Williams actually shares more than musical kinship with one member of that quartet — he also, apparently, shares DNA. He is likely the biological son of Jerry Lee Lewis, a fact Lewis has acknowledged publicly, though anyone who’s heard or witnessed Rockin’ Jason D. Williams kill a keyboard (figuratively, for the most part) never had a doubt. Even Todd Snider, who produced Williams’ last album, Killer Instincts, says people in Memphis never tolerated disbelievers.
Raised in Arkansas by his adoptive parents, a pair of Baptist missionaries (his dad, coincidentally, was named Hank), Williams first hit the piano keys when he was 3. It didn’t take him long to fall under the spell of rock ’n’ roll, or characters like the Killer. As Williams’ turned his talent into his career, he recognized that the resemblance — musically and physically — was likely more than coincidental, a fact Lewis eventually confirmed.
“We’re very comfortable with being around each other at this point. It’s a really great relationship,” Williams says. “It was actually Jerry who sought me out here in Memphis when I was about 14 years old.” Williams had done a few performances there while traveling with his parents. Not too many years later, he wound up getting hired by rockabilly ace Sleepy LaBeef, who was also impressed by the young player’s prowess. During an Atlanta show Williams played in his early 20s, Lewis showed up again, this time with his cousin Rusty Brown (brother of Lewis’ very young third wife, Myra Gayle).
“He hid in the back of the crowd and watched for some time,” Williams reports. “His comment to Rusty back then was that he had heard I was his natural son and he had no question after that.” In 1982, Williams was traveling through Memphis during a snowstorm and got stuck in front of the historic Peabody Hotel. He went inside, wound up entertaining the stranded guests, and landed a permanent gig. By then, he and Lewis had formed a bond that continues to this day. Williams even handled the keyboard work for Dennis Quaid in the 1989 Lewis biopic Great Balls of Fire!