Entries by Peter Gates

Renee Geyer Full Narrative

RENEE GEYER LIVE

at the Eureka Hotel 1979 and the Tivoli Sydney 1982

TRACKS

1 The Thrill Is Gone 1979
2 Chickaboom 1979
3 Set Me Free 1979
4 That Did It Babe 1979
5 Baby Be Mine 1979
6 Shakin’ All Over 1979
7 Great Balls Of Fire 1979
8 Look What You Done 1982
9 Baby I’m Missing You 1982
10 Say I Love 1982
11 Do I Move You 1982
12 On My Way 1982
13 News For You 1982

THE BAND/ARTISTS

RENEE GEYER BAND MEMBERS

1979 – 1982

Renée Geyer vocals
Mal Logan keyboards
Barry ‘Big Goose’ Sullivan bass guitar
Vanetta Fields backing vocals
Stuart Fraser guitar
Ted ‘The Head’ Yanni guitar
Harry Brus bass
Mark Punch guitar
Tim Partridge bass
Greg Tell drums
Brenton White guitar
Rex Bullen keyboards
John Watson drums
Chris Haig bass
Steve Hopes drums
Geoff Oakes saxophone, percussion
Russell Smith trumpet, flugle, percussion
Sunil De Silva percussion
Trevor White backing vocals
Peter Chambers backing vocals

KEVIN BORICH EXPRESS (1979)

Kevin Borich guitar, vocals
Tim Partridge bass, backing vocals
John Annas drums, backing vocals

THE RECORDING

RENEE GEYER LIVE

at the Eureka Hotel 1979 and

the Tivoli Sydney 1982.

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Gerry Georgettis (R.I.P) - (sound ‘79)
Geoff Wheadon (R.I.P) - (sound ‘82)
Mark Williams - (monitors)
Bill “Cookie” Cook (R.I.P) - (stage)
Grant Jennings (R.I.P) - (lights)

ABOUT THE ARCA DESK TAPE RECORDINGS

Renée Geyer LIVE is the 45th release of the Australian Road Crew Association’s (ARCA) Desk Tape Series.

The Series was created by ARCA to raise badly-needed finances for ARCA Programs and Support Act’s Roadies Fund to provide financial, health, counselling and well-being services for roadies and crew in crisis.

The tapes are released on ARCA’s Black Box Records through MGM Distribution and on all major streaming services.

Over 50 artists have now thrown their hats in the ring to help support those in need.

Renée Geyer LIVE is the 45th release of the Australian Road Crew Association’s (ARCA) Desk Tape Series.

The Series was created by ARCA to raise badly-needed finances for ARCA Programs and Support Act’s Roadies Fund to provide financial, health, counselling and well-being services for roadies and crew in crisis.

The tapes are released on ARCA’s Black Box Records through MGM Distribution and on all major streaming services.

Over 50 artists have now thrown their hats in the ring to help support those in need.

The ARCA Desk Tape Series is acknowledged in media for its historical importance in capturing great live music from great live acts.

THE ARTIST

Greatest Voice

When Renée Geyer passed away in Melbourne in January 2023, Bonnie Raitt applauded her “as one of the greatest voices in the world”. 

Marcia Hines’ defined her as “A game changer. A soul diva. My sister in song.”

Added Kate Ceberano, “Renée the powerful, the diva, the brutal, the original, the temperamental, the stellar, the shapeshifter, the original, the unforgettable, the irreplaceable Renée!”

Australia had noticed Geyer’s pipes since she was 16 and working around Sydney’s wine bars fronting a number of jazz fusion bands.

“I just live to perform,” she once declared. “There’s something exciting about the spotlight hitting you on the stage, and having that thrill of seeing the people who had come to see you.

“I wanted to be a singer as long as I could remember. I never married, I never had children, I never had a house. I simply was a nomad because that was the lifestyle I chose.”

Just weeks before her passing, Renée was playing to a full house and had been looking forward to another year of touring.

Four years before, she made a surprise appearance at the Australian Women In Music Awards in Brisbane that accentuated how no one else could match her.

She’d been awarded a Lifetime Achievement gong the year before but couldn’t attend. But she promised to perform the year after, and kept her word.

“No one knew she was coming on,” recounts her manager and confidante of 20 years, Kathy Nolan.

“She went on to finish the night, and the place went crazy when she came on!

“She wiped the floor with everyone. She did ‘It’s A Man’s World’ and got two young First Nations rappers to come on with her, and blew the place apart.

“It was goose bumps time for everyone there, and that appearance is remembered as iconic.”

Nolan recalls Geyer’s mid-90s shows at the Basement club in Sydney were “off the charts. The voice was next level, hitting notes that I didn’t think she was capable of.”

Renee once described herself as “a white Hungarian Jew from Australia sounding like a 65-year-old black man from Alabama.”

As Renée Geyer Live shows, that voice could step from the elegance of Nina Simone’s “Do I Move You” and blues/jazz standards as “The Thrill Is Gone”, to being joyful on her hit version of Eddy Grant’s “Say I Love You” to steely yet vulnerable soul on “Baby I’m Missing You” and “On My Way”, and rough and ready on the up-tempo “Great Balls Of Fire” and “News For You.”

The bands were on fine form especially on “That Did It Babe”, moving effortlessly from crisp blues licks on “Set Me Free” to jazz passages of “Look What You Done” and whipping it up on “Shakin’ All Over” and “Chickaboom”.

THE SOUND CREW / VENUES / PRODUCTION

The live tapes are recorded off the mixing desk by a crew member – here, Gerry Georgettis for the Eureka Hotel show in Geelong in 1979, and Geoff Wheadon for the Tivoli in Sydney in 1982.

Huge thanx to Greg Noakes, Tony Mott, Kathy Nolan and Phillip Morris for the photos, Nprint for the artwork, Phil Dracoulis for the mastering, and especially Renee Geyer for her support of roadies and crew.

Sound Crew

The sound on the Eureka show, which she played with the Kevin Borich Express, was by Gerry Georgettis, generally regarded among the great sound engineers to emerge from Australia.

Starting in the ‘70s, the quiet, calm and strong Georgettis worked with the La De Das as their solo crew member, then Cold Chisel where he had an influence on a teenage Jimmy Barnes.

“He was the coolest guy I ever knew,” the singer said. “He exposed me to great music and great musicians, and I would not be the singer or the person I am now without his influence.”

Georgettis moved to England in 1980 and worked for Brit Row (Production company owned by Pink Floyd) and then relocated to the US, working on the Lollapalooza Festival and with Red Hot Chili Peppers. He ran a theatre in Miami, and took his own life on board a United Airlines flight from Washington to Los Angeles, aged 56.

Mark Williams is the sole survivor of the crew that worked on the Tivoli Sydney set.

He joined the Renee Geyer national tour while Russell Morris was off the road for six weeks.

The rest of the 1982 crew were Bill “Cookie” Cook (stage), Grant Jennings (lights) and Geoff Wheadon (sound).

Williams recalls, “It was a baptism of fire driving with Cookie, learning to drive a 12-ton truck like a sports car.

“In Armadale, a fight started in front of Renée and Vanessa. Cookie jumped off the stage, wrapped his arms around both the brawlers and literally bulldozed them off the dancefloor and outside the door!”

At 20, Williams worked in a “shit job in a factory” to pay his way through School of Audio Engineering. A few months later his lecturer alerted him to a job going with a band touring Queensland for two weeks.

After he returned, he quit the factory, and worked with Fingerprint, Claude (or Clawed) Rains, and Morris. After that it was Troy Balance and tours with Mi Sex, Berlin, Party Boys (with Joe Walsh), Eurogliders and Redgum. Mark was the engineer on the Redgum desk tape release from 1985 in Holland.

When he started a family in 1990, he went off the road and joined Haycom as an audio engineer.

The Tivoli show was opened by Austen Tayshus. Richard Clapton was to get up and sing a couple of songs with Renée but got stuck into the backstage rider and couldn’t make it up.

“Renée was just amazing that night. The band was incredible, as were all her bands. That had a lot to do with Mal Logan, her music director.”

The venue(s):

Some of the tracks on Renée Geyer Live are from the Eureka Hotel in Geelong, 90 minutes from Melbourne, and with a band room that could fit in 250 fans. The Eureka was run by Ian Lovell.

“It was the rock centre of Geelong in the late ‘70s and 1980s,” remembers Kevin Bishop, whose company DB Concert Sound (with the late Bill Dart) supplied extra speakers for the venue at the Geyer show.

“It was a sweaty rock and roll, people loved it. Tuesdays was its big night, when major touring bands would play there on their way to a week in Melbourne.”

Born in the UK where he played in bands and DJ’d, Bishop moved to Geelong and worked with Redhouse and Sherbet before DB supplied gear to early bands such as Goanna and Little Heroes.

MEDIA & PODCASTS

Article: NOISE11.COM Renee Geyer Live at the Eureka Hotel, 1979 [ Read ]

Article: Pop Preservation Society: “Renee Geyer’s Timeless Grit: Live Recordings … Capture The Soul Diva At Her Best” [ Read ]

MORE ON THE ARTIST

Renée titled her autobiography, co-written with late journalist Ed Nimmervoll, Confessions Of A Difficult Woman (2000).

She could be temperamental and hard to handle.

That included slapping “Molly” Meldrum on the set of Countdown, ending an argument with the promoter at the Canberra show of the It’s A Long Way To The Top tour with a well-delivered punch.

She angrily rang up the editor of the famous Juke magazine at 4 am at his home to berate him over what she considered a disrespectful review.

She had feuds with everyone from Kate Ceberano to Colin Hay (all of whom forgave her because they were in awe of her talent), and had a passionate affair with Dragon’s Marc Hunter.

She paid out on a punter throughout a club show for turning up in a suit and tie, and could be a nightmare to airline crews at those at her record company and booking agency.

According to Deborah Conway, “I was on the receiving end of her abundance of personality plenty of times.

“The first time we met, she tried to punch me out. She missed; she never apologised!

“Renée literally never held back, didn’t know the meaning of it. She made me laugh, she pissed me off, but she was never, ever boring and she made my life the richer for knowing her.”

It was left to long-time manager Kathy Nolan to smooth things over.

“Yes, Renée could be a handful. But she and I got on really well. We could yell and scream and I probably got sacked once a year, but we always got over it.

“I told her, just focus on singing and doing what you do, and I’ll do everything else. Relax, and know that I always have your best interest at heart.

“It worked so well, she trusted me. She knew I’d take a bullet for her, and she probably would have taken a bullet for me.”

Renee and the Road Crew

It was no secret among crews and musicians that Renée Geyer could be a hard taskmaster with high expectations.

She seldom rehearsed. It was not enough for band members to be note-perfect. Before the show, she’d go through the setlist with the band, just the beginnings and endings, she imitating each instrument.

They had to have their own style, and they had to watch her all the time, because she would change the setlist or go off into a tangent mid-number.

If they didn’t, she’d tear strips off them.

For all that, she adored and respected her band and crew. “They make me look good!” she’d say. She was awed about the technical prowess of her crew and thought them wizards.

Kathy Nolan is setting up a scheme where ongoing royalties go to musicians and crew who had fallen on financial and medical hard times through the Renée Geyer Foundation.

She was an admirer of ARCA’s Desk Tape Series and her estate was very supportive in the release of Renée Geyer Live. Renee will be missed.

Recording & Touring

Renée Geyer lived her life where she had no regrets. The exception was over the album cover of her first US release.

It was her fourth Australian studio album Moving Along, retitled Renee Geyer, which included a re-recorded version of her hit “Heading In The Right Direction” and some tracks featuring Stevie Wonder’s band and produced by legendary Motown producer Frank Wilson.

The powerful black radio stations started to play advance copies of “Heading In The Right Direction” and “Stares And Whispers”.

The album was surely going to break her in America. But her (black) producer Wilson and US label Polydor advised her that the radio interest was only because they thought she was black.

They suggested they release the album without her photo.

Renée absolutely refused. When the record came out with “my big pink huge face” on the cover, black radio stopped playing it, and the album failed to chart despite great acclaim.

Years later the singer admitted to radio station Double J, “I should have gone along with it actually. I was just stupid in those days. I should have just played the game like they were gonna do.

“I know what they were talking about. It would have been good to sort of play along with it a little bit. I just didn’t have that sense of humour about it in those days.

“I should have looked at it as a publicity thing and not been so precious about it. I look back and know that I would have done it different now but that’s the way you learn as you come along.”

Despite that hiccup, Renée found admirers among superstars. Bonnie Raitt and she shared a band, and Renée sometimes stayed in her house.

Joe Cocker adored her, got her to duet on his 1987 album Unchain My Heart and took her on tour through Europe.

She also did sessions with Neil Diamond, Julio Iglesias, Buddy Guy, Chaka Khan, Toni Childs, Men at Work and Trouble Funk.

She was standing outside a Los Angeles club after her show. A man with an English accent came out. “Was that you singing in there? You were ****** fantastic!” It was Ringo Starr.

Another time when she was in a club with Kevin Borich and bassist Harry Brus, Ronnie Wood invited them back to his house, and they jammed in his basement on Rolling Stones classics for the rest of the night.

She appeared on Sting’s single “We’ll Be Together” from 1987’s …Nothing Like The Sun, his second solo album.

At the session, there were just some of his singers. After while they left but Renée stayed through the night, overdubbing her voice six times and coming up with the line “let’s get together right now”

“That line took the song to another level, Nolan says. “In my opinion, it makes that song.”

“We’ll Be Together” charted in ten countries, including #7 in America and #13 in Australia.

At a function attended by Sting, Geyer was introduced to him as, “This is Renée, she did the backing vocal on the single.”

He looked at her and, dismissively responded, “I have so many people doing backing vocals, I can’t keep track of them.”

The next morning “someone” posted a photo of Sting on a pre-social media channel with one word, “TOSSER”.

RENEE GEYER LIVE

at the Eureka Hotel 1979 and the Tivoli Sydney 1982

ZYDECO JUMP Live at the Nth Melbourne Town Hall 1990

ZYDECO JUMP

Live at the Nth Melbourne Town Hall 1990

TRACKS

1 Joe Pete Is In The Bed (wr: S.Semien)
2 Walking Up The Creek (wr: A. Wright & George Butrumlis)
3 That Was Your Mother (wr: Paul Simon)
4 Alligator Waltz (wr: Rockin’ Sydney)
5 Johnny Can’t Dance (He’s Got Ants In His Pants) (wr: Clifton Chenier)
6 Let’s Talk It Over (wr: Chuck Berry & Tampa Red)
7 Not Fade Away (wr: Buddy Holly & Norman Petty)
8 You Win Again (wr: Hank Wiliams)
9 All Night Long (wr: Clifton Chenier)
10 What’d I Say (wr: Ray Charles)

ARTISTS

George Butrumlis piano accordion
Paul Neuendorf guitar and vocals
Gary Samolin drums
Alan Wright bass
Linda ‘Toots’ Wostry sax
Ben Taylor washboard

THE RECORDING

ZYDECO JUMP

Live at the Nth Melbourne Town Hall 1990

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Simon Glozier Sound Engineer

Tour of Duty – Xmas Concert For The Troops 1999

Tour of Duty – Xmas Concert For The Troops

Dili, East Timor

 

TRACKS

1 You’re The Voice All Artists
2 I Just Wanna Be With You Doc Neeson
3 Shadow Boxer Doc Neeson
4 She’s So Fine / Sorry John Farnham and Doc Neeson
5 No Secrets Doc Neeson and The Living End
6 Mambo No.5 R.M.C.(Royal Marine Corps) Band
7 Silent Night Rachael Starkey and the R.M.C Band
8 Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas Gina Jeffreys
9 Dancing With Elvis Gina Jeffreys
10 Libertade Dili All Stars
11 Way Out West James Blundell
12 Chain Reaction John Farnham
13 Have A Little Faith John Farnham
14 Playing To Win John Farnham
15 Sadie (The Cleaning Lady) John Farnham
16 That’s Freedom John Farnham
17 You’ll Never Walk Alone John Farnham
18 Shout John Farnham & Kylie Minogue
19 Santa Baby Kylie Minogue
20 All Torn Down The Living End
21 West End Riots The Living End
22 Jingle Bell Rock Kylie Minogue and The Living End
23 It’s A Long Way To The Top All Artists
24 Take A Long Line All Artists
25 Will I Ever See Your Face Again All Artists
26 I Still Call Australia Home All Artists

ARTISTS

John Farnham
Doc Neeson
Kylie Minogue
Gina Jeffreys
James Blundell
The Living End
The John Farnham Band
The Dili Allstars
The RMC Army Band
Roy and H.G
JOHN FARNHAM’S BAND
Lisa Edwards
Stuart Fraser
Joe Creighton
Chong Lim
Lindsay Field
Angus Burchall
Steve Williams
Jack Jones

THE RECORDING

Tour of Duty – Xmas Concert For The Troops 1999

Dili, East Timor

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Grant Walsh - front of house sound
Chris Newman - lighting director
John Henderson - monitors
Gary Radbourne - keyboards tech
Barry Woods - guitar tech
Frank Iskra - drum tech
Pat Pickett - stage
Wayne Rafferty - stage
Michael Kent - rigger safety officer
Ross Clunes - rigger safety officer)
Doug Brady - Audio OB engineer
Frank Greer - World Stages
Tom Wilkins - stage builder
JANDS CREW
Greg Rosman
Bob Daniels
Rohan Goss
Aaron Woznicki
Glenn Williams

The Poachers and The Idle Diddlies LIVE at Maldon Folk Festival 2001

The Poachers and

The Idle Diddlies

LIVE at Maldon Folk Festival 2001

TRACKS

The POACHERS
1 Reels
2 Lydia
3 Rake And A Ramblin’ Man
4 Sleepless Sailor
5 Three Long Years
6 Walkaway
7 Water Is Wide
The IDLE DIDDLIES
8 The Boston Burglar
9 The Lament Of Limerick Set
10 Welcome Poor Paddy Home
11 Tobin’s Set
12 Hector The Hero
13 The Gold Ring Set

ARTISTS

The POACHERS
Penny Boys lead vocals, percussion
Cathy Bell vocals, fiddle, accordion
Andrew Heath guitar, mandolin, banjo
The IDLE DIDDLIES
Anthony O’Neill bouzouki, banjo, guitar, mandolin, fiddle
Steve Simmonds vocals, guitar, fiddle
Dan Bourke fiddle

THE RECORDING

The Poachers and The Idle Diddlies

LIVE at Maldon Folk Festival 2001

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Simon Glozier sound
Stuart Hassell stage

Sports Live At Billboard 1981

The Sports

Live At Billboard 1981

TRACKS

1 Black Stockings (For Chelsea)
2 Don’t Throw Stones
3 Suspicious Minds
4 Passionette
5 Perhaps
6 Strangers On A Train
7 Lucky Shop
8 Blue Hearts
9 Softly, Softly
10 Against The Dance
11 Hit Single
12 This Is Really Something
13 Boys! (What Did The Detective Say)
14 Stop The Baby Talking
15 How Come
16 Who Listens To The Radio?
17 Wedding Ring
18 All The Girls But One

THE BAND

Stephen Cummings lead vocals (1976–1981)
Andrew Pendlebury guitars, backing vocals (1976–1981)
Robert Glover bass (1976–1981)
Martin Armiger guitars, backing vocals (1978–1981; died 2019)
Freddie Strauks drums (1980–1981)

THE RECORDING

THE SPORTS

Live At Billboard 1981

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Cyril Moonan (R.I.P) TM and stage
Gary Brokenshire Lights
Andy Crosby (R.I.P) Lights
Laurie Quigley Sound Engineer
Jon Lemon Sound Engineer
Bob Gosford Sound Engineer
Jim MacMillan Sound Engineer
Dave Gornalle Stage
Garry Craft Monitors
Mark Edwards Monitors
Gruzzle Monitors
Kieran Sell Stage

The Slim Dusty Travelling Country Band Reunion Show

Slim Dusty Travelling Country Band Reunion Show | Live at Tamworth 1996 | Blackbox Records Desktape Series

Slim Dusty Travelling Country Band Reunion Show

Live at Tamworth 1996

TRACKS

1st Half-
1 Charleville
2 Leave Him In The Longyard
3 The Man From The Never Never
4 Our Wedding Waltz
(Greg Hayes introduction)
5 Kelly’s Offsider
6 Indian Pacific
7 Who Wants Moss
8 On The Last Train To Nowhere
9 Trouble
10 Wheels
11 Out Of The Blue
12 John Hardy
13 Waiting For A Train
14 Roulette Wheel Of Love
2nd Half-
15 Lead Me Down To The Stockyard Medley
16 Cunnamulla Fella
17 Soarin’ On The Strings
18 Ringer From The Top End
19 Middleton’s Rouseabout
20 Catching Yellowbelly
21 When The Rain Tumbles Down In July
22 Biggest Disappointment

ARTISTS

Slim Dusty
Joy McKean
Anne Kirkpatrick
David Kirkpatrick
Heather McKean

 TRAVELLING COUNTRY BAND

Rod Coe - Bass
Mike Kerin - Fiddle
Rob Souter - Drums
Warren Morgan - Keyboard
Jeff Mercer - Lead electric & acoustic guitar, dobro

TRAVELLING COUNTRY BAND REUNION GUESTS

Colleen Trenwith - Fiddle
Paul Trenwith - Banjo
Colin Watson - Electric guitar
Michel Rose - Pedal Steel guitar
Lawrie Minson - Dobro, harmonica
Charley Boyter - Lead acoustic guitar
Lindsay Butler - Electric guitar
Ian Simpson - Banjo
Barry Thornton - Lead Guitar

THE RECORDING

Slim Dusty Travelling Country Band Reunion Show

Live at Tamworth 1996

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Andrew Rodd - Front of House
David Finch - Monitors
Matt Lowery - Lighting (courtesy Tamworth Town Hall)
Compere - Greg Hayes

Slim Dusty Family Show Live at Tamworth 1996

Slim Dusty Family Show Live at Tamworth 1996 | Blackbox Records Desktape Series

Slim Dusty Family Show

Live at Tamworth 1996

TRACKS

1st Half
1 Man From The Never Never
2 Kelly’s Offsider
3 Indian Pacific
4 Patsy Cline Medley: Crazy, Walkin’ After Midnight, I Fall To Pieces
5 I’m Little But I’m Loud
6 Ringer From The Top End
7 By A Fire Of Gidgee Coal
8 How Will I Go With Him Mate
9 When the Rain Tumbles Down In July
10 When The Currawongs Come Down
11 Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
12 Rock N Roll In A Cowboy Hat
2nd Half
13 Sunlander
14 Last Train To Nowhere
15 Highway Blues
16 Out Of The Blue
17 Goodbye
18 Whites Of Your Eyes
19 Yellow Old Bullcatcher
20 Pub With No Beer
21 Duncan
22 The Biggest Disappointment (Presentation to Joy)
23 Me And Matilda
24 Natural High
25 Yodel Medley
26 Orange Blossom Special

THE BAND/ARTISTS

Slim Dusty
Joy McKean
Anne Kirkpatrick
David Kirkpatrick
Heather McKean
TRAVELLING COUNTRY BAND
Rod Coe - Bass
Mike Kerin - Fiddle
Rob Souter - Drums
Warren Morgan - Keyboard
Jeff Mercer - Lead electric & acoustic guitar, dobro
Ian Simpson - Banjo & acoustic guitar

THE RECORDING

Slim Dusty Family Show

Live at Tamworth 1996

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Andrew Rodd - Front of House
David Finch - Monitors
Matt Lowery - Lighting (courtesy Tamworth Town Hall)
Greg Hayes - Compere

KEVIN BORICH EXPRESS Live

Kevin Borich Express Live 50th Black Box Records Release Album Cover

TRACKS

Eureka Hotel 1979
1 I Can’t Wait
2 The Snowball King
3 Social Disease
4 Caught In The Middle
5 KB’s Boogie
6 Goin’ Downtown
Miranda Hotel 1982
7 Heartstarter
8 Don’t Let Go
9 Miracle Day
10 Slinky
11 Bell Hop Blues
12 Full Moon
13 Working On A New Day
14 Good To See Ya
15 1980
16 Cadillac Walk
17 She Can’t Help It – Goin’ Fishing
Victoria Hotel 1995
18 Voodoo Child
19 Cadillac Walk
20 Goin’ Fishing
21 Gonna See My Baby Tonight

THE BAND/ARTISTS

Kevin Borich - (Eureka ’79, Miranda ’82, Darwin ’95): vocals, guitar
John Annas - (Eureka ’79, Miranda ’82): drums
Tim Partridge (RIP) - (Eureka ’79, Darwin ’95): bass
Mal Logan - (Eureka ’79): keyboards
Steve Balbi - (Miranda ’82): bass
Andy Cowan - (Miranda ’82): keyboards
Adrian Cannon - (Darwin ’95): drums

THE RECORDING

KEVIN BORICH EXPRESS Live

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

Gerry Georgettis (RIP) - (Eureka Hotel, Geelong)
Andy Rayson - (Victoria Hotel, Darwin)
Phil Meltzer - (Miranda Hotel, Sydney)

Gondwanaland Live at the Greek Theatre 1989

Gondwanaland

Live at the Greek Theatre 1989

TRACKS

1 Drought
2 Deja’Vu
3 Highway
4 Ephemeral Lakes
5 Log Dance
6 Choppers
7 Emu
8 Bullant
9 Rainforest
10 Landmark
11 Troppo Wet
12 Bedrock
13 Danger

THE BAND/ARTISTS

Charlie McMahon didjeridoo, vocals, didjeribone
Peter Carolan synthesiser
Eddie Duquemin drums, percussion

THE RECORDING

Gondwanaland

Live at the Greek Theatre 1989

All the ARCA Desk Tape Series recordings are available through Black Box Records – australianroadcrew.com.au

Mastering:

Phil Dracoulis

THE CREW

George Alexander Front Of House
Phil Free Monitors
Steve Pauner Lights
Terry Fisk Lights
Lash Stage