Until New Year's Eve, 2006, former hobo Steven Gene Wold, a 65-year-old
blues musician, playing a beat-up, three-string guitar (aka The
Three-String Trance Wonder, or "the biggest piece of shit in the world")
and stomping on a wooden box with a Mississippi motorcycle plate stuck
on, was hardly known outside his tiny community of fans. A performance
before on Jools Holland's New Year's Even special projected Seasick
Steve into the big league. Dog House Music sold out overnight, and
2008 brought his major label debut. Behind this unique performer's rise
is 65 years of fascinating life story: he left a violent home at 13, and
his professional career only began after decades on the road. He learned
from blues legend KC Douglas in his grandfather's garage. Part of Steve,
the hollerin', stompin' blues, and the gorgeous homemade guitars is
magical musical history. But he's also a modern, versatile musician, who
has rubbed shoulders with the likes of Janis Joplin, Joni Mitchell, and
Kurt Cobain.