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grace cummings

  • grace cummings great clubGrace Cummings
    + Lady Lyon
    The Great Club, Marrickville, NSW
    Thursday 29 September 2022

    Sitting at my favourite breakfast haunt with the rain hitting its stride, the nearby beach appears to resemble a wild mosh-pit. The mobile phone rings. I decide to answer and then gulp the last of my coffee: it was my mate Vic.

    "I saw Grace Cummings last night, and I know you’d like her; you don’t often see a support act get a standing ovation at the Recital Hall."

    Vic rarely raves about too many artists, I slurped down my coffee and started to Google. As the rain pelted down, the sounds of Grace’s song "Heaven” blared from my phone.

    That voice and what a song.

    As the rain continued and I traversed the slippery pavement, finding spots of shelter on the way home. Grace’s voice resonated from the mobile phone in my coat pocket, sounding for all the world like music coming via a treasured transistor radio from years ago.

  • grace cummings hero image

    Grace Cummings and Band
    Metro Social Club, Sydney
    Saturday, August 3 2024
    Photos: Sandra Kingston

    Grace Cummings is a once-in-generation Australian artist.

    It is two years since I first caught her at the Great Club in Marrickville in Sydney’s inner-west, with less than a hundred others on a cold Thursday night.

    It was a show by a remarkable artist with swagger and brutally heart wrenching songs that left us in awe.

    Accompanied by a band with attitude, she took her vocals from a whisper to paint-stripping level, leaving the hairs on your arms standing up.   

    Her remarkable album “Storm Queen” has been on my turntable regularly since, but her records don’t fully capture the live experience.

  • edmund 2022R.I.P. Ed Yonker. At the time of his passing earlier in 2022, I was going to write a few words about this legend of the Australian music Industry.

    This quiet achiever in an industry full of sycophants, where inflated egos don’t match their mediocrity.

    There few gems I have encountered in “the industry” like Ed Yonker. He was one of the good ones. A hip cool cat with his leather jacket who, as a teenager, had seen the Beatles, Rolling Stones and The Animals in Holland in 1963-65. At first, he was not that impressed by what he found in the Australian musical landscape when he migrated here.

    Ed was of the one first attendees at Beatle Village on Oxford Street in Sydney. He used to catch the train, avoiding the bogans who wanted to fight a cool kid in what was the early days of the Bohemian inner-city music scene. He was often at the gigs by The Easybeats , The Creatures and The Missing Links.