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Vic Chesnutt: 1964-2009

by Jedd Ferris on December 28, 2009

Vic Chesnutt died on Christmas Day. The apparent suicide of the dark genius isn’t completely surprising, but that doesn’t make it any less sad. The acclaimed underground singer-songwriter from Athens, Georgia, seemed to be constantly grappling with demons, but unlike many with the same problems, he was able to manifest it into beautiful art. A car accident at 18 left him a paraplegic, and he said dealing with the impairment was one of his biggest inspirations for his Southern Gothic-style songs that were often both haunting and humorous. Chesnutt was a musician’s musician. His first two albums were produced by Michael Stipe of R.E.M., and he came to wider recognition when his songs were performed on the 1996 tribute album Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation by artists including Madonna, Smashing Pumpkins, and the Indigo Girls. Over the years he collaborated with an endlessly diverse array of acts: Lambchop, Bill Frisell, Elf Power, and recently Fugazi’s Guy Picciotto and members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor. He also had a small role in Billy Bob Thornton’s film Sling Blade.

I first became a fan of Chesnutt through his collaborations with Widespread Panic. The band and songwriter teamed up under name Brute and released two great albums, 1995′s Nine High a Pallet and 2002′s Co-Balt. Panic also recorded one of Chesnutt’s most haunting tunes on 1996′s Bombs and Butterflies. The words of “Aunt Avis” seem to foreshadow this tragedy:

Help me mama, for I have grinned

Save me daddy from where I’m goin’

Call out to me from the ages beyond

Help me remember how to be good

How to continue when I feel I really shouldn’t

Below is Chesnutt performing “Aunt Avis” at the Grey Eagle in Asheville this past September.




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