Description
Wille and the Bandits have built a reputation as one of the most exciting and authentic live bands to emerge from the UK. Rooted in Cornwall, their music carries the spirit of a place that feels almost like the Deep South of the UK — miles from cities, shaped by wild coastlines, Atlantic weather, and a culture where individuality is survival. It’s a landscape that breeds grit, independence, and soul — and you can hear that in every note they play. The group features some of the finest musicians in the South West, each bringing world-class skill and fearless creativity to the stage.
Wille’s slide guitar playing and voice has become the cornerstone of Wille and the Bandits’ sound, earning admiration from both fans and some of the biggest names in blues rock. “Wille is a superb slide player,” says Joe Bonamassa, while Beth Hart praises, “What a voice and some of the best songwriting you will hear.” His lap steel work carries fire, tenderness, and a sense of vast space — the sound of a musician who plays from the chest, not the ego.
A another defining element of their sound is Stevie Watts on Hammond organ — voted UK Blues Instrumentalist of the Year — whose rich, swirling tone evokes gospel halls, swampy blues bars, and the cinematic warmth of vintage rock records. Harry Mackaill provides a melodic and powerful anchor on bass, while Zach O’Loughlin’s dynamic drumming brings the music to life with both thunder and sensitivity, the band’s music feels lived-in, human, and powerfully real.
Critics and audiences have drawn comparisons to Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, John Martyn and Ben Harper, while their rhythmic flow and improvisational fire echo the spirit of the John Butler Trio. On stage, they are electrifying — named one of BBC Radio 1’s Top Ten Must-See Bands at Glastonbury, invited to perform on the legendary Rockpalast, and selected to play the London Olympics, alongside tours with Deep Purple, Status Quo, Joe Bonamassa, Beth Hart, and Warren Haynes.
The band now enters a new era with their forthcoming album Salt Roots (2026) — a record that reaches deep into questions of identity, environmental responsibility, and belonging to the land. Recorded live in the room, the album captures the energy of musicians playing together, not programming — the sweat, the risk, the electricity of real performance. Wille and the Bandits remain a hard-touring band at their core — hundreds of shows across Europe, the USA, and Australia, winning crowds the old way: by showing up and leaving everything on stage.
Whether delivering a roaring rock anthem or a hushed moment of intimacy, they connect with audiences not just through sound — but through soul, honesty and presence.
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