The Kennedys - Half A Million Miles (2005) Reviews and Press Quotes:
“Pete and Maura Kennedy are two of
the finest technical musicians, and best-liked people, on the modern folk
circuit. They fell in love as members of Nanci Griffith's band, and have
released eight CDs as a duo. The songs on the latest, Half a Million
Miles, are a beguiling blend of world-bleary street-smarts and bug-eyed
spiritual innocence; set to jingle-jangle, folk-rock melodies, cheek-to-cheek
harmonies, and superbly realized arrangements. A word of warning: their
crackling cover of Bob Dylan’s ’60s anthem, ‘Chimes of Freedom,’ could have you
scribbling your own protest signs and marching on Washington.” – Scott Alarik, Boston Globe
“Anyone familiar with Maura and
Pete’s previous albums won’t be surprised by the sounds that keep surfacing on Half
a Million Miles: the acoustic-electric weave of vintage pop, folk and
rock; the life-affirming lyrics; the ballads inspired by personal encounters;
the cascading colors and tones generated by Pete's stellar lead guitar work.
The two cover tunes here won't throw fans for a loop either: Bob Dylan’s
‘Chimes of Freedom,’ which also underscores Pete's familiar fixation with the
Byrds, and Richard Thompson's ‘How Will I Ever Be Simple Again,’ a
Celtic-tinged narrative ballad that inspires a particularly lovely and poignant
vocal by Maura. Still, among the album’s highlights are several original songs,
some autobiographical. The title track, for instance, tunefully recounts how
the Kennedys found themselves standing at Holly’s grave shortly after they met.
‘9th Street Billy,’ a portrait of an East Village neighbor and songster who ‘can call out the spirits over Tompkins Square,’ offers a charming, bossa nova-tinged interlude. Standing
out, too, are the Jack Kerouac-inspired ‘Midnight Ghost’ and the Memphis soul-tinged admonition ‘Live.’ Both performances mine the
Kennedys’ influences with as much craft as affection, which is saying a lot.
– Mike Joyce,
Washington Post
“Road warriors Pete and Maura
Kennedy move their tack to Appleseed for their new album, Half a Million
Miles, a sparkling collection of 10 originals and two covers. They
wisely use the lyric pages in the booklet to add notes that shed extra light on
the ‘why’ and ‘when” of each of its songs. . . . The album’s recorded sound is
gorgeous, exceptional, with a mastered sound that leaps to meet your ears. I
suspect Pete and Maura are especially proud of Half a Million Miles.
It really is one of their best, brightest albums. Terrific songwriting and
cover choices played with verve and delight make this a wonderful album.”
– Michael Tearson, Sing Out!
“Have I told you lately I love The
Kennedys? Not just the crisp, breezy clang-jangle of Pete's guitars or Maura’s
vocal effervescence. It’s not just the sincerity and universality of their
songs, reassuring us to savor the glorious now, as their music skips through
our hearts and heads, making us shinier, happier people. . . .Quite simply, I
love Pete and Maura because they invite us all to celebrate their ten years
together – livin’, lovin’, giggin’, tourin’ – in the exuberant title track.
‘Namaste,’ where ‘The divine in you recognizes the divine in me’ sets the tone
of my whole day. The chugging ‘Midnight Ghost’ revives the wide open mind and
spirit of Kerouac's America. ‘Listen’ and ‘Live’ cools me when I’m set to boil. Even
cover versions of Richard Thompson’s plaintive ‘How Will I Ever Be Simple
Again’ and Dylan’s iconoclastic ‘Chimes of Freedom’ sound like Kennedys’ songs.
How many artists can achieve that? Unafraid to mix philosophy, spirituality,
love and artistry with a folk-rock back beat is what makes this duo a
positive force on all things human."
– Mike Jurkovic, Folk & Acoustic Music Exchange
“Having crisscrossed the country
to perform a thousand gigs or so doesn’t guarantee an exalted level of artistic
expression, but it does increase the odds. Half a Million Miles,
[The Kennedys’] eighth album, only confirms the extent to which they’ve honed
their craft. Using a jangly musical amalgam that draws mostly from folk, rock
and country, they offer secular gospel gems reflective of a mindful
philosophy.”
– Paul E. Comeau, No Depression
“If you’re new to the duo, you’ll
note from this that they're not your usual purveyors of Americana. ‘Namaste’ may be a jangling slice of ’60s pop with a ‘La
Bamba’-ish chorus but lyrically it derives from an East Village sushi bar
owner’s wife who greets customers with a greeting that translates as ‘the
divine in me recognizes the divine in you,’ while all their own songs carry
references to Buddhism’s credo of enlightenment and living life with the senses
open. So, a fair bit of summer of love vibes as they namecheck or draw
inspiration from Thoreau (‘Listen’), Ralph Waldo Emerson (‘Here and Now,’
adapted from his ‘Self Reliance’ essay), Joseph Campbell, Jack Kerouac (train
song ‘Midnight Ghost’), a Sumerian version of Noah's flood (‘Nuah’) and some
East Village New Age store (‘9th Street Billy’). . . . It weaves a musical mood
that tips the hat to the likes of Carole King, Maria Muldaur, The Band and
Sandy Denny and, just to underline the pedigree of their musical influences
they slip in sterling covers of Richard Thompson's Belfast lament ‘How Will I
Ever Be Simple Again’ and Dylan's ‘Chimes of Freedom.’ Here's to the next half
a million then.”
– Mike Davies, NetRhythms
“The Kennedys – husband and wife
Pete and Maura – named their latest effort after the amount of traveling
they’ve done in their decade of touring together. . . . The lack of road-wear
on their talent has never been a question, as their fans will tell you and as
this album illustrates. It starts strong with the title track and carries on
for a dozen tunes with nary a miss. Songs such as ‘Namaste’ carry classic
Kennedys sound.”
– Ray Sidman, Discoveries
“This shimmering set of
folk-rock and alt-country from the husband and wife team of Pete and
Maura Kennedy features their gorgeous harmonies, jangling and twangy guitars,
and a superb set of original songs. There’s a heavy influence of early rock ‘n’
roll in their music... Their own songs are complemented by an anthemic version
of Dylan’s ‘Chimes of Freedom’ and a heartbreaking rendition of Richard
Thompson’s ‘How Will I Ever Be Simple Again?’ (****1/2, #3 in Top 10 Country/Roots
CDs of 2005)”
– Mike Regenstreif, Montreal Gazette and The
National Post
“This Washington, D.C., husband-and-wife duo – Pete and Maura – bring the
pulse-beating excitement of days-gone-by pop music vibrantly back to the
present. [Their new CD is] packed with wedding-cake melodies; haunting,
thrilling Rickenbacker hooks; and the colliding shadings of two musicians who
happen to be disarmingly outstanding harmonizers.”
– Sauce Magazine
“Pete and Maura Kennedy are a
singing folk-rock couple so damn cute together you just wanna pinch their
cheeks, but thankfully not smack ’em – an important distinction. The songs on
their eighth album are tastefully granola-inspired by Kerouac and Thoreau, and
quoting the Buddha and the hostess at their local sushi bar – without getting
too tofu. . . . They apply their genuine vocal gifts to Richard Thompson’s ‘How
Will I Ever Be Simple Again?’ and bring a new ring to Dylan’s ‘Chimes of
Freedom’. . .”
– Rob Patterson, Harp
“Pete and Maura Kennedy, who
perform together as the Kennedys, harmonize together as if they’ve been
partners their whole lives. Their newest album, Half a Million Miles,
is . . . a generous mix of jangly, ’60s-influenced pop and
singer-songwriter country elements. Perhaps no better introduction to their
aesthetic can be found than the back-to-back placement of Richard Thompson’s
‘How Will I Ever Be Simple Again’ and Bob Dylan’s ‘Chimes of Freedom.’
Understand that ‘Chimes’ echoes the Byrds’ version more than Dylan’s, and
you'll have the idea. The Kennedys’ clear-headed optimism that the world can be
a better place comes not from ignoring the pain and suffering out there, but in
the knowledge that there is just as much beauty to see.”
– Steve Pick, St.
Louis
Post-Dispatch
“Talk about happily married: The
Kennedys figure that in their 10 years of concert touring they’ve driven ‘half
a million miles.’ Together. Working together. The fact that after that they’ve
turned in an album (their eighth) so bright, lively and full of good cheer
gives gobs of hope to us all. The folk, rock, country and pop amalgamation
documents their life on the road, the people they’ve met, and the writers of
the books they’ve read in their travels, including Aldous Huxley, Joseph
Campbell and Ralph Waldo Emerson. . . . Backed by Pete’s varying guitar
stylizations, Maura’s vocals are girlishly spritely but weathered and tempered
with time. . . . Soaring vocals and full-bore guitars.”
– Jeffrey R. Lindholm, Dirty Linen
“How wonderful is the husband-wife
duo called the Kennedys? Or more precisely, how wonderful is their music and
the imagery and ideals they present so eloquently? Even a cursory listen to
each and every one of their eight albums to date provides testimony to their
talents, emitting feelings of optimism and possibility as well as a celebration
of all life has to offer. Their lyrics echo sentiments about peace and love,
tie-die and patchouli, and literary references from the likes of Emerson, Thoreau,
and Huxley perched atop melodies that reflect influences of Dylan, the Byrds
and Buddy Holly. These disparate elements all gel on Half A Million Miles,
an album that provides eloquent testimony not only to the distance they’ve
traveled since their first encounter in an Austin music club 13 years ago, but
also to the here and now, twin themes that pop up repeatedly throughout these
jangly folk-rock excursions. The ’60s-stirred melodies allow ample support for
their starry-eyed sentiments, as evidenced by the riveting title track and the
steadfast ‘Live,’ a soulful tryst that borrows liberally from Van Morrison. A
pair of effusive covers enhance the retro feel – Richard Thompson’s ‘How Will I
Be Simple Again’ and Dylan’s ‘Chimes Of Freedom,’ two timeless songs that
provide perfect harmony with the pair’s soft rock sensibilities. However, all
these songs are transcendental, not transient…trumpeted in titles like the
aforementioned ‘Live’ as well as ‘Listen’ and ‘Here and Now.’ Then there
are the odes to their New
York neighborhood
and the sages that populate it, manifest in ‘Nuah’ and ‘9th Street Billy.’ Taken in tandem, they impart spiritual
sacraments, psalms of sorts that are well worth considering. The Kennedys’ saga
continues. Happily, the rest of us are fortunate enough to be able to
join the journey.”
– South Florida’s Entertainment News & Views