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Reid Kerr at MYSPACE

"There is something about the troubadour voice of North Carolina's native sons. It sings of love and within the intonation there is the bitter with the sweet. James Taylor is probably the most famous singer/songwriter to take the sound on the road, but he about to be joined by Sunset Beach's own Reid Kerr!"

-  Pete Skiba, The Brunswick Beacon; April 25, 2002

 

 

 

 

"There is no way to know if a fledgling musician will blossom into a star. But if it's true that success requires equal amounts of talent and hard work, anyone who has heard this young singer/songwriter from Sunset Beach would agree that Kerr has an ample portion of both."
- Eric Carlson, The Brunswick Beacon, Island Living;  June 2001 





Wilmington Star News  9-10-03  

Student songwriter wins hearts of locals with soulful music

By Linda Bordner
Star-News Correspondent


Holden Beach- A breeze off the Intracoastal Waterway stirs the early evening air at The Holden Beach Provision Company in Holden Beach. Patrons sink back in their seats, turning to better hear the lone musician warming up his acoustic guitar.

For Reid Kerr, a senior at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, it doesn't get any better than this. From the time he was 6, the 21-year-old songwriter knew he would be in front of a crowd, making people smile with his music.

"I might not ever become famous," he said. "If that happens, it would be great. But the important thing for me is to impact people the way other songwriters did me."

By other songwriters, Mr. Kerr doesn't mean rap icons, hip-hoppers or punk rockers of MTV. Instead, he's referring to the likes of Bob Dylan and James Taylor, who inspired him early on to write songs with melody, words with meaning.

Tina Oshbahr of The Provision Company says she's always glad when the restaurant can get Mr. Kerr, who performs around his class schedule at restaurants, nightclubs and other venues along New Hanover and Brunswick counties. On Thanksgiving weekend, he'll be part of a show to usher in the holiday season at Thalian Hall in downtown.

"He's wonderful," Ms. Oshbahr said. "His music is so mellow, a couple of his songs put tears in my eyes."

But melancholy blues is only one shade in Mr. Kerr's palette of original numbers. It's hard for him to categorize his pieces into one particular style.

"I go out of category a lot," he says, "from country to jazz, blues and rock 'n' roll to folk."

Although listeners enjoy his original compositions, he includes crowd favorites to accommodate customer requests. Recently, he tasted what it's like to inspire future musicians, when a young girl, about 7, in the audience started singing along.

"She knew the words, too, not just to new songs, but songs by Dusty Springfield and Bob Dylan's Nashville Skyline," he said. "I couldn't believe it. I talked to her parents later. They said she just loves music and catches on quick."

Among his finest moments, he said, was being among the top three finalists recently on the remake of Arthur Smith's classic Carolina Calling public television show. In the audience that night was Eric Carlson, who is not only his mentor, but also his biggest fan.

Mr. Carlson, a magistrate in Brunswick County and friend of Mr. Kerr's dad, Jay Kerr, recalls being struck by the depth of talent and poise in one so young.

"I've been playing at it for 30 years," Mr. Carlson says of his own guitar and bass music. "It's rewarding, but a bit of an effort for me. But Reid is really a natural talent. What I think makes him so unique is his ear for quality and his appreciation of roots music."

He believes that's what infuses Mr. Kerr's work with more complex, interesting song structures. As for stage presence, he adds, "On stage, he's fearless."

Despite not winning top spot on Carolina Calling, Mr. Kerr said the show was a great learning experience for how the system works and who the people are within it, describing Arthur Smith as "a legend."

Although Mr. Kerr's music career began young and included a year of formal lessons, he is for the most part, self-taught.

He sang in his church choir and conducted impromptu concerts for anyone willing to listen. By his teen years, he was playing for tips at any restaurant that'd have him.

His first paying gig came several years ago at Crabby Oddwaters near the South Carolina line.

Since then, his popularity has grown to the point he earned enough to put himself through UNCW for the past three years.

Upon graduation, he hopes the skills he's learned through his communication major will help him make the right connections to play music for a living.

"I feel I owe it to myself to at least try," he said. "There's a lot of good music out there. If another song were never written, it would probably be OK. But to me, music is so important. I feel I have something to say."