Guitar World

Buffalo Nichols

FOLK-BLUES ARTIST DIGS DEEP ON HIS FAT POSSUM DEBUT

- By Jim Beaugez

THE PLAINTIVE HOWL and ominous, minor-key blues played by Skip James has more in common with the apocalypti­c worldview of grindcore bands like Napalm Death than you might think, at least for 30-year-old Austin folk-blues artist Carl “Buffalo” Nichols.

“As a teenager, I was really more into metal and punk than I was into the blues,” Nichols says of his upbringing in Milwaukee. “Skip James always felt, like, heavy and haunting, [and] I connected with metal in that same way.”

All the time he spent spinning CDs by Son House, Keb’ Mo’ and James from his mom’s record collection finally caught up with him in his early 20s. Inspired by those American bluemen and West African guitarists like Ali Farka Touré, he set aside his ESP LTD MH shred machine, picked up a Recording King resonator and a slide and developed his rhythmic approach to fingerstyl­e guitar playing.

“I just used what I knew from there and applied it to what I was hearing on the blues records,” he says. “A lot of it matched up and seems, not the same techniques, but once you learn that stuff, everything else, even the separation of the thumb and the finger, it all comes together.”

Nichols spends a lot of time in D minor, the tuning used by Bentonia, Mississipp­i, blues artists like James, Jack Owens and Jimmy “Duck” Holmes, as well as Adia Victoria — a decidedly different take on the genre than the Chicago style played around Milwaukee when he was growing up. Only one song on his 2021 self-titled Fat

“Skip James always felt, like, heavy and haunting, [and] I connected with metal in that same way”

Possum debut, “These Things,” is played in standard tuning.

While recording the album, Nichols kept his approach to gear straightfo­rward. He mounted a Lace pickup on his Recording King Tricone Resonator and ran it through a Fender Twin Reverb for many of the tracks, and balanced it with a sustainabl­e-wood Gibson B45 and Blue Ridge acoustics. He recently picked up a Mavis Mule solidbody resonator to play live, where he’s been supporting Drive-By Truckers and others, in addition to playing his own shows.

“I’ve been on this journey for half my life, trying to come to terms with the blues as a genre and trying to understand it and what it means to me,” he says. “What I’m aiming for is to just keep the essence of that music without falling into clichés and nostalgia. That’s always on my mind. I think that will be a lifetime struggle. But, you know, it’s fun.”

 ?? ?? Buffalo Nichols with his Recording King Tricone Resonator
Buffalo Nichols with his Recording King Tricone Resonator
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