400 Bears
  • Memories
  • Borderline
  • Holy Place
  • Take It Slow
  • Cold Situation
  • 80's Mercedes
  • Small Town
  • Annie Hall
  • Good Bear
  • Take This Hammer
  • Memories
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:44) [11.95 MB]
  • Borderline
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:34) [9.28 MB]
  • Holy Place
    Genre: Americana
    MP3 (03:11) [8.42 MB]
  • Take It Slow
    Genre: Americana
    MP3 (02:14) [6.25 MB]
  • Cold Situation
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:08) [12.87 MB]
  • 80's Mercedes
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:13) [8.51 MB]
  • Small Town
    Genre: Country Americana
    MP3 (03:23) [8.89 MB]
  • Annie Hall
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (02:54) [7.78 MB]
  • Good Bear
    Genre: Country Blues
    MP3 (03:17) [8.66 MB]
  • Take This Hammer
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (09:04) [21.86 MB]
Highway 81 Revisited
A new wrinkle for the singer and guitarist on “400 Bears” is his pedal steel playing.

“I don’t think I would have learned it if it wasn’t for a global pandemic,” he notes. The instrument itself “kind of fell in my lap,” he says. “I have an uncle who is a musician and bass player who had a pedal steel who at one point said do you want to try this out? But everything had to shut down for me to ever learn this, and I just thought I’m never going to get the chance again. It’s different. There’s a different technique to it.”

Another major adjustment for Wilkinson was helming the songwriting, which is primarily handled in Mason Porter by Joe D’Amico, whom Wilkinson calls “a songwriting machine.”

“It’s the difference between being a solo artist and not having those core band members to bounce ideas off of, say when Mason Porter are doing stuff and Joe and I are communicating tons back and forth,” he explains. “Putting this record out on my own, I have friends and people to talk to, but there’s not that same back and forth.”

The last song on the album is “Take This Hammer,” a traditional work song recorded over the years by Mississippi John Hurt, among others. Wilkinson’s atmospheric version stretches out past nine minutes.

“I liked that song and thought, hey let’s record that one and just set up the framework: acoustic [guitar], vocal, a little rumble intro,” he recalls. “Brad Hinton is on two different lap steel parts, and at the end of the tune, he just kept going with some effects and stuff. … I thought, whoa, this is turning into something really cool. … It really did take on a life of it’s own that I didn’t envision, but all the parts did really feel special.”

Mason Porter, which has grown its annual Midnight Music Show festival in Blakeslee, Pa., into a sellout, is “chilling out right now,” Wilkinson says.

“If something is coming our way, we’ll do it,” he says. “But each member is in their own place in life, is kind of the best way to say that. We’re not pushing each other too hard.”

< Go Back
3
  • Members:
    Paul Wilkinson
  • Sounds Like:
    J.J. Cale, Mark Knopfler
  • Influences:
    Taj Mahal, Bob Dylan, J.J. Cale
  • AirPlay Direct Member Since:
    10/19/20
  • Profile Last Updated:
    08/14/23 14:21:21

"Radio Creds" are votes awarded to artists by radio programmers who have downloaded their music and have been impressed with the artist's professionalism and the audience's response to the new music. Creds help artists advance through the AirPlay Direct community.


Only radio accounts may add a Radio Cred. One week after the track has been downloaded the radio account member will receive an email requesting a Cred for each artist they've downloaded.