Can You Duet’s Wild Honey – The Exclusive 9513 Interview

Jim Malec | May 27th, 2008 Email Share

Wild Honey

It took a bit of prodding, some motherly encouragement, and even a little cheesecake to bring together Victoria Gibson and Ruth Collins, who now appear on CMT’s Can You Duet as the duo Wild Honey.

Victoria, who was raised in a conservative Christian household in Cummings, GA, began teaching herself guitar at the age of twelve. Ruth grew up on a vineyard in Fredonia, NY, and is a classically trained musician with a degree from Berklee College of Music in Boston.

Although it may seem both unusual and improbable that these two young women from seemingly different worlds could converge as a single artistic voice, Gibson and Collins believe that it is the differences they share as individuals that makes them unique as a duo.

“We collaborate on our thinking,” Victoria says. “Ruth writes a certain way, and I write a certain way, and we bring it together. It’s very interesting and very different, and it works for Wild Honey. It defines who we are.”

Sweet Beginnings

It was, however, a collaboration that almost never came to fruition.

Victoria and Ruth were working together at The Cheesecake Factory in the posh Nashville suburb Green Hills, when they met just a little over one year ago.

“I didn’t know Victoria that well,” Ruth says. “She asked me to jam. And I was, like, ‘oh no, this girl’s asking me to jam, I don’t know what that’s gonna be like.”

But Victoria, who had only been in Nashville for a few months, persisted. She told Ruth that she was handing out “best friend” applications. And Ruth passed the application process with flying colors. “I had to get her to open up to me,” Victoria says. “But the first night we hung out, we were best friends automatically.”

“I’m just shy,” adds Ruth.

Wild HoneyBut their friendship didn’t immediately grow into the potent artistic collaboration that exists between them today. At that time,they were both still pursuing solo careers, although they had begun to frequently appear on stage together, not as an act but simply as two friends supporting each other, playing guitar and harmonizing on one another’s songs. It wasn’t until Victoria’s mom spoke up that the duo finally began to take shape. “She just said, ‘you guys just need to do one set’,” Ruth explains. “And we did. And it was something we couldn’t ignore.”

That “something,” is the product of a blending of two distinct personalities, from two very different backgrounds.

Victoria, 20, moved to Nashville in February of 2007. She had made it all the way to the final 56 competitors during the auditions for Nashville Star’s fifth season, and the taste of success left her hungry for more.

Hailing from a tiny Georgia town most known for its annual 4th of July steam-engine tractor parade, Gibson is a small town girl to the core who was raised on the same land as her father. And she had never even attended a “real concert,” until Ruth took her to Fan Fair in 2007.

“I grew up in a very Christian home,” she says, with a soft drawl that leaves no question as to her southern heritage. “My parents were children of the seventies who grew up when crazy stuff was going on [at concerts]. So they kinda kept [me] away from that. I wasn’t really allowed to listen to anything but Christian music until I was sixteen.”

The “honey” to Victoria’s “wild,” Ruth, 24, took a very different path to Music City. The restrained and introspective songstress, who cites Emmylou Harris as one of her greatest country influences, studied piano and violin (she uses this word rather than ‘fiddle’), and “didn’t really listen to that much country growing up. My parents didn’t really play anything but classical.”

“I remember my ex-boyfriend’s mom would play country music in the car on the way to his middle school hockey games, and that’s when I really started loving it.”

And, Ruth adds, she’s always been a country girl. “I’m from NY, and I definitely get a lot of slack for that. People are like, ‘you’re not country’, But I grew up on a grape farm that was in our family for two-hundred years.”

Upon graduation from Berklee, she took a job as a vocal director at a church in San Antonio, but the lure of Nashville and it’s songwriting community was too strong to resist, and before long she found herself smack-dab in the country music capitol of the world. And it’s been full speed ahead ever since.

Can You Duet?

“We were playing every little dive bar,” Ruth says, when, in late 2007, an opportunity presented itself that was so perfectly suited to the duo that it must have seemed like a gift. “We heard about the show from several different people. And we thought, ‘this is what we do every day of our lives, and now they’re making a reality TV show about it?”

Wild HoneyAfter six hours of waiting in line on the day of the show’s audition, the pair was finally ushered to the back of Nashville’s Wildhorse Saloon. “We went in, and we didn’t know who the judges were. They led us down a long dark hall, and all of the sudden we walked out into the room and there’s Naomi Judd. And our hearts start pounding, cause, you know, she’s famous. It’s crazy. We didn’t expect we’d have to go sing in front of Naomi Judd,” Victoria says.

“And Naomi told Vic that she liked her shoes,” Ruth says.

But the duo managed to calm their nerves. First they sang, “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry.” And when the judges asked for something up-tempo, they performed their original, “This Is What Love Looks Like.”

The judges promptly awarded the duo three “yes” votes. But it wasn’t exactly smooth sailing thereafter.

“They gave us the all-access passes, and we did our interviews where they asked us, ‘How do you feel, congratulations, blah blah blah.’ Then they said, ‘Ok, well, we still have to do an entire other day of other people, so we’ll actually call you on Wednesday to let you know if you made it or not.’” Victoria says.

“The next day was Wednesday,” Ruth says. “And me and Victoria met in the morning so we could be together all day, so we could be with each other for the phone call. And it never came. And so we thought, ‘Oh. I guess we didn’t make it.’ And we were kinda down about it.”

Nevertheless, the duo pulled themselves up by the bootstraps–they tried to take the focus off their disappointment by getting ready for a show that they were schedule to play in a couple of weeks.

“Then, on Friday, at 8 in the morning, I get a call and somebody says, ‘Is this Victoria from Wild Honey? This is Garret from Can You Duet. We have a big meeting today, and we were just wondering–where are you?’”

“And I said [to Garret], you never called us. We thought we didn’t make it. I hung up the phone and called Ruth immediately. And we moved into Opryland hotel the next day.”

Real Artists, Real Music

As excited as Victoria and Ruth were to take advantage of the incredible opportunity to compete on CMT’s flagship summer series, it was not something they entered into lightly, as they were both well aware of the stigma that is often attached to artists who gain prominence through reality TV.

Wild HoneyRuth, especially, was weary at first. “Victoria sort of had to convince me to do this show,” she says, when asked about people who might think less of them because they didn’t take a traditional route to industry success.

“I have to admit, I’ve even been guilty of that type of thinking before. We work so hard to be respected as musicians.[...]I used to see those reality shows and think, ‘A lot of those people aren’t that great.’ And then you go through it, and the nerves that go on–it’s the scariest thing I’ve ever done in my life. I don’t think people quite give it credit it deserves.”

“I think that people who are on these shows, very rarely do they just not sing or play out anywhere,” Victoria says. “That is what they do every day. We did play out together before the show. Heck, we still play three times a week in Nashville.”

“It’s just like a showcase in a different way. We audition; we do basically everything we do in a real showcase. For people to look down on [the show] and say, ‘well, they didn’t work hard enough,’ that’s not true at all.”

One thing that is true, however, is the fact that whether or not Wild Honey ends up being victorious on Can You Duet, these two friends are thankful–and not just for the exposure and fans the experience has won them.

“The show helped us a lot, because it was such a stressful situation. We’re just these little girls, we don’t really know what we’re doing. Being together through that brought us so much closer, because we didn’t have to do it alone. We’ve had to learn to love each other when we hate each other. We just understand that it has to work, so we make it work. And we make it work. We know each other up and down, we know each other’s buttons, what not to say and when not to say it,” Ruth says.

And that may be Wild Honey’s sweetest song of all.

Visit Wild Honey’s MySpace Page

  1. Jarheaddad
    May 27, 2008 at 9:31 am Permalink

    Absolutely love those two! Gotta’ admit I’m biased though since Victoria is a Georgia girl. Pretty cool the way those two harmonize and have come together from such totally different backgrounds.

    I won’t even address the “fear” they have from being on a reality show other than to say Good For Them!

    Thanks for the article and MySpace link. I find myself listening more to music on the net than anywhere else lately. What does that say? Heh!

  2. Chris N.
    May 27, 2008 at 9:55 am Permalink

    I was really hoping you meant something else by “cheesecake.”

  3. Jarheaddad
    May 27, 2008 at 10:10 am Permalink

    Yeah well Chris, you didn’t even comment on the Kellie Pickler bikini thing so I thought you were losing it. Nice to see you have recovered! :-o

  4. Kelly
    May 27, 2008 at 10:22 am Permalink

    Great article, Jim.

    I will admit to watching the show, and even enjoying it to a point. I do feel as though Wild Honey are only maybe the 4th or 5th strongest duo still left (maybe they’re just not my cup o’ tea). My main issue with the show however, is that the format of the show has upped the “manufactured” aspect ten fold by splitting duos up and putting them together with other split duos (or people that showed up solo in certain cases). Reality competitions are going to have a bit of cheese and slick programming, thats just a given. I think the mixing and matching has helped the show lose any possibility of having a real, seasoned duo win and be a genuinely warm success story of a duo that has played together, fought together and won together. The two duos that have gone home already are two duos that were paired together by the judges, doesnt that say something? Did i just say way too much about this show???

  5. Chris N.
    May 27, 2008 at 10:25 am Permalink

    Man, I didn’t realize I had such a rep around here as a leering pervert. Not that it’s inaccurate at all.

  6. Brady Vercher
    May 27, 2008 at 12:01 pm Permalink

    Great interview, Jim. I’ve kinda watched a couple of episodes, but I’m not really recalling their performances. Maybe they’ll be able to fill the spot left by The Wreckers.

    Kelly, I watched the episode where they cut it down from 12 to 8 and it made me mad because I thought they cut three of the better acts that were more country and were looking for a particular rock type vibe more than anything. Naomi even told one duo to never change, that they were great the way they were, and then proceeded to cut them. I think they’ll keep the overalls dude (Rory I think) and his wife in it for awhile because they’re actually country, but I don’t think they’ll let them win.

  7. SJ
    May 27, 2008 at 12:11 pm Permalink

    yawn, more AI wannabe’s…

  8. Kelly
    May 27, 2008 at 12:11 pm Permalink

    Brady, I thought the same thing, specifically about the folky couple where the guy had dreadlocks. I actually agreed with the judges last week about Rory and his wife. Great voices, good performance, but it was very safe and easy for them. I want to see them branch out a bit, but still be true to who they are…man I shouldnt have such strong opinions on this show….

  9. Mike Parker
    May 27, 2008 at 1:11 pm Permalink

    SJ-

    I don’t understand why everyone is down on AI and the other contests. Every wannabe artist does whatever they can to get into the spotlight. Is being voted into that spotlight by celebrity judges, and then your fan base really a bad thing? There are drawbacks to it for sure (thin-skinned, too raw, not ready for fame), but you can’t argue that the winners usually have some degree of talent.

    I think the trend to immediately disregard the winners of these contests is unfair. At least give them the same shot you’d give to some guy/gal who got a record deal because they got in front of the right person at the right time at a Karaoke bar.

    After the contest, if the winner makes a horrible product, then it’s fair to unleash the fury- but labeling someone a wannabe because they manage to win such a huge contest is silly.

  10. Kelly
    May 27, 2008 at 1:51 pm Permalink

    I am with you to a point, Mike. My issue isnt with the contestants that display some sort of originality, and happen to be on the various talent shows. Sadly, those are too few and far between. These shows do encourage middle of the road material and they reward slick, poppy crap too much of the time. I am cool with someone trying an alternate path in order to make a name for themselves, not everyone can afford to pack up and move to Nashville, NYC or LA, and these shows can be good for someone who is truly talented and unique.Again, sadly those types of talent rarely get through to the final rounds.

  11. Rick
    May 27, 2008 at 2:27 pm Permalink

    For the few early episodes I caught I was most impressed with the Coppola Sisters and the little blonde teeny-bopper gal who was accompanied by her father on guitar. I just like great family member vocal harmonies and the Coppola’s sounded great to me. The teeny bopper gal had a great voice apart from duet considerations and could very well make it as a solo artist.

    I too was put off by the judges disparaging the contestants that dare to perform traditional country material when the judges want radio friendly pop-rock crap instead. I’ve enjoyed the musical performances, but the judges comments tend to infuriate me, well except for Naomi anyway. If these reality musical talent contests boost the careers of truly talented artists, more power to them. Now if only Ashley Monroe and Sarah Buxton had been contestants on American Idol……

  12. J.R. Journey
    May 27, 2008 at 2:53 pm Permalink

    Have to agree with Rick. My main gripe about the show wouldn’t be the song choices of the contestants,(though I do want to hear more country music and less southern-rock and/or southern-rock influenced country – it’s just a better proving ground in my opinion) but more so, the judges’ comments when someone does choose a good song. Case in point: Hal Ketchum’s ‘Small Town Saturday Night’ was covered on last week’s show and Ms. Mayo was down on the pair because she ‘wasn’t crazy about their song choice.’ Personally, I thought it was the best song of the night, certainly the most country.

    I want to hear these guys and gals sink their teeth into some real country ballads. I want to hear them ache like Reba, nail the lyric to the wall like Ronnie Dunn, and maybe even do a little Vince Gill soul too. There seems to be some some good enough singers in the group to pour out some real country honest to goodness on that stage.

    Right now, my favorite singer on the show is Caitlin Fisher. She was also split from her original partner and paired with another lady before she was finally paired with Will Snyder – also, a superb singer in his own right.

    Caitlin really has the kind of voice that can stand out on radio; all her own. She doesn’t seem like a down-home country girl as of yet. But country can also be the forte for bad-ass girls too … My money’s on this girl, whether she wins this duo competition or not. Remember this girl’s name so you can say ‘I watched her back when …’

  13. Stormy
    May 27, 2008 at 3:21 pm Permalink

    Rick: Were the Coppola sisters Immani and Mia?

  14. Rick
    May 27, 2008 at 4:28 pm Permalink

    Stormy, The Coppola Sisters are 25 year old twins Kacey and Kate from Denver Colorado. You can read about the final 16 contestants (ie final 8 duet pairings) at:

    http://www.cmt.com/shows/series/can_you_duet/contestants.jhtml

    I just really like these gals voices, their harmonies, and the way they blend. I guess being twins might have something to do with it…..(wink)

  15. Stormy
    May 27, 2008 at 6:08 pm Permalink

    I was hoping for a return of my favorite Coppola.

  16. Kelly
    May 28, 2008 at 5:57 am Permalink

    Sofia???

  17. Stormy
    May 28, 2008 at 6:51 am Permalink

    Immani–she is really good.

  18. Chris N.
    May 28, 2008 at 8:45 pm Permalink

    I’ll stick with Francis Ford.

  19. Lynda
    May 29, 2008 at 8:50 pm Permalink

    I think that Wild Honey is great. I wish them all the best in the rest of their carreers. And good luck with the show.

  20. Gregory
    May 31, 2008 at 8:00 pm Permalink

    I can’t believe these two got kicked off. She was right, the judges have loved them every week. What Happened. These girls are great

  21. Kelly
    June 1, 2008 at 10:55 am Permalink

    Actually, the girls talked as if the judges had raved about them, and the judges actually hadnt raved about them near the way they have raved about Rory or Amy and Will. Their song wasnt good, and they displayed a ton of unwarranted cockiness when they said that they expected that song to not only get them to the final (even though there were 6 remaining), but would ALSO be the first single from their record?!?! Nice girls, but they were out of their depth with that performance.

  22. Maria
    June 6, 2008 at 3:34 pm Permalink

    The judges are a mess!You have one gal who sounds like she has been huffing helium and the guy who cannot make eye contact with the contestants because of that hair in his eyes.Don’t even get me started on Naomi who has been mean spirited throughout this competition,not to mention the fact that her daughter had all of the talent in their duet music career.Everyone knows that!

  23. J.R. Journey
    June 13, 2008 at 9:56 pm Permalink

    Ouch, Maria …

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