At first glance, Jesse Welles resemÂbles nothÂing so much as a time travÂelÂer from the year 1968. That’s how I would open a proÂfile about him, but The New York Times’ David PeisÂner takes a difÂferÂent approach, describÂing him recordÂing a song in his home stuÂdio. “Welles, a singer-songÂwriter with a shagÂgy, dirty-blond mane and a sandÂpaÂpery voice, has risen to recent promiÂnence postÂing videos to social media of himÂself alone in the woods near his home in northÂwest Arkansas, perÂformÂing wryÂly funÂny, politÂiÂcalÂly engaged folk songs,” PeisÂner conÂtinÂues. This pracÂtice has proÂduced “viral hits on TikÂTok and InstaÂgram, buildÂing an audiÂence of more than 2 milÂlion folÂlowÂers on those platÂforms.”
Welles’ subÂjects have includÂed “the war in Gaza, the rise of the weight-loss drug OzemÂpic, and the rapaÂciousÂness of UnitÂed Healthcare’s busiÂness modÂel.” You can hear his musiÂcal takes on these news-pegged subÂjects on his YouTube chanÂnel, along with such othÂer much-viewed, ripped-from-the-headÂlines songs as “FenÂtanyl,” “WalÂmart,” “WhisÂtle BoeÂing,” and “We’re All Gonna Die.”
For his younger lisÂtenÂers, his subÂject matÂter (and his perÂspecÂtive on it) have a kind of curÂrenÂcy much intenÂsiÂfied by life on social media; for his oldÂer lisÂtenÂers, his manÂner and musiÂcianÂship recall a goldÂen age of the protest singer that many would have assumed a wholÂly closed chapÂter of culÂturÂal hisÂtoÂry.
It will, perÂhaps, disÂapÂpoint both relÂeÂvant demoÂgraphÂics that Welles’ forthÂcomÂing debut album MidÂdle includes none of these viral hits, nor anyÂthing much like them. “The only filÂter placed on it was I wasn’t doing topÂiÂcal songs for this project,” PeisÂner quotes him as sayÂing, latÂer writÂing that the album “surfs between surÂreÂalÂisÂtic fanÂtaÂsy worlds and Welles’s own inner life.” This counÂterÂinÂtuÂitive move is underÂstandÂable: givÂen his obviÂous chops honed with the inspiÂraÂtion of Bob Dylan, Tom PetÂty, and John Prine, being pigeonÂholed as a singer of the news on TikÂTok has probÂaÂbly nevÂer been his ultiÂmate goal. A couÂple of decades from now, music critÂics may declare that OlivÂer AnthoÂny walked so that Jesse Welles could run.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Tom PetÂty Takes You Inside His SongÂwritÂing Craft
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
John Prine meets BilÂly Bragg
Some brilÂliant obserÂvaÂtions and song-writÂing.
Sounds more like 1963 than 1968 whatÂevÂer he has some seriÂous talÂent