Kevin
Montgomery and the Road Trippers
Cornish Arms - 1 September 2005
Kevin Montgomery
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It
was a vision to bring a tear of joy to any fan of the Blue Brothers
movie. A campervan parked out the front of the Cornish Arms right
on the Gaza Strip, Sydney Road Brunswick. I had visions of that
other great country band the Good Old Boys as they traipsed around
from one disaster to another at the behest of Jake and Elwood.
But
that was a cliché and there was not a hat or a milky bar
cowboy in sight at the venue either in the meagre audience or the
band. Just a high-octane country rock band, a front man with a pedigree
with a stack on songs honed on the road as a solo performer.
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Kevin Montgomery
has toured here previously hitting the home concert circuit in between
pub shows with former Maverick and Swag member Robert Reynolds. This time
Montgomery brought a band to flesh out the songs and amp up the sound
for the Gympie hordes and luckily for some make a visit south of the Murray
Dixon line.
The act deserved
a better audience than they got. It's a shame that it wasn't better attended.
It doesn't bode well for a repeat performance or give the promoter any
incentive to take a chance and promote other tours by other artists. Maybe
it's the price of gas/petrol, maybe it was because it was a mid week gig,
maybe it was the lack of advertising/promotion or that people were saving
their money for football finals. Whatever it was, the crowd was sparse
and if there is anything a band needs more than anything else it's a crowd
to feed off in order to raise the energy levels.
The four
piece Road Trippers and Montgomery struggled with the sound early but
that improved as the night went on thanks to a hard working sound man
or maybe it was because I moved to a different position in the room avoiding
the bounce from the wall at the back of the room.
The band
comprised of former Mavericks drummer Paul Deakin, Danny White on bass,
playing guitar was Mick McAdam formerly of The Dukes, Steve Earles road
band and he appears on the Exit O live album of the early nineties. Honorary
Road Tripper for the tour was Aussie Graeme Griffith who laid down the
sweet sonic pedal steel sounds. Whilst Montgomery changed broken guitar
strings on two occasions the two guitarists ripped on a couple of instrumentals.
McAdam also showed that he had more talent than a mere guitar slinger
when he sang a song out front of the band.
After finally
overcoming the sound problems, the longer the band played the better they
gelled and the better they sounded. Running through his own songs in the
band format Montgomery has enough charisma to hold the stage and he performed
video hit Tennessee Girl but it was the closing number Not Fade Away a
hit for Buddy Holley and still one of the best Rock and Roll songs of
all time that delivered on the admission price.
The Aussie
Winnebago was still parked out front as I walked outside and into the
night. After checking it out it looked like a pretty good rig and a great
way to drive around the country. Three seats out front in the cabin just
like the original Good Old Boys. I bet these good old boys, the Road Trippers,
had fun on the tour and the night, and I know I did.
Review
by Peter O'Keefe 2005
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