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Bill Kirchen

 
Artist: Bill Kirchen

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Jack O'Dell, Johnny Castle, Jack Smith, Jeff Sarli

Worked With:

John Tichy, Andy Stein, Tony Johnson, George Frayne, Billy C. Farlow, Lance Dickerson, Bobby Black, Bruce Barlow, Hoyt Axton

Formal Connection With:

Nick Lowe & the Impossible Birds
  • Born: January 29, 1948, Ann Arbor, MI
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Have Love, Will Travel," "Tombstone Every Mile," "Hot Rod Lincoln Live!"
  • Representative Songs: "Swing Fever," "Womb to the Tomb," "Secrets of Love"

Biography

Bill Kirchen is best known for his work in the '70s with the rebel band Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen. Leading the way, this gang of rock & roll honky tonkers cut a wide path through country and rock, creating an intersection where both could meet and meld together their many guises effortlessly.

Bill Kirchen was a dominating force behind the success of the Airmen. Meeting up with George Frayne, later known as Commander Cody, in his hometown of Ann Arbor, MI, set the wheels of Kirchen's musical career into motion.

Born and raised in Ann Arbor, the future guitar god first learned to play the trombone. While in high school he meet folksinger David Siglin and proceeded to place himself in the middle of the local folk scene. This was a training ground for Kirchen's prospective endeavors. He learned to play banjo and guitar. His fascination with folk eventually segued into an interest in the blues and string bands. While still in college, Kirchen started his own band, an outfit best described as "psycho folk-rock." It was around this same time that Detroit-based Frayne and future airman John Tichy decided to put a country band together. Having gone to the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Kirchen, Frayne, and some of the other Airmen knew each other, thus Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen were born.

By 1969 Kirchen knew something had to be done or the band would idle away in obscurity. Aware of the music coming out of San Francisco, he convinced the rest of the band to move to the West Coast, where they took off and became legendary outlaws, lauded by Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson as well as the Allman Brothers and the Grateful Dead. Kirchen's power as a vocalist, player, performer, and songwriter began to solidify. Known for his vocal treatment and hot guitar licks on "Mama Hated Diesels" and the ever popular "Down to Seeds and Stems Again Blues" from two of their preeminent releases, Hot Licks, Cold Steel & Truckers' Favorites and Lost in the Ozone, respectively. As a performer Kirchen came into his own while on stage in Austin for the live recording of the critically acclaimed Live From Deep in the Heart of Texas, recorded in November of 1973 at the Armadillo World Headquarters. Kirchen's work during this phase in the all-too-short career of Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen is still remembered with awe.

The 1976 breakup of the band lead Kirchen to form the Moonlighters, a swing orchestra. British star Nick Lowe, who'd become interested in Kirchen's work while he was still with the Airmen, sought him out. The two formed a bond that remained intact years later. As the producer of the first Moonlighters album, Lowe found a soul mate in the talented American. Kirchen toured internationally with his friend and even joined him in the studio. While in England, Kirchen's style was a hot property as is evidenced by his participation on recording projects for Elvis Costello, rockabilly king Gene Vincent, and Link Wray.

By 1986 Kirchen had moved to the Washington, D.C., area, establishing himself as a leader on the music scene. Prior to his signing on with Black Top Records in 1994, Kirchen recorded Tombstone Every Mile. This high-powered project was initially released on Costello's label, Demon Records, in England. Available in the States on Black Top, this was just the beginning of Kirchen's personal recording renaissance.

1996 was the year Kirchen saw the release of Have Love, Will Travel. Critically acclaimed, it is an eclectic disc that displays the various aspects of Kirchen's artistry and talent. Praised as one of the pioneers who marked territory for a new radio format, Americana, this still-wild guitar slinger is also noted as a forefather of the twangcore movement that encompasses everyone from the king of California, Dave Alvin, to rockabilly bands and roots rock outfits like Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys and Wilco. It is also believed that fellow madman Junior Brown was given a career boost thanks to Kirchen's dominating spirit, which has served to stand as a point of light for rebels of every stripe and color over these many years. In 1999, Kirchen followed with Raise a Ruckus on Hightone Records.

A proud father married for over 25 years to the same woman, Kirchen has been instrumental in keeping the work of many musical pioneers as more than just memory. Using his 1950s Telecaster and his chameleon-like voice, he has told the tale of Bakersfield's top bard, Red Simpson, and maverick songwriter Blackie Farrell. Ernest Tubb's former man of pedal steel, Buddy Charleton, whose infallible twang and moan can be heard throughout Have Love, Will Travel, is a featured player in Kirchen's world. Always ahead of his time, Kirchen remains a man of distinction who looks at music not as something to be categorized, but as an art form that has no boundaries. Continuing to work with Hightone Records, Kirchen released Tied to the Wheel in 2001, followed by King of Dieselbilly in 2005 and Hammer of the Honkey-Tonk Gods in 2006. ~ Jana Pendragon, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bill Kirchen
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Bill Kirchen

Kirchen in Shirlington, Virginia with his original telecaster in 2003
Background information
Origin Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.
Genre(s) Rockabilly, Country Music, Blues, Rock and Roll, Jazz, Bakersfield Sound,
Years active 1967 - present
Label(s) Hightone Records

Bill Kirchen (born June 29, 1948, Ann Arbor, Michigan[1]) is an American rockabilly guitarist, singer and songwriter. He was the guitarist with the original Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen from 1967 to the mid 1970s, although, in reality, his time with the Commander accounts for only a portion of his career. Known as "The Titan of The Telecaster" for his big, twangy licks and diverse musical styles, he played the unmistakable lead on the 1972 Commander Cody hit "Hot Rod Lincoln." In the years since, his body of work has been rich and varied, recording albums and making dozens of appearances on recordings by other artists.

Kirchen grew up in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he attended high school with Iggy Pop and Bob Seger. In recent years, Kirchen has toured or recorded with Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello, Doug Sahm, Emmylou Harris, Austin de Lone and others.

Kirchen's signature sound has been dubbed "Dieselbilly" as it incorporates elements of Country music, Blues, Rockabilly, Western Swing and Boogie-Woogie - laced with themes of American truck driving music that were explored years earlier by Red Sovine, Dave Dudley, Del Reeves, Red Simpson and others. These styles were later fully developed during his stint with Commander Cody and his writing collaborations with Blackie Farrell.

He plays a Fender Telecaster almost exclusively, and his main unit through the years has been a 1959 model with a Maple fretboard and Sunburst finish - practically all of which has been worn off by years of playing. Interestingly, this Telecaster came to him in 1967 by way of an even trade with a complete stranger he met on a bus, with Kirchen handing over his own Gibson SG in exchange.

For the better part of 20 years he lived in the Washington, D.C. area, where he formed the band Bill Kirchen and Too Much Fun, featuring Dave Elliot on drums and John Previti on bass, later replaced by Jeff Sarli. However, the best-known and most prolific lineup of Too Much Fun featured the rhythm section of Johnny Castle (bass,vocals) and Jack O'Dell (drums,vocals). The band produced a string of critically acclaimed albums: Have Love, Will Travel, Hot Rod Lincoln - Live, Raise a Ruckus, Tied to the Wheel, and Dieselbilly Road Trip.

Kirchen in Silver Spring, Maryland in 2005

Kirchen is a contemporary (and associate) of many D.C. guitarists such as the late Danny Gatton and Roy Buchanan, Link Wray, Tom Principato, Evan Johns, Billy Hancock, Linwood Taylor, Dave Chappell, the Nighthawks and others who, during this time, forged an elite fraternity of Washington D.C.-area roots rock performers. In fact, it is more common than not for musicians to appear as special guests at Kirchen show's for extended jam sessions. These shows are often billed as "Twin Twang", with two or more guests on stage trading riffs.

In 2005 he moved to the West Coast to take care of family, then to Manchaca, Texas. In early 2007 he returned to the D.C. area and currently resides in southern Maryland. His live show includes an extended version of "Hot Rod Lincoln," in which he solos in the styles of many famous rock, blues, power pop, punk, and country guitarists, including Johnny Cash, Duane Eddy, Roy Orbison, Johnny Rivers, Marty Robbins, Buck Owens, Merle Travis, Merle Haggard, Bob Wills, Bo Diddley, Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed, Link Wray, Vince Gill, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, The Ventures, Jerry Reed, Earl Scruggs, Lester Flatt, Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, The Monkees, Cream, Deep Purple, The Rolling Stones, The Sex Pistols, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and even, as he says, "The Kings" -- Elvis, B.B. King, Albert King, Billie Jean King (a tongue in cheek Pong style imitation of tennis), King Kong (a comical visual), Don King (another visual), and others.

Kirchen at the Alden Theater, McLean Virginia 2004

Kirchen released his first album in a number of years on January 30, 2007, Hammer of the Honky Tonk Gods, on Proper American Records. The disc is a mix of Kirchen's musical styles. Nick Lowe appears prominently on the album, along with other guests, such as Chris Gaffney and Dave Gonzalez.

Besides being a singer, songwriter, and guitarist, Kirchen is also known for his whistling skills and trombone playing.[citation needed]

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
The Best of Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen (1995 Album by Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen)
Wrangler City (1996 Album by Ruthie and the Wranglers)
DeLone at Last (Album by Austin Delone)

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