I first heard this song by the Everly Brothers in their comeback in the 1980s. It fit their style perfectly. I had assumed they wrote it, but I recently found out that Chip and Tony Kinman wrote it for their band, Rank and File. Two Brothers who started a punk band and then moved to Austin, where they transitioned to country-punk. Another performer who was a member of this band at one time was Alejandro Escovedo.
Rank and File were one of those bands that always felt born a decade too early. When most early 1980s acts were into synths, drum machines, and big production, the Kinman brothers were rewiring country music with punk and some power pop.
Chip and Tony Kinman first made music in the late 1970s with The Dils, a sharp-edged California punk band known for political lyrics, ragged guitars, and a take-no-prisoners attitude. When The Dils ran their course, the Kinmans stepped back and started exploring American roots music. They headed toward warmer tones and harmony.
In 1981, the brothers moved from California to Austin, Texas, a shift that changed everything. Austin was the hub of outlaw country, rockabilly revival, blues bars, and indie experimentation. The perfect place for musicians who did not fit neatly into one box. They found guitarist Alejandro Escovedo, fresh out of The Nuns, another West Coast punk band. The three of them shared a love for classic country songwriting like Hank Williams, The Burrito Brothers, and the raw honesty of punk.
The band officially formed as Rank and File, a name that reflected their working-class roots and their desire to keep things grounded. They blended Telecaster twang, tight harmonies, and a pinch of punk to keep them honest.
What I love about this song is how free it feels. Listening to it today, you can hear the origins of what would become Uncle Tupelo, The Jayhawks, Old 97s, and the whole alt-country wave that swept in during the 90s. Rank and File never got the widespread attention they deserved, but Amanda Ruth remains a cool little gem.
This song was on their debut album Sundown, released in 1982.
Tony Kinman – “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.”
Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
We read the paper and we pick the show,
I’d meet her there but my watch was slow
She came early and I came late
We never met
It was a hell of a date
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
The way we met, she was a friend of a friend,
They needed money and I had it to lend
She had five; she wanted ten.
I gave her all my money
So I got none to spend
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
She burns her biscuits and her gravy is strange,
Can’t fry a chicken in a microwave range.
Her salt’s tasty, her sugar’s sweet
No she can’t cook
But she’s got something to eat
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
Amanda, Amanda Ruth
…

Oh yeah! Vaguely remember it but hadn’t thought about it in years. I actually think I have it on some Rhino-style ’80s compilation. Good to hear it again
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I like this band a lot…damn they were good musicians and good songwriters… but I remembered it from the Brothers at first.
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and there’s me thinking they were British until I read this. Maybe they just got more acceptance over there, like the Stray Cats did at first
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Well they came a long way…they were pure punk…I mean sex pistols punk and then changed to this.
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That line, “No she can’t cook But she’s got something to eat.” sounds very sexual. Nice tune, Max.
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Thanks Jim!
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Great song! It vaguely sounded familiar, so I may have heard it by the Everlys before. The Alejandro Escovedo connection is interesting as well.
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Yes that connection I forgot about. I read about this band when I did my first post on him and kept it in memory lol.
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Honestly other than recognizing the song title from the EB, I don’t recall the band. They are great though, funny how stuff you would have liked when it came seems to elude you.
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I remembered the Everly Brothers version but this band didn’t get played a lot when they were out…not nationally anyway. I do like them and they came a long ways from pure punk to this.
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Oh yeah, the Everly’s are the right fit for this song. It’s good- another one that’s new to me.
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Thanks man…yea I thought it fit them perfectly as well.
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New one to me, Max. I can see the Everly’s doing this…
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It sounds really good as well..
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Forgot about the Everly connection.
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I knew I heard of these guys before….and then I remembered I heard of them through Alejandro Escovedo.
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I got the first couple records when they came out. Never stuck with them. Alejandro I did stick with. Big time.
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He was in another band as well if I remember right….The Nuns…I’ve heard some of his newer stuff…really good.
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Buick MacKane.”Big Shoe Head” I did a take way back. He is really good. So prolific he’s impossible to keep up with.
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Oh yea! I remember them! Great stuff! Thanks for reminding me of that band.
Also…and not related but something made me think of him…Fred Eaglesmith…I have to do another on of him.
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How do you choose a Fred song. Another prolific guy. Lock into his album ‘Drive – In Movie’ and if he’s not Guy Clarks Canadian cousin I give up.
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Thanks CB… I did need a starting point…
.thank you that is perfect! I never thought about him that way before…that is interesting.
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I think our brains are alike in that music takes us down many paths. So many crossroads.
(Rudy was a hit with the gang)
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I agree. It’s like those tree limbs we talk about…I love how they overlap another and lead to other things. I have one tomorrow that does that.
Oh cool! I have him out right now. They are a lot of fun CB. Not scared of anything or anyone…including the saint.
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While I’ve never heard it before, it sounds familiar. I can’t think of what band or what song, but it’s in there somewhere. The middle verse is different than the one you’ve written out.
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Thanks…I must have got a live version of it or the Everlys.
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Sounds really good. Is that Escovedo in the live one? Thanks for the back story on the group.
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I think so Lisa…I didn’t even know he was in this band and also Van Zandt producing.
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Lisa…I’m sorry…Stevie Van Zandt had NOTHING to do with this one…sorry I got mixed up on the other post!
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Never heard of these guys, and I’m a Texas musician who was part of that Austin hippie country religion back in the early 70s. You sure dig up some stuff, Max. Willie would be proud of ya. If you went to Austin these days, you wouldn’t think it was ever cool and the live music capital of the world. All the old Hippies stayed there and reproduced, and their offspring ruined it. The last time I was there was 14 years ago when my son got married there. Us Texans don’t consider it part of our state.
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I love finding the rare stuff if possible. Thats a shame about Austin…it really is.
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One of my fave bands of all time. Lucky to have seen them live several times back in the day. RIP Tony.
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You got to see so many Mike…that is really cool. Yea I read where he passed and should have put it in the post.
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Here is a video I made about Rank and File.
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Watching it now! Thanks Mike!
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Reading this made me think of an Austin band from back in the day that I like, Wild Seeds. Michael Hall. They made a couple of albums. I always liked ’em and still do…
Debi Came Back
I’m Sorry I can’t Rock You All Night Long
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They sound really good…
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I’ll write them down no doubt…I never heard of them.
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I like the reunion idea on the second video. To have your son sing “I’m sorry I can’t rock you all night long” when your son is not even 10 years old is very funny.
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Never heard of them. Can hear some Burritos influence for sure.
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I’m not as familiar with them. The song was made for the Everly Brothers…it fit them perfectly.
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