Seasick Steve

Artist

Popular As Steven Gene Wold

Birthday March 19, 1951

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Oakland, California, U.S.

Age 72 years old

Nationality United States

#24905 Most Popular

1940

Douglas wrote the song "Mercury Blues" and had played with Tommy Johnson in the early 1940s.

His mother remarried, to a Korean War veteran who Wold characterized as abusive, and, at the age of about 13, Wold claimed that he left home following a violent confrontation with his stepfather.

1951

Steven Gene Wold (né Leach; 19 March 1951), commonly known as Seasick Steve, is an American blues musician.

He plays mostly personalized guitars and sings, usually about his early life doing casual work.

Official birth records confirm his birth year as 1951.

When he was four years old, his parents split up and he continued to live with his mother.

He claimed that as a child he was taught to play the guitar by K. C. Douglas, who worked at his grandfather's garage, and later realised that he had been taught the blues.

1960

From the late 1960s, he worked as a musician and recording engineer in the US and Europe; he played bass in Shanti and was in a disco band called Crystal Grass as well as other bands.

He also pursued other works, including producing an album for Modest Mouse.

Wright drew on interviews with Wold's estranged eldest son as well as previously published material covering his career in music since the late 1960s, and commented that Wold was "retiring about facts of his own life".

Steve Wold was born in Oakland, California, as Steven Gene Leach, though his biographer suggests that he may have been adopted as a baby.

Wold claimed to have lived rough and on the road in Tennessee, Mississippi and elsewhere, until at least the late 1960s.

1965

However, Wright's biography claims that Wold lived in Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, for some time from 1965.

He attended the Monterey Pop Festival, regularly saw bands such as The Grateful Dead perform in the area, and became acquainted with Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix.

1969

In about 1969, he toured clubs in the region as a backing musician with Lightnin' Hopkins.

1970

In 1970, as Steve Leach, he became the bass player in an innovative band, Shanti, who performed a fusion of Indian and rock music.

Other band members included Zakir Hussain and Aashish Khan, and all the band members were adherents of Transcendental Meditation.

Wold also spent time in the 1970s in Hawaii, and worked as a session musician and studio engineer, as well as in occasional manual jobs.

He has claimed to have played with other musicians including Son House, John Lee Hooker, Albert King, and Joni Mitchell around this time.

1972

He left California in 1972 and moved to Paris, France, where he busked in the Métro.

1974

He occasionally returned to California where he married Victoria Johnson in 1974; they had two sons together but later divorced.

1976

In 1976, he worked with French producer Lee Hallyday and fronted the disco group Crystal Grass.

Leach appeared on two Crystal Grass albums released by Philips Records in France, Dance Up a Storm and Ocean Potion, the latter credited to Steve Leach with the Crystal Grass Orchestra.

The group also released several singles including "You Can Be What You Dream".

He also sang on the first album released by Mike Love's side project Celebration, a collaboration with members of the Paris-based band King Harvest.

1980

He took the surname Wold in the early 1980s, from that of his second wife.

Around 1980, Steve Leach returned to Europe.

For a time in the early 1980s, he lived in London, and then with Elisabeth in Skelmersdale, England, which biographer Wright notes is the location of a major Transcendental Meditation movement center.

1982

In 1982, he appeared as singer and guitarist on an album, Women and Sports, by the band Clean, Athletic & Talented (C.A.T.), co-writing their single "I Love To Touch Young Girls".

He met Elisabeth Wold in a blues bar in Oslo, Norway, and adopted her surname after she became his second wife.

2000

The publicity about Wold at the time he first became successful in Britain, in the mid-2000s, suggested that he was then aged in his sixties, and emphasised his past as a hobo in Tennessee and Mississippi.

In 2000, he gave his age as 50, though later publicity implied that he was older.

2006

He achieved his breakthrough, initially in the UK, at the end of 2006 when he appeared on Jools Holland's annual Hootenanny as Seasick Steve.

He has since released a number of commercially successful albums, including I Started Out with Nothin and I Still Got Most of It Left, Man from Another Time, and Sonic Soul Surfer.

2007

In a 2007 interview, he said: "I rode them [ freight trains ] for 14 years off and on..", adding "I've been married to this one girl for 25 years, so I’m a little bit settled down now..."

2008

In a 2008 interview in Memphis, Wold was quoted as stating: "I came down here as a young feller looking for the blues, but I didn't find them... Wasn't in Clarksdale but an hour before a big, old redneck policeman ran me right out of town again. That was how it was back then, and there were some places hereabouts you just didn't go if you were a hobo."

By his own account, he would travel long distances by hopping freight trains, looking for work as a farm laborer or in other seasonal jobs.

He claimed that he had worked at a carnival, as a cowboy and as a migrant worker.

2015

In liner notes for a 2015 reissue of Shanti's only album, writer Richie Unterberger states that "bassist Steve Leach has reinvented himself as the blues musician Seasick Steve", and his participation in Shanti was confirmed by Seattle band the Tremens.

2016

In 2016, an unauthorized biography by Matthew Wright presented evidence that parts of Wold's backstory may have been exaggerated.