Back in 2009, rock & roll enigma
Anton Fier, drummer and visionary behind
the Golden Palominos, emerged from his silence of more than a decade to produce
Drivin' n' Cryin''s excellent The Great American Bubble Factory. He also became an active drummer again, playing with guitarist
Tony Scherr's longstanding Monday night residency in New York City.
Kinney caught him there and the pair rekindled their friendship. Around this same time,
the Golden Palominos had played some well-received reunion shows and
Kinney and
Fier began jamming together impromptu in a rehearsal space. It progressed to a Kickstarter campaign and resulted in the monstrously fine
A Good Country Mile.
Kinney's name is on the front cover, but the back lists "...and
the Golden Palominos." It's a collaboration in every sense of the word. The album is inspired, tight, classic-sounding rock & roll; whether it's of the garage, roots, or country-rock variety.
Fier's production is deeply intuitive, groove conscious, and free of excess. He creates loads of space around music that reflects rock & roll classicism, but the music is kinetic; it has a very live feel, like that heard on the very best recordings of the late '60s and early 70s. You can name all the inspirational sources you want, but this music is the bounty of a heightened focus that exists almost symbiotically between
Kinney and
Fier.
The Golden Palominos include
Fier,
Scherr on guitars, and Andy Hess on bass.
Kinney plays guitars and harmonica, and guests include Jon Cowherd on piano and B-3, and guitarist Aaron Lee Tasjan, among others. The set list includes excellent
Kinney songs (the nine-minute jam "Bird" is among his very best), a couple of surprise covers -- including a killer reading of the
Drive-By Truckers' "Never Gonna Change" -- to open, and a definitive reading of
Seven Mary Three's "Southwestern State" to close it. That said, most of the best tracks here are the
Kinney-
Fier co-writes that make up half the record. "Challenge" is one, it begins slowly with acoustic six-string, a dobro, and warm electric guitars weaving through one another.
Fier's snare and kick drum are guiding forces. The verse is almost stately, but the refrain explodes into fuzzy wah-wah guitar,
Kinney's snarling vocals, and a punched-up bassline -- until the bridge, where total surprise awaits the listener. "Wild Dog Moon, Pt. 2," starts heavy, with blues-rock riffs and thundering drums that are way up in the mix.
Kinney's voice is more than up to the task; he snarls and wails, carrying the song to the limit before another gorgeous bridge cools it all out. The bottom line is that
A Good Country Mile is transcendent rock & roll. It's timeless in listener appeal and musicianship. We can only hope that this creative reunion is a long-lasting one between
Kinney and
Fier -- and
the Golden Palominos. ~ Thom Jurek