it, it makes you not want to fuckin’ do it. I was the first member of my family to have a degree. I taught high school till I was 25. I owned my own businesses till I was 30. I sold my businesses and funded my band without having to take money to sell my soul. And for almost six years now, I’ve done my country band. And I learned that mentality from punk rock. I learned it from DIY and alternative music.” To quote Waylon Jennings, old Hank didn’t do it this a-way, but I for one am sure glad IV did.
Happily, IV and the Strange Band aren’t alone in their quest to draw more looping spirals in the Venn diagram of country, punk, rock and metal. Opening for Coleman tonight, Mike West is a sort of musical soulmate to IV, blending melodic country-inspired songwriting with surprisingly versatile heavy-metal vocals. When I first saw Mike West take the stage a few years ago, opening for Nick Shoulders, for a half-minute I thought he was a roadie gone rogue. The large, bearded and long-haired Scouser, like Gregg Allman in a biker jacket, didn’t fit any image I had of a country singer, but the quality of his songs proved otherwise. I became an instant fan and his album, The Next Life, proved to be a work of art I still play regularly. Some months later, he opened for Mike and the Moonpies, who blew the lid off the place, and it had been West’s name on the bill which had been an important factor in my decision to go. In truth, it was also a motive for tonight with IV.
Tonight, Mike West is fronting his new band in only their second ever gig, and he’s delighted to be doing it in support of IV and the Strange Band. “I see what I do as bringing metal to country and country to metal,” he says, adding that when he started the band he played them videos of IV, including ‘Son of Sin’, “because I wanted to sound like that”. Adding Brian Dixon on drums to Rob Wakefield on fiddle (who also played with Mike at that Moonpies gig), Mike West and his band the Missing Links forge their own chain between the same disparate genres the Strange Band roam in.
Proving that IV’s music is not the only revelation tonight, the Missing Links give Mike’s songs the backing they deserve. ‘Mothman’, his signature song, which I’d previously heard solo and as a twosome with Rob on fiddle, finally breaks out of its chrysalis with the addition of Brian’s crashing drums, and reveals its full power live. The Missing Links add tempo to ‘Ballad of the White Collar Arsonist’, Mike’s “mass murder ballad”, and their opener, ‘Work On’, which I’d previously heard as a slice of Mersey delta blues, is heavier, punctuated by some dissonant fiddle touches from Rob Wakefield. The dreadlocked Rob, in his Alice Cooper ‘Poison’ shirt and camo pants, might look an incongruous part of a country outfit, but he’s Mike West’s not-so-secret weapon, emphasising the songwriter’s natural gift for melody in songs like ‘Mothman’ and helping songs like ‘Lonely Hill’, which has an exuberant Irish folk vibe, and ‘For Them’ soar.

The latter song is a special moment for me, as I had mentioned ‘For Them’ some days earlier when Mike put the word out on social media that there was a gap in his setlist and he was taking requests. Lyrically, the song is poetry, fulfilling the literary principles of ubi sunt which I am particularly fond of; a concept hard to define but a sort of rhetorical, enigmatic evoking of the joys of yesteryear, not so much nostalgia or longing but merely lamenting that such fine moments have passed. Introducing the song, Mike says he wrote it because he noticed so many songs out there were “love songs, about romantic love” and he wanted to write a song for his friends, including, he says, the members of the band now known as the Missing Links. When I meet Mike after his set, he smiles and confirms he put the song in there because I requested it. While it plays, with Rob’s gorgeous, soaring fiddle making the song almost anthemic, I look around the crowd and find myself pleased to have played a small role in having it heard.
Even allowing for my meddling, the Missing Links have provided a fine set and it’s an honour to hear the band come together. Not only the songs but Mike himself seems energised by having them at his back, singing ‘Away I Go’ with gusto and introducing ‘Goin’ to Hell’ by playfully pointing out the disturbing advertisement playing on repeat behind the bar. The Mona Lisa, her immortal form possessed by one of those cheap AI-driven face manipulators, is sipping Red Bull, and Mike cites it as evidence that everything is indeed going to hell.
What to do about this? Mike asks. Well, the next song is, pointedly, ‘How to Build a Guillotine’. A catchy song with witty lyrics, I first heard Mike sing this song at that Nick Shoulders gig two-and-a-half years ago and, as odd as it may seem for a song about the benefits of revolutionary carpentry, I suspect it has breakout potential. If it stays unreleased for much longer it will be a great crime, with West himself – who draws his finger across his neck theatrically on the line – deserving to “meet Robespierre’s end”.
Elsewhere, the trio have fun with a cover of the Eighties Dio hit ‘Rainbow in the Dark’. The song shows the flexibility unlocked for Mike in having a band to back him up, and this is confirmed by their final number, a gutsy version of ‘No Grave’. Showing that it’s not only IV who will be able to deliver thoughtful and eloquent perspectives to the audience, Mike says the song was written because he doesn’t like cemeteries; “I don’t need a stone in a field to honour someone. I’ll watch their favourite film, go to a night of live music like this one.” Capping off a set in which the Missing Links have forged a chain that deserves to capture many in the audience, ‘No Grave’ ends with the line “Remember me.” I hope many here in Manchester, and in London two nights hence, will indeed remember. (Fate – and two blown van tyres – will conspire to prevent the band from joining IV in Brighton tomorrow. Like the saying goes, “Man plans, God laughs.”)
Mike West and the Missing Links deserve their flowers, and in a small way Mike’s influence will be felt throughout the rest of the night, for after singing another new song (with the hearty refrain of “so damn blue”), Coleman Williams puts down his own guitar and plays Mike’s black-bodied acoustic for the rest of the Strange Band’s set.
“Hey Mike, thanks for letting me use your guitar again,” Coleman says later, after a fine cover of Harlan Howard’s ‘Nashville Women’ characterised by some great lead guitar from Ethan Salas. “I’m pretty good at re-stringing, but you saved me about three minutes, brother, thank you so much.”
Hunter Edwards strikes his drumsticks together to count in the next song, and Alex’s pedal steel begins to play. Coleman holds up his finger. “Hold on,” he says, and the band stops. “Y’all need to give it up for Mike West one more time, please. I thanked Mr Mike and nobody clapped.” The audience obliges; there hadn’t been any disrespect, only miscommunication.

“Remember,” Coleman says, “the friends that matter are the ones that help you, not the ones that just help themselves. Keep those around. We appreciate ya, Mike.” It’s a worthy tip of his black cowboy hat to the man he calls a brother; in addition to his own excellent music, Mike West also works tirelessly to promote other independent acts in the British country scene through Rogue Country, the enterprise he runs with Welsh singer-songwriter Josh Beddis. “Y’all Europeans don’t seem to dig openers as much,” Coleman says, “but I’m really happy to have a friend to play music with for a couple of days, so y’all treat him right next time he comes through here.”
But there’s no real admonishment in IV’s remarks, only observation. What I find particularly interesting in tonight’s performance by the Strange Band is IV’s strength as a frontman. He has character and he has star power – and that’s not a lazy reference to his heritage on my part. When Coleman stands on stage, tall and slim and with a thick, drooping horseshoe moustache, it’s not any fanciful shadow of Hank that fills out the image. It’s Coleman himself; he can draw you in and he can push you away at will. He can silence a heckler, as he does when introducing ‘Diddle’ (“I have no idea what the fuck you’re saying,” he says sharply, “but we’ll talk about that later. This next song’s about gettin’ wild.”), and he can praise the rest (“Y’all are what I call weekday warriors. You showed up on a Tuesday, it shows you give a damn. Fridays and Saturdays are easy.”). He can bare his heart, introducing ‘The Bleed’ by pointing out it was written about a friend who called him for help. He didn’t answer, thinking it was nothing. “He died,” Coleman says, “and I have to live with that”. How he processes the harsh reality of that is heard in the rasping, pained vocals of the song itself.
He can tell a story, bringing a lump to the throat when introducing the tender ‘Hang Dog’, written for his elderly basset hound Piper (“my best friend in this world”), and defuse it with warmth and humour, telling us that whenever he came home to Piper to break the bad news after a bad day, “well, she already looked disappointed before I told her any bad news”. He can dedicate the song to “all your critters, all your pets” and mean it.
He can gloss over a lull due to technical difficulties with a guitar (“us rednecks just put a pick on it and it makes noise,” he says, just before these rednecks prove they can’t half pick some noise on ‘Malice’). He can charm, dedicating the song ‘I.O.U.’ like a smooth radio DJ to “all of you broke jokers out there”. Ours is a world where fortune favours the 500, but IV reassures us with a smile that “you gon’ cut that gold one day” and that because you know the struggle, “when you get it, you won’t lose it”.
He can whip up the band, shouting “show ’em, boys!” during a hot moment or “alright, Frog, show me!” before Ethan’s guitar solo in ‘Malice’. He can sermonise, talking about “the real Nashville, not the bullshit” and how 90% of the historic town has gone in the space of ten years, “all turned into condos and fuckin’ Apple stores”. He has an edge to him, not only in the stories between songs but in the songs themselves, with an occasional fierce look in his eye as he sings the lines he has penned. It goes without saying that the son of sin breaks tonight’s 10 p.m. sound curfew, and is still talking and playing as we creep towards a transgressive half-hour mark.

And above all, remarkably, he can make you forget he is IV, fourth-generation scion of the Hank Williams clan, even in the same breath that he is mentioning the man himself. Coleman is his own man, and when he approaches me at the merchandise stand after the show and shakes my hand, I can honestly say I don’t think for a moment about his family name. There’s no journalistic guff I could write here about feeling in that handshake a connection to legacy or to country music history. Because when Coleman thanks me for coming out and asks with sincerity if I enjoyed the show, I can look him in the eye and say I did, very much so, because it has been a cracking night of music from him and his Strange Band.
There has been no setlist (“we just figure out what we feel like”, Coleman admitted earlier) and IV and the Strange Band have frequently been heard murmuring and nodding among themselves tonight as they decide which song to go with next. It’s that feel, I realise later, that has helped make the night so memorable. I’ve been fortunate to hear a lot of live country here in the UK, some of the finest America is producing in a fine moment right now, but all of them felt far from home. As great as they were, through no fault of their own they were still far from home. Mike and the Moonpies came closest to conjuring, in Manchester’s Retro Bar, that sense of what I imagine it’s like to be a native in a close honky-tonk bar in country music’s heartlands, but that’s what it was: a conjuring trick from a magical band.
But tonight, in Manchester’s Deaf Institute on the first day of their first visit to England, IV and the Strange Band are at home. When the band plays, or Coleman speaks, this feels like the place to be. They are among their own people. Coleman has broken through the chains that bound him to his family name and he shows people what he wants to show them, plays them what he wants to play. And it means that when we hear country tonight, we hear country. We hear a tight band in a small spot and a singer carving out his own ground and standing on it and defending it. As a country fan, I hear talk so often about whether such-and-such an artist is authentic or real, or whether a twang is affected or a hat deserves to be worn, or whether an Englishman can even truly appreciate country, but there’s none of that shit tonight. Maybe it’s an inheritance from the more welcoming punk and metal scenes the Strange Band has embraced. But tonight there’s a man on stage doing exactly what he wants to do precisely because he wants to do it, and there’s a band on fire behind him.

Those early country boys, Coleman says as he introduces his final song, “they were wearing a five-piece suit covered in rhinestones and telling you to fuck off with a smile. That’s why I love country, folks. It means so very much to me. For years, people thought that when I walked up on a stage in my early career, they could harass me, they could yell at me, they could bother me, to make me pretend to be Hank Williams. And guess what? Not one fucker ever achieved that goal.
“Because that’s not why I do it, folks. Because one day when I die, I will face my great-grandfather. I will see that wonderful, talented, beautiful man and the one thing I can tell him is: We all love you. We are all so proud of you. And I didn’t have to pretend to be you, because you taught me the lesson that I truly needed to know, and that is to be myself. Do not forget: I love Hank Williams.”
Coleman gestures out into the crowd.
“And if you love him, don’t be scared to tell me. Please don’t. Just remember, just remember that he was not somebody’s son. He was not somebody’s grandson. He was not somebody’s nephew. He was just a man with not a dollar in his pocket at 24 and a dream. And he achieved all that.
“For years, people would yell at me, scream at me, threaten to kill me, one dude even shot a gun at me, because I wouldn’t sing Hank songs. And I don’t give a shit about that. Because at the end of the day, I do it for me.
“I wrote this next song on my second record. It’s called ‘If the Creek Don’t Rise’. It’s about Hank Williams. Because, folks, I don’t see a need to pretend to be him. I’m from Nashville, Tennessee. I can walk down Broadway and hear sixty people sing Hank Williams songs every night of the year. There’s no reason I need to add to that, because nobody could ever do it better than Hiram King Williams. No one could ever do it better.
“And I wrote this song to show my love for my great-grandfather. From the bottom of my heart. A song that I wrote about him, because every day on the radio the last two years of his life he told people that if the Lord was willing, and if the creek didn’t rise, he’d see you next week.
“But the sad part about this, and the problem I think with music in society, folks, my last note I’ll leave you with: We clap people into a grave a lot in music.
“There are lots of musicians far beyond just him that ask for help. Ian from Joy Division. Kurt from Nirvana. Hank Williams. They ask for help. And we clap them into a pinewood box. And then we’re surprised that they died.
“Every single week, three times a week on the radio, my great-grandfather said that line at the end of every show. Why would a man that’s so young, with all the money in his pocket and all his dreams, say that? Because he didn’t expect to make it to the next day, folks.
“And I wrote this song about that, and I just want to say thank you to all of you, and just know, thank you again for supporting live music. Not me, but live music. This is a song about my family, thank you.”

Setlist #1 (Mike West and the Missing Links):
(all songs from the album The Next Life and written by Mike West, unless noted)
- Work On
- Lonely Hill (unreleased)
- Ballad of the White Collar Arsonist (from The Attic Sessions)
- Mothman (single)
- For Them
- Away I Go
- Goin’ to Hell (from The Attic Sessions)
- How to Build a Guillotine (unreleased)
- Rainbow in the Dark (Ronnie James Dio/Vinny Appice/Jimmy Bain/Vivian Campbell) (unreleased)
- No Grave
Setlist #2 (IV and the Strange Band):
(all songs from the album Hang Dog and written by Coleman Williams, unless noted)
- I Thought You Knew* (unreleased)
- E-450 (unreleased)
- Son of Sin (Coleman Williams/David Talley/Jason Dietz) (from Southern Circus)
- The Bleed
- Drinking Sad (Williams/Daniel Mason) (from Southern Circus)
- Why I’m Walkin’ (Stonewall Jackson) (unreleased)
- So Damn Blue* (unreleased)
- Malice (from Southern Circus)
- Inbred (from Southern Circus)
- Diddle
- I.O.U.
- Sailin’ On (Paul Hudson/Gary Miller/Darryl Jenifer/Earl Hudson)
- Today
- Hang Dog
- Nashville Women (Harlan Howard) (unreleased)
- The Alley (unreleased)
- If the Creek Don’t Rise
* track titles unconfirmed
My other concert reviews can be found here.
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