
Bill Kirchen & Austin de Lone
Transatlanticana
(Red House)
Rating: 3.5ย out of 5 stars
The times they might be a-changinโ as Dylan so timelessly stated in the 60s (and this duo reprises), but for Bill Kirchen and Austin de Lone, the times are going backwards to the late 70s. Thatโs when guitarist Kirchen, then fresh from his stint in Commander Codyโs Lost Planet Airmen, and keyboardist de Lone, ex-of Eggs Over Easy, first joined forces in a band called the Moonlighters. Despite a handful of tough, Rockpile influenced albums (one was even produced by Nick Lowe), the Moonlighters never generated more than a trickle of interest. Perhaps that will change now.
Although de Lone and Kirchen are not officially reforming the Moonlighters, they have re-teamed for this partnership album whose somewhat clunky title refers to its bi-continental recording. Recorded primarily in Austin and London with two different rhythm sections, the pair is in fine spirits as they frolic through what was once considered pub rock in the UK and bar band music in the US. Now itโs thrown into the Americana bag. But genre pigeonholing aside, this set mixes some relative obscurities with new originals and is a modest yet rollicking good time. Lead vocals are shared and even though the tracks were recorded with different backing musicians and producers, the disc feels like a unified whole.
Kirchen and de Lone dig into and rearrange some Commander Cody lost gems with โWine Wine Wineโ (from the Cody bandโs debut where it was called โWine, Do Yer Stuffโ) and drag 1986โs โLet it Rockโ into the swamp for a slower Nick Lowe-styled version that would do J.J. Cale proud. They get soulful on a lovely version of the Percy Sledge classic โWarm and Tender Loveโ and tear it up with the piano boogie-woogie of โAll Torn Up.โ The discโs only full-fledged gospel track, โSomebodyโs Going Home,โ an original from Kirchen and co-writer Blackie Farrell, pays tribute to and was influenced by the Staple Singers. Interestingly itโs the only selection recorded in both the UK and the States. Texas songwriting legend Butch Hancock stops in to lend vocals to his rocking โOxblood,โ one of the discโs many highlights.
It wouldnโt be a Bill Kirchen album without a trucking song which he gets out of the way on the opening โHounds of Bakersfield,โ a homage to Merle Haggard written just before he passed away and a showcase for Kirchenโs notorious Telecaster twang. The guitarist is a long time Dylan fan so the duo takes Dylanโs aforementioned โTimes They Are A-Changinโโ down to Highway 61 Revisited territory for a charged version. It closes out a rollicking, unpretentious and thoroughly enjoyable set of country, rock and roll and soul thatโll make you smile, dance and even may encourage you to search out those old Moonlighters albums to hear what you might have missed the first time around. Hal Horowitz
