Stephen Wilson Jr.
Stephen Wilson Jr. Bio
Stephen Wilson Jr. opens every one of his performances the exact same way, by walking to the microphone and introducing himself to the crowd: “I’m Stephen Wilson Jr. — I am my father’s son.” Wilson’s entire being is defined by those words, and particularly by the two simple letters that follow his name: Jr. Like his father before him, he is a boxer, and learned discipline and self-esteem in the ring beginning at age 5. He has the same eyes as his dad too. And, most importantly, he has his name.
“You don’t have to put Jr. after your name. It’s an optional suffix. But it is very powerful,” Wilson says. “It carries a lot of weight in the sport of boxing, because it means you’re an extension of your father. I’m an artist now, but when I see my name on a show poster, I still look at it like a fight card. My first stage wasn’t a stage at all, it was a boxing ring.”
Since Sept. 15, 2018 — the day his father died after a brief illness at 59 — Wilson’s been in the fight of his life, battling grief and uncertainty to figure out how to carry on without his hero. It’s a bout tougher than any Wilson faced when competing in the Golden Gloves championships in his native Indiana, but it’s one he’s winning. The proof is in Son of Dad, his triumphant 22-song debut album on Big Loud Records. It is an album that’s impossible to pigeon-hole: It is country, it is rock, it is grunge, and it’s among the most unique records to come out of Nashville in a decade.
“Writing and making this album has been very therapeutic for me to learn who I am and what my existence looks like after my father. Because life has to go on,” Wilson says. “I’m living my own life, but it’s like his death bookended what life he should have had onto mine and I’m carrying it around like a train car.”
With songs like “Grief Is Only Love,” “Hang in There,” and the autobiographical centerpiece “Father’s Son,” Son of Dad is a testament to the life of Stephen Wilson Sr., who raised two sons and a daughter as a single father and auto-body mechanic. But while so much of the album is pulled from Wilson Jr.’s own experiences, it has universal appeal to anyone who has lost someone they love.
“If you’re lucky enough to have lived, you’re going to grieve something,” Wilson says. “It is the most human thing we have and we grieve on a level that is unmatched.”
But Son of Dad, co-produced by Wilson and Benjamin West, is not a downer album. Rather, it’s a cathartic and high-energy rock & roll journey, informed by Wilson’s wildly diverse background as a boxer, a believer (he was raised Nazarene), a scientist (he has a degree in microbiology and chemistry from Middle Tennessee State University), and a songwriter.
Wilson first became enamored of songwriting after hearing Tim McGraw’s “Don’t Take the Girl,” a pivotal moment on the school bus. “That song made a mess of me in just four minutes,”says Wilson, who would worry relentlessly as a child about the safety of his mother. “I spent a lot of my childhood waiting to get a call that she had been badly hurt or killed. It just seemed inevitable. And even though ‘Don’t Take the Girl’ had nothing to do with my mom’s situation, I was able to copy and paste her into that song. I knew then that songwriting is wizardry, but there was nothing illusionary about what that song did to me. That was as real as it can get.”
When he was 16, Wilson’s father recognized his son’s inherent ability for music and bought him a cheap guitar. He quickly learned to play but cracking the songwriting code still seemed out of reach. Eventually, he left Indiana for Nashville to be close to songwriters and finish college, where he played in the indie-rock band AutoVaughn while taking contract jobs in the research & development department of a major food company. He began writing songs in the lab too. When the company offered him a well-paying, full-time position, he froze.
“I had a conversation with my boss there and he said, ‘They’re about to put the golden handcuffs on you,’” Wilson says. “That metaphor scared the shit out of me.” So, he quit and gambled his future on songwriting. But the type of songs Wilson was writing weren’t in line with the good-timing party hits of the era and he struggled to make ends meet. Finally, he got a publishing deal — “This guy liked one of my weird-ass songs,” he says — and watched as Nashville stars like Brothers Osborne and Caitlyn Smith, in a collab with Old Dominion, slowly began to record his material. The very first to do so? Tim McGraw.
“It was a full-circle moment,” Wilson says. “I’ll never forget the day I learned that he recorded my song ‘For What It’s Worth.’ I had to go outside and just stare at a wall for 20 minutes.” In the end, McGraw didn’t release the song, but Wilson is. His version, an irresistible declaration of love with a euphoric chorus, is a standout of Son of Dad. Like “For What It’s Worth,” “Patches” (about the scars, scratches, and holes in our lives) and “Year to Be Young 1994” (an imagery-rich slice of nostalgia) are born for radio. Other tracks on Son of Dad are more unconventional — but no less captivating. “Mighty Beast” is a blast of skronky noise inspired by Wilson’s love of Soundgarden. “Calico Creek” is a haunting war cry. And “All the Wars From Now On” is a deep-thinking ballad about conflict and aging.
The disparate styles embody the many sides of Wilson, who views life from often polar-opposite perspectives. He is a man of science, but he also believes in “the devil” — he intentionally lowercases the title of that song on Son of Dad.
“I grew up with a lot of apocalyptica being shoved down my throat. I saw more of the devil than I saw God,” he says. “I saw a lot of demon exorcisms and movements of the spirits, and speaking in tongues. The reason I got into science was I was trying to understand
everything at its molecular level.”But even science couldn’t explain what he felt after the death of his father. Instead, he found answers in songwriting. “There is no chemical formula to help me rationalize grief,” he says. “Music was the only thing that had any ability to help me understand it.”
In “Grief Is Only Love,” you can hear Wilson making peace with his loss in real time. “I miss my father every day/kind of pain I pray don’t fade away,” he howls, before offering that “grief is only love/that’s got no place to go.” The song is both spiritually based and scientific, shot through with faith and doubt. “Doubt is good for belief,” says Wilson, who while racing home to Indiana to be at his father’s bedside, had to pull over to say his final goodbye. “His last words to me were ‘Write a good song for me’ and then he said, ‘I love you’ four times. As his voice was fading, I could feel the higher power taking him. Whatever you believe, I had a real visceral experience.”
A few weeks after Wilson’s father passed, he was onstage at a songwriter festival singing a show-closing cover of “Stand by Me” when he felt another strange sensation wash over him. He still considered himself only a songwriter at that point, and rarely sang in public. But at that moment, the pragmatic scientist says he felt the unmistakable presence of his father on his shoulders, “like a 3-year-old kid singing along.” He was forever changed. “That was the real confirmation that I was no longer the same person. Who I was before died with him. I was no longer just a songwriter,” Wilson says. “It was almost like a knighting of sorts. I knew then that I was the vehicle for these songs — for my dad, for myself, and for the people who need to hear them.”
His hope for Son of Dad is that listeners find an outlet for their own grief and remember to live not only for those who are gone, but for themselves. He’ll do that through writing and singing songs, and by reminding everyone that he’s Stephen Wilson Jr. — his father’s son