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- Musician William Clark Green will perform at the Majestic Fort Smith on Feb. 28.
- Green’s latest album, “Watterson Hall,” is inspired by his new life of marriage and fatherhood.
- The artist’s songwriting has shifted from themes of heartbreak and partying to more personal family topics.
- Green cites Texas songwriters like Guy Clark and Lyle Lovett as major influences on his work.
When William Clark Green returns to Fort Smith on Feb. 28 at the Majestic Fort Smith, fans may hear something different in the songs, not a departure from his roots, but a deepening of them.
For more than 15 years, Green has built a devoted following on relentless touring, raucous live shows, and albums filled with heartbreak, hard miles and harder weekends. But he has always said each record is a chapter of his life. His latest, “Watterson Hall,” opens on a new one.
“Marriage and kids,” Green said plainly. “I met my wife in 2020, and we have a 3½-year-old, a 2-year-old, and a girl on the way. We’re in the thick of it.”
The album, he says, is “the anthem of starting a family for me.”
For a songwriter whose catalog once leaned heavily into loss and late nights, the shift required recalibration.
“My whole songwriting career has been about loss of love and partying,” he said. “When you find your wife and have kids, those other things go away. I just wasn’t experiencing heartbreak.”
Instead of chasing old themes, Green chose to write about what was in front of him.
“I just decided to start writing about things that really meant something to me … rather than just do what I’ve been doing before,” he said.
That doesn’t mean it’s easier.
“It’s never easy to write,” he said. “I just try to find different ways to stay interested.”
During the making of the album, Green also lost his father, another emotional undercurrent in this chapter. He wrote a number of songs in the aftermath, though only one made the final record.
“Songwriters write what they feel,” he said. “I don’t think losing my dad benefited my songwriting. It just gave me something to write about.”
If “Watterson Hall” feels more personal and vulnerable, it is because it is. But Green insists the core philosophy hasn’t changed. He still writes the songs he loves first — and lets the audience decide what lives onstage.
“When I record a song, I’m recording because I love it,” he said. “The live show is all based on what you think the fans want.”
That connection, fans singing every word back at him, remains one of the greatest rewards of his career.
“That’s one of the biggest compliments someone can get,” he said.
Green’s songwriting DNA runs straight through Texas tradition. He counts Guy Clark, Willis Alan Ramsey, and Lyle Lovett among his top influences, along with Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys.
What he learned from Clark, he said, wasn’t imitation but conviction.
“He did his thing, and he never really faltered on that,” Green said. “It doesn’t matter what was catchy. He wrote songs that he liked. That’s how I do it.”
Lovett’s originality made a similar mark.
“He’s original,” Green said. “That’s the best part. He does his thing, and no one else does it like him.”
That independence may also explain why Green shrugs off genre labels. Often associated with the Red Dirt movement, he prefers not to let it define him.
“I write songs and perform them and put out records,” he said. “The genre classification is for y’all to do, not for me. I write songs I believe in and record them.”
When he steps back onto the Majestic stage, it will feel less like a stop on a tour and more like a reunion. He has played the venue and the Peacemaker Festival in Fort Smith before and calls the Majestic “a great room, with good sound and a great stage.”
“It’s always good to see people who have been around since the beginning,” he said. “A lot of fans are turning into friends. It’s kind of a reunion.”
The wild Friday nights that once fueled his writing may have quieted into golf games and toddler chaos. But the through-line remains the same: write what’s true, sing it hard and mean it.
“It could end tomorrow,” Green said of his career. “There’s no guarantee. I’m fortunate enough to support my family by doing what I love. As long as I still love it … that’s what keeps it going.”
Heartbreak may have given way to fatherhood. The party anthems may have softened into family ones. But when Green takes the Majestic stage Feb. 28, the foundation, Texas storytelling, hard-earned honesty, and songs he believes in, will sound exactly like him.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.swtimes.com ’














