Search - Kevn Kinney :: Flower & The Knife

Flower & The Knife
Kevn Kinney
Flower & The Knife
Genres: Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

Six years have passed since Kevn Kinney, the heart and soul of the Southern roots-rock band Drivin' N' Cryin', released a solo effort, 1994's Down Out Law. Patience, it turns out, has brought forth the most personal and po...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Kevn Kinney
Title: Flower & The Knife
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Capricorn / Umgd
Original Release Date: 5/2/2000
Release Date: 5/2/2000
Genres: Folk, Pop, Rock
Styles: Contemporary Folk, Roots Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 731454244220

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Six years have passed since Kevn Kinney, the heart and soul of the Southern roots-rock band Drivin' N' Cryin', released a solo effort, 1994's Down Out Law. Patience, it turns out, has brought forth the most personal and poetic recording of Kinney's 15-year career. Opening with "Trail of Seasons," a five-minute masterpiece of the sustaining powers of friendship and the comic wisdom of love lost but survived, The Flower and the Knife enthralls and inspires from the driving-with-the-radio-blasting anthem "Dirty Angels" to the hilarious beatnik rap "Kerouac" to the stinging cover of Dylan's "Ballad of Hollis Brown." Recorded live over a week in New York, the record features some heavy hitters--guitar masters like Gov't Mule's Warren Haynes (who also produced) and Derek Trucks, plus Blues Traveler's John Popper and Sister Hazel's Ken Block. But ultimately, Kinney's third solo album succeeds because of the understated acoustic support, exceptional songwriting (including refreshed reprises of DNC favorites "Scarred but Smarter" and "Straight to Hell"), and Kinney's reedy, intuitive, and hardscrabble voice. --Roy Kasten

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CD Reviews

Past, present & future, all in one cd....
papatembo | yokohama, japan | 05/11/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Kevn has made his best album to date for both the dedicated fan or for the person looking at this cd for the first time. he shares in this cd where he came from (2 dylan covers), where he's been (reworks 2 of my favorite drivin-n-cryin songs), and where he is headed (songs like "whatever" and "dirty angels")...kevn kinney has found his place in time and has put it on this cd...buy it with no regrets and meeted expectations..O-daijini...."
With Warren Haynes
L. B. Wisner | Knoxville, TN | 06/22/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Kevn Kinney returns from a six year hiatus on the folk front with this star-studded release, backed most of the way by southern Jam-Band superstar Warren Haynes, who also produces. Kinney spins his typical set of reflective story-songs, with John Popper, Derek Trucks, Edwin McCain, Matt Abts, Jimmy Herring, Hook Herrera, Allen Woody, and Haynes in tow. Kinney brings us a record which is musically not too far removed from 1994's "Down Out Law." Featuring Haynes's sometimes beautiful, sometimes nasty acoustic slide backing his own nasal, resonant voice, Kinney considers giving up on "Quittin' Time" and "Whatever," shows his blues mojo on "40 Miles of Mountain Road," and pays tribute to Dylan on "Ballad of Hollis Brown." With help from Woody and McCain, the minor-masterpiece "Trail of Seasons" memorably opens things.



At times, Kinney's voice sounds as good as it ever has, and his and Haynes's interplay makes this a memorable affair. Despite the great sound and the musical breadth, however, and despite the album's length, the set of songs isn't quite as strong as those of his previous albums. With two Dylan covers and new (unnecessary?) versions of two drivin n cryin classics, Kinney gives us only nine new tunes, not all of which are up to his usual standards. Still, the record sounds great, and should appeal to fans of Kinney and Haynes, and anyone who likes folk or laid-back acoustic jamming."
KK Diversifies
Brian D. Rubendall | Oakton, VA | 03/27/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)

"You gotta hand it to Kevin Kinney, late the leader of the quirky modern day Southern Rock heros Drivin'n'Cryin'. He has the talent and songwriting skill to pump out Skynyrd-like anthems and live the life of a mega-rock star if he really wanted to. That he chooses instead to remain true to his art and not sellout to the mainstream has kept him interesting as an artist for going on two decades. "The Flower and the Knife" was the first solo album since Kinney put his old band on indefinite hold in the late 90s, and as such it sounds like a clearing of the air."Flower" is a very diverse album, featuring uptempo rockers and slower ballads as well as a pair of Bob Dylan covers and two reworkings of songs Kinney originally recorded with D'n'C. For the most part it has a more folkish feel that his work with the band. The best tracks are the opening "Trail of Seasons;" an accoustic reworking of "Scarred but Smarter," the title track from D'n'C's first album; the folkish ballads "This Town" and "Above the World" and the cover of Dylan's "I Shall Be Released." On the downside, the reworking of D'n'C's "Straight to Hell" is inferior to the band's version, and some of the more experimental songs, like "Kerouac," don't really work. Nevertheless, on balance the album is a winner.Overall, a quirky and smart solo album from an artist who has ofetn been described as "difficult to catagorize.""