Published on Dec 3, 2003
[Editor’s note: this review originally appeared in On The
Town
magazine on July 2, 1996.]
Wow. No, really. WOW!
I could just leave it at that, but this incredible album
deserves much, much more.
First of all, as far as I know they aren’t related to those
Kennedys (or even, for that matter, punk icons the Dead Kennedys).
Husband-and-wife guitar-and-vocals songwriting team Pete and Maura
Kennedy are instead musical descendants of jangly guitar masters
The Byrds and Tom Petty on the one side, and confessional
country-folk artists Mary Chapin Carpenter and Nanci Griffith on
the other (both were part of Griffith’s touring band in the ’80s;
Pete also toured with Carpenter; and founding Byrd Roger McGuinn
solos on this album’s title cut). The Kennedys wear their
influences on their sleeves, chiming out Rickenbacker guitar leads
underneath lyrics brimming with insight and wordplay, while also
managing to move the music forward, creating a sound that is fresh
and smart and thoroughly enjoyable.
Pete Kennedy’s retro production, full of Hammond organ, Maura’s
acoustic rhythm guitar and his own punchy electric leads, invites
you to dance along to numbers like the dark-side-of-love “Velvet
Glove” and the witty, self-aware “Sunday.” For most of the album,
he also plays harmony vocalist to Maura, whose clear, expressive
voice is as capable of conveying frustration and melancholy on
songs like “I’m Not You” and “St. Mark’s Square” as it is of
celebration on upbeat love songs like “One Heart, One Soul” (the
latter featuring a letter-perfect closing solo from E Street Band
guitarist Nils Lofgren). Toward the end of the disc, the sitar of
“Right as Rain” and the whispery vocals and hypnotic licks of
“Blackberry Rain” and “Sirens” extend the Kennedys’ vision to
embrace a psychedelic pop sound that would have been right at home
on
Sgt. Pepper’s.
But frankly, the 11 terrific songs that follow this album’s
opening title cut were all gravy to me. Rare is it that the first
time I listen to a new CD, I stop after the first song, go back and
listen to it again before moving on. This time, I had to. “Life is
Large” is a knockout power-pop anthem to the fullness of
possibilities life has to offer, featuring the aforementioned solos
from Byrds guitarist Roger McGuinn, and filled with sharp little
nuggets of wisdom like “How do you want to be remembered? / A
raging fire or a dying ember?”
Like I said before — wow. Three months ago I’d never heard of
the Kennedys. Now I’m confident they’ve produced the best album
I’ve heard so far in 1996. Don’t miss it.
To learn more about the Kennedys, visit their Web
site at
www.kennedysmusic.com.