Will Oldham was born in Louisville, Kentucky, in 1970. He first pursued acting, appearing in several movie and television roles in the late '80s, but he quickly became disillusioned with the industry. After several miscellaneous tracks in the early '90s, Oldham's first musical output under the name the Palace Brothers began appearing on the Drag City label. The group was a vehicle for Oldham's desolate country-tinged songs with his obtuse lyrics and occasionally cracking voice as the only constant. He sometimes recorded solo under the Palace brand and sometimes called on his actual brother Ned Oldham and a cast of other musicians to fill out the songs. Oldham released scores of singles, EPs, and albums under different variations of the Palace moniker ("Palace Music," "Palace," "Palace Songs") from 1993 until 1997 before switching over to his own name without changing anything about his sound on 1997's weird and lonely Joya. Time spent going by his birth name would be relatively short, though the next two years did see a good number of 7" singles, EPs, and even a compilation of rare tracks issued under the Will Oldham name before he switched titles again, taking up the stage name Bonnie Prince Billy for 1999's critically lauded album I See a Darkness.
Oldham would stick with the new moniker for the majority of the next 20 years, but every so often would return to his birth name, usually for miscellaneous projects. Instances of this included All Most Heaven, a brief collaboration with Rian Murphy issued in 2000; 2004's soundtracky Seafarers Music EP; split 7"s with Don Lennon and David Berman; and limited-edition flexi disc In the Garden of Evil, included with copies of the 2015 art book of the same name by Charles Burns and Killoffer. In 2018, Oldham released Songs of Love and Horror under his own name, an album that saw him revisiting older songs and re-recording them in a consistently haunting, stripped-down acoustic manner. ~ Fred Thomas, Rovi