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Bill Kirchen has become widely known for the trademark big-rig guitar
riffs that powered the Commander Cody hit “Hot Rod Lincoln” into the
Top 10 in 1972. Since 1993, he has recorded seven critically acclaimed
albums of his own that have made him one of the musical elder
statesmen of today’s Americana music, which in truth was pioneered by
acts like Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen back in the ‘70s.
For his new album, Hammer of the Honky-Tonk Gods on Proper Records,
Kirchen puts the accent on songwriting, a talent that is sometimes
overshadowed by his dazzling instrumental virtuosity. “I felt it was
time to write some songs that cut closer to the bone,” he says. And on
such moving numbers as “Rocks Into Sand” and “One More Day,” he
succeeds admirably. All told, Hammer of the Honky-Tonk Gods is the
culmination of one very rich American musical life.
On Hammer, the man known as “The King of Dieselbilly” and “A Titan of
the Telecaster” visits most every sonic landmark along the proverbial
Route 66 of American music that he’s traveled for decades now as a
player, songwriter and singer, and serves up a blue-plate special of
such tasty and nourishing stylistic flavors as rock ‘n’ roll,
honky-tonk, soul, rockabilly, Western swing, country, blues,
boogie-woogie and more. The set captures the essence of Kirchen as “a
devastating culmination of the elegant and funky,” as he’s described
by his longtime friend and compatriot Nick Lowe, one of the noted
musicians who plays on Hammer of the Honky-Tonk Gods.
From his twanging title tribute to the Fender Telecaster guitar that
he plays (and which he notes in song “was born at the junction of form
and function”) to the soulful closing take of Arthur Alexander’s “If
It’s Really Got To Be This Way,” Kirchen covers a home run of musical
bases on his new disc. Recorded primarily in London with Lowe on bass,
Robert Trehern on drums and Austin deLone and Geraint Watkins on
keyboards, the album touches on Kirchen’s Michigan Motown R&B roots
(“Soul Cruisin’” and a take of “Devil With the Blue Dress” that echoes
the Shorty Long original), barroom blues (Blackie Farrell’s “Skid Row
In My Mind”), doo-wop (“Working Man”) and Sun Records rockabilly meets
Jerry Lee Lewis boogie-woogie (“Heart of Gold”) in addition to the
honky-tonk, Western swing and Dieselbilly, of which Kirchen is an
acknowledged master.
Kirchen has appeared on record and stage with a who’s who of musical
talents that includes Lowe, Doug Sahm, Ralph Stanley, Gene Vincent,
Elvis Costello, Emmylou Harris, Bruce Hornsby, Hoyt Axton and fellow
six-string heroes Link Wray and Danny Gatton. At the recent Hardly
Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco, Bill played guitar with
Elvis Costello, who named his band for the event the Hammer of the
Honky-Tonk Gods after Bill’s upcoming release, and featured Bill
singing the title song. Kirchen was nominated for a 2001 Grammy Award
for Best Country Instrumental Performance for his song “Poultry in
Motion” and inducted the next year into the Washington (D.C.) Area
Music Association Hall of Fame alongside John Phillip Sousa and Dave Grohl of Nirvana and the Foo Fighters. He has lectured at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, the Smithsonian Institution and the 1998
International Conference on Elvis Presley in Memphis, and is featured
in the TNN special Yesterday and Today: Honky-Tonk & Western Swing.
The Dieselbilly king is especially known for exhilarating live
performances at festivals and venues across North America and Europe.
The tour de force of every Kirchen show is his extended rendition of
“Hot Rod Lincoln” on which “like an impassioned preacher in a souped-up
convertible,” as Washington City Paper describes it, he cites the
guitar styles of such six-string giants as Muddy Waters, B.B. King,
Scotty Moore, Carl Perkins and Jimi Hendrix, while also referencing
riffs by everyone from Merle Haggard to the Rolling Stones to Flatt &
Scruggs to the Sex Pistols.
Kirchen began his musical journey in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he
attended high school alongside Iggy Pop and Bob Seger. His first
instrument was the classical trombone — which happens to share the
same lowest note with the guitar — until a counselor at the esteemed
Interlochen Arts Academy turned him on to folk music. “I said, this
trombone has got to go,” Kirchen recalls. “I found a banjo in my mom’s
attic and got the Pete Seeger how to play banjo book and 10-inch
Folkways record and off I went.”
He soon picked up the guitar, initially emulating the finger picking
of Mississippi John Hurt. Attending the Newport Folk Festival in 1964
and 1965, he received a master class tutelage in American roots music
and, at the latter, witnessed Bob Dylan’s first appearance as an
electric folk-rocker. “I was really lucky to hear many of the legends
before they passed away,” he recalls, still reveling at the memories
of seeing bluesmen like Son House, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Skip James,
Robert Pete Williams, Mance Lipscomb and Furry Lewis at Newport and
such bluegrass greats as Bill Monroe, the Stanley Brothers and the
Kentucky Colonels (with Clarence White) in Ann Arbor. To this day,
Kirchen continues to consider himself a folk artist, albeit “one who
plays too fast and too loud.”
After leading a hippie rock band called the Seventh Seal in Ann Arbor
in the late ‘60s, Kirchen helped form Commander Cody and His Lost
Planet Airmen, who revived and revitalized honky-tonk, boogie-woogie
and Western swing for a rock audience. The group relocated to the San
Francisco Bay Area in 1969, and recorded seven albums for Paramount
and Warner Bros. Records before the original band broke up in 1975.
Along the way, they became staples of FM radio and a popular concert
attraction, cut a disc that was later named one of the best 100 albums
of all time by Rolling Stone (Live From Deep in the Heart of Texas),
and were the subject of one of the first and still among the finest
books about the inner workings of the music business, Star-Making
Machinery.
Kirchen carried on, forming a new band, the Moonlighters, and recorded
two albums, the second in England with Nick Lowe producing. In 1986,
Kirchen relocated to the Washington, D.C. area, where he formed a
trio, Too Much Fun, that became the musical toast of the Capital town.
Over two albums with Black Top Records and three with HighTone,
Kirchen solidified his reputation as one of the most thrilling roots
music six-stringers today, as well as a singer and songwriter capable
of everything from keen wit to poignant depth and insight.
In recent years, Kirchen recorded with Lowe on the latter’s Impossible
Bird album and played on the subsequent worldwide tour and live album,
and toured and cut a live album with the Twangbangers (in which he
joined forces with fellow Telecaster master Redd Volkaert, singer and
songwriter Dallas Wayne and steel guitar savant Joe Goldmark). He also
reunited with Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen for a
25th-anniversary performance on A Prairie Home Companion in 2001, and
was tapped by the National Commission for the Traditional Arts to
record an album, Dieselbilly Road Trip, for a Heritage Music
Collection. Kirchen remains the consummate working musician, wowing
audiences night after night at the scores of shows he plays every
year.
All it takes is a spin of Hammer of the Honky-Tonk Gods or a night
with Bill Kirchen as he tears the roof off any place he appears to
agree with what the Austin American-Statesman says: “Bill Kirchen
rules. It’s just that simple.”
For more information on Bill Kirchen, please contact conqueroo:
Cary Baker • (818) 501-2001 • cary@conqueroo.com
Booking Inquiries:
Bill Penn
REDCOW Promotions
PO Box 1652
Manchaca, Tx 78652-1652
Ph: 512-771-8303
Email: redcowbill@austin.rr.com
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