Almost four years have passed since that initial effort, during which time Baird played on and produced a fine album by Nashville’s Ken McMahan and toured with fellow Southern rocker Terry Anderson and former Del Lord Eric Ambel in a loose-knit but highly-rocking entourage called the Yahoos. Somewhere in between, Baird found time to pen the songs that make up Buffalo Nickel, a near-classic of Southern rock that bridges the gap between where country music has been and where rock music is going.
Dan Baird’s Buffalo Nickel
With help from producer Brendan O’Brien (who also contributes a fair
amount of instrumental talent, as well), Nashville bassist extraordinnaire
Keith Christopher, and former Satellites bandmate Mauro Megellan on drums,
Baird’s Buffalo Nickel is a hot, sticky slab of Southern-fried funk
with a side of sizzling guitar rock. Baird has never been shy about his
preference of musical styling, drawing heavily from the well of ‘70s-era
guitar rock with just enough Hank-inspired country twang thrown in to reveal
the work’s Southern origin; judged in this light,
Buffalo Nickel certainly doesn’t stray far from its roots.
Unlike
the blues-infused rock of Joe Grushecky, or even Springsteen’s earlier
material, Baird’s creative output reflects the working class nature of his
predominantly Southern audience. This is rock ‘n’ roll for folks that show red
necks beneath their blue collars, the same sort of listeners that once
championed bands like Lynyrd Skynyrd and Molly Hatchet. Unlike those artists,
however, Baird shows more British influence (i.e. the early classic rock of
the Stones and the Faces) alongside the spirits of Hank Williams and Ernest
Tubb. This audience wants its rock loud, electric and with no sign of the
intellectual pretension or dedication to fashion shown by many trend-oriented
bands.
Baird doesn’t disappoint. The cuts on
Buffalo Nickel are solid rockers, from the rockabilly-touched “Little
Bit” to a raucous, inspired cover of Joe South’s “Hush” (with vocal assistance
from South himself) or the syncopated rhythms and buried vocals of “Hit Me
Like A Train.” The funky riffs shown on “Cumberland River” are part of a
long-standing Southern musical tradition, belying the song’s lyrical criticism
of Nashville as “an empty promise, soulless and hard as stone.” The irony of
Baird’s use of this particular musical style underlining a poetic damnation of
a “Music City” that often turns its back on tradition is not lost on this
Nashville-based critic. “Hell To Pay” is a good ol’ Dixie-styled tale of
retribution that utilizes the imagery of fire and brimstone to smite critics
and enemies, while “Trivial As the Truth” – which would make a great radio cut
if every “progressive” station wasn’t too busy playing Nirvana and Pearl Jam
every hour – is a great lyrical “piss off” to everyone trying to hold the
spirit of rock ‘n’ roll down.
The Reverend’s Bottom Line
Baird’s work continues to improve with Buffalo Nickel. Age and
experience, in this case, do equal a certain hard-won wisdom, and even if
Baird continues to work in as untrendy a milieu as he does, there’s nobody
better at cranking out tunes like these. He may never again sell a million
records or receive anything close to significant airplay, but he can make a
living with work as good as this, and have a hell of a lot of fun along the
way. (American Recordings, released 1996)
Review originally published by R.A.D! music zine, Spring 1996
Also on That Devil Music:
Dan Baird’s Love Songs For the Hearing Impaired CD review
The Yahoos’ Fear Not the Obvious CD review
Buy the CD from Amazon:
Dan Baird’s Buffalo Nickel
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