Upon tallying how many decades he’s worked as a professional guitar
slinger, Telecaster master Bill Kirchen quips, “Well, they don't make 50
years like they used to.” They don’t often make careers like his,
either.
From performing with his Who Knows Pickers jug band in
Ann Arbor High School’s senior talent show (also on the program: the
future Iggy Pop), to birthing the Americana genre with the original
“hippie country band,” Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen, this
affable Austinite has been everywhere, man, flying alongside some of the
planet’s coolest cats — including the Jesus of Cool, Nick Lowe, and
Lowe’s old protégé, Elvis Costello.
Kirchen has toured the world
with Lowe, who produced an album by Kirchen’s post-Airmen band, the
Moonlighters, and Costello recruited Kirchen for high-profile gigs like
the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival — and even named his festival
band after Kirchen’s Hammer of the Honky-Tonk Gods album. Lowe appears on that 2006 album, and its 2010 follow-up, Word to the Wise, along with Costello, Maria Muldaur, Dan Hicks and other luminaries.
Now those albums, plus Kirchen’s third Proper Records release, 2013’s Seeds and Stems, are being combined with three bonus tracks from Transatlantica, his 2016 project with pub-rock progenitor Austin de Lone, as a two-CD retrospective titled The Proper Years. Waxworks, is a vinyl best-of version of the full collection.
A well-balanced mix of engaging originals and wonderfully rendered covers, The Proper Years
admirably conveys Kirchen’s versatility as a player and singer — one of
the first to mash up rockabilly, country, western swing, honky-tonk,
jump blues, jazz, boogie-woogie and even the “psychedelic folk rock” he
played with the Seventh Seal, the band he formed while attending the
University of Michigan. (MC5 manager/activist John Sinclair got them a
dealon the ESP-Disk label, home of Sun Ra, but the band turned it down.)
Somewhere between steering Commander Cody’s “Hot Rod Lincoln”
into a top-10 hit and scoring a Grammy nomination for Best Country
Instrumental Performance, Kirchen dubbed his sound “dieselbilly,”
wrapping his fondness for country’s truck-driving song subgenre (as in
big rigs, not pickups), its intersection with the Bakersfield Sound and
his own name into one memorable moniker.
Kirchen’s
right-place-at-the-right-time career has put him at the forefront of
many musical movements, including outlaw country; Commander Cody’s 1974
album, Live from Deep in the Heart of Texas, recorded at Austin’s legendary Armadillo World Headquarters, made Rolling Stone’s 100 Best Albums of All Time list.
But
whatever label Kirchen’s music wears, it’s always notable for its
balance of high-octane energy and deft understatement. There’s no
leadfoot excess; Kirchen’s all about finesse — a sensibility absorbed
from the symphonies and Broadway musicals his parents loved, along with
the orchestral works he played as a school-band trombonist. Through
another major influence, Interlochen Center for the Arts summer camp
counselor David Siglin (who would go on to run famed Ann Arbor venue the
Ark), Kirchen became immersed in folk traditions and learned to love
the “big, sonorous tones” of an undistorted guitar. “I was more
interested in sounding like Doc Watson than Eric Clapton,” admits
Kirchen, whose main guitar was crafted by Rick Kelly of Carmine Street
Guitars from 200-year-old pine floorboards recycled from film director
Jim Jarmusch’s loft.
It’s fitting that this collection begins
with his ode to that Telly-modeled “stick of wood” he calls “the bicycle
of the electric guitar —the most efficient way to get from point A to
point B.” That song also serves as exhibit A in a collection showcasing a
central facet of Kirchen’s songwriting: his wit. If there’s a laugh to
be reached for — or stooped to —Kirchen’s goin’ for it; you don’t
survive years in a band named Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen,
or drop album titles like Seeds and Stems,
without possessing a gleefully subversive, double-entendre-loving funny
bone. “I like music where at least someone onstage is smiling
sometimes, fer crissake,” jokes Kirchen, who’s often grinning happily
when he’s not busy singing.
But for every injection of humor,
there’s an equal dose of heart (and in some cases, heartbreak). And
songs like “Tell Me the Reason” or “Get a Little Goner” illustrate
another truism: Kirchen often sets the saddest or mostbiting lyrics to
the jauntiest melodies. Those two were cowritten by his wife, Louise;
“Goner” also features frequent contributor Sarah Brown (coincidentally
also raised in Ann Arbor).
Kirchen likes collaborating; on Word to the Wise,
a musical reminiscence of sorts, he tapped several favorite artists to
join him, carefully selecting or writing songs for each. In the liner
notes, he explains, “The criteria we used were that you had to be A)
someone I had actually played with, either on stage or record, and B)
not dead yet.” Sadly, Norton Buffalo, who played harmonica with the
Airmen and Moonlighters, passed away shortly after recording “Valley of
the Moon” — in which Kirchen revisits scenes of his early life with
Louise on a trip to attend a funeral (for Hacienda Brother Chris
Gaffney, another musical mate). Dan Hicks, who delivered a note-perfect
duet on the title tune — written for him —died in 2016. But as of this
writing, Lowe, Costello, Maria Muldaur, Paul Carrack, original Asleep at
the Wheel vocalist Chris O’Connell and Commander Cody (aka George
Frayne) are still very much with us.
Kirchen’s entertaining
liner notes explain his connection to each, tracing many of these
relationships directly to longtime collaborator and “mainman” Austin de
Lone, who appears on all three solo albums and shares billing on Transatlanticana. Philadelphia-born
keyboardist de Lone and his band, Eggs Over Easy, moved to England in
1970, urged by Jimi Hendrix’s manager, Chas Chandler. Their rootsy mix
of blues, country and rock caught on — and germinated the pub rock
movement, whose acolytes included Brinsley Schwarz, in which Lowe played
bass. In 1972, de Lone moved to California, where he met Kirchen. Years
later, de Lone wound up joining the Moonlighters and introducing
Kirchen to Lowe, who produced the band’s 1983 album, Rush Hour (and
introduced Kirchen to Costello). That album was engineered by Paul
Riley, who eventually would produce all four of Kirchen’s Proper Records
albums.
A devoted Anglophile, thanks to two aunts who married
Brits, Kirchen began recording for the label after owner Malcolm Mills
promised, “I'm going to give you the best deal you've had in 25 years.”
He did, too. Mills not only supports Kirchen’s recorded output, he also
supports the guitarist on stage, right alongside bassist Riley. “Where
else do you get a record company where the owner plays drums, the
producer plays bass, and they tour with you?” Kirchen says of his good
friends. “They’re the best.”
That’s just another twist in an
incredible career trajectory set in motion, according to Kirchen, by two
pivotal events: the 1964 and ’65 Newport Folk Festivals. As a
high-school kid on a quest to catch Mississippi John Hurt, he thumbed to
the first one, then went back the following year — and witnessed Dylan
going electric. “That pretty well blew away the competition for what I
was going to do before, or if, or when I grew up,” he says of those
experiences.
Five years later, he found himself sharing a bill
with John Lennon, Yoko Ono and Stevie Wonder, when Commander Cody and
the Airmen, who’d formed in Ann Arbor, played a benefit for Sinclair
after he got 10 years for two joints. A mere 50 years later, Kirchen’s
still having a blast. He’s even planning another tour with Riley and
Mills. But releasing this package, he says, “nicely puts a bow on a
whole, very enjoyable period of my life.”
“Not that it's over,” he adds quickly. “I mean, I've got more stuff in the works.”
Then he cracks, “Don’t tell anybody, but it's not as hard as it looks.”