Rank and File (band)

Rank and File
Genres Alternative country, cowpunk, post-punk, new wave
Years active 1981–1987
Associated acts The Dils
The Nuns
True Believers
Past members Chip Kinman
Tony Kinman
Alejandro Escovedo
Slim Evans
Bobby Kahr

Rank and File was an American punk rock band established in 1981 in Austin, Texas by Chip Kinman and Tony Kinman, a pair of brothers who had been members of the seminal California band The Dils. The band were forerunners in combining the musical rawness and Do It Yourself punk aesthetic with the style and ambience of country and western music, helping to create a subgenre known as cowpunk. After releasing three albums, the band terminated in 1987.

History

Formation

In 1981 brothers Chip and Tony Kinman split up their influential political punk band The Dils, based in Carlsbad, California, and departed for the East. After a brief time in New York City, the brothers landed in the musical mecca of Austin, Texas, to start a new band.[1] There they joined forces with guitarist Alejandro Escovedo of The Nuns to form Rank and File.[2]

Recording history

Rank and File released three albums—two on prominent Los Angeles label Slash Records and a third on the offbeat, retro-oriented Rhino Records.

The band's debut album, Sundown, was released in June 1982 on Slash Records.

A second Slash album, 1984's Long Gone Dead, included a cover version of a tune by Lefty Frizzell and made use of traditional country instrumentation such as a steel guitar and fiddle.[1] Chicago Tribune music critic Tom Popson emphasized the band's employment of "a lot of Johnny Cash-style rockabilly guitar lines" as part of that particular project.[1]

The band's third and final full-length release, the eponymous album Rank and File on Rhino Records, marked a move from traditional country to more pop-oriented country-tinged far, which the band deemed "a little easier for the normal person to pick up on".[1]

Guitarist Chip Kinman later recalled the difficulty the band had at the time of its launch, during which "people were grossed out" by the band's heavy-on-the-country, light-on the punk sound.[1] "We'd go into New Wave clubs, and no one was playing country music. We'd play those songs, and we'd never get asked back," Kinman remembered.[1]

Stylistic trendsetters

While continuing to espouse their personal political views, the Kinmans saw their new band as a more entertaining departure from the intensity of hardcore punk, embracing the sound and cultural ambience of country music, albeit with a post-punk spin. In a 1986 interview with Flipside magazine, bassist Tony Kinman emphasized the band's willingness to shatter stylistic preconceptions to become trendsetters:

"We're brave, we're not afraid to do stuff, most people are. They're deathly afraid to do anything different.... [W]hen everybody else was talking about how stupid country music was, country music was the last thing to like, if you wore a cowboy hat you were a redneck, you know, we decided go say, 'Yeah, we play country music, it's fun.'

"Up in San Francisco, KUSF Wave, their magazine, did the first review Rank and File ever got, live review. They said we sucked, and then they said, 'What are these guys trying to do, start a trend?' Well, that's the way it worked out, but only because we were brave enough and smart enough to do it first. That's how you get to be influential—if you're brave enough to do something different and you're smart enough to do it right. Otherwise you're just another dumb-ass band."[1]

  1. ^ Martha Ross O'Meara, "Rank 'N File," Flipside, whole no. 49 (Summer 1986), pg. 16.

The band appeared on PBS's nationally broadcast country music showcase Austin City Limits.[3]

Later projects

The Kinmans' next project was the synthpop, guitar and drum-machine based, Blackbird. They would return to the cowpunk subgenre with another band, a minimalistic three-piece band called Cowboy Nation that released its debut album in January 1997 on Shock Records from Australia.[4]

Alejandro Escovedo formed the True Believers with his brother Javier, before launching a solo songwriting and recording career.

Discography

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Tom Popson, "Rank And File: Country-pop Outfit Scrubs The Country," Chicago Tribune, April 17, 1987.
  2. The band name is sometimes rendered as "Rank 'N File", see for example Martha Ross O'Meara, "Rank 'N File", Flipside, whole no. 49 (Summer 1986), pp. 14–16.
  3. "Rank and File AMG biography". Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  4. Richie Unterberger, "Chip Kinman," Interview of January 1997, www.richieunterberger.com/
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