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It
has often been said that the Newcastle crowd is a hard one to win
over. You have to prove yourself on stage before the crowd really
begin to appreciate what you are trying to do.
For
the Five Horse Johnson gig however, the crowd didn't even give the
band a chance to prove themselves. After the dreadful support acts
(two horrendous death metal bands) had packed up and taken their
mates with them, there were not very many people left to witness
the headlining act.
Melody
Which
was a shame, because Five Horse Johnson put a bit of melody back
into the evening. Theirs is a style which began with ZZ Top's Texan
boogie, took a sprinkling of early Aerosmith's rock 'n' roll, added
together several shots of bourbon, and ended up on stage in Newcastle
playing to a crowd of 36 people. Yes, I counted them.
While
the sound system of the Student Union's Global Cafe did the band
little justice, you could still get an idea of what Five Horse Johnson
were all about.
And
ultimately, the band do have some excellent songs, while there are
not that many modern bands who can boast such beefy riffs as the
ones chugged out by Brad Coffin on guitar.
Cherry
Red is one such track, Soul Digger is another. Great rock tracks
backed up by a tight rhythm section. Steve Smith, a double of Iron
Maiden's Steve Harris in his younger days, played a mean bass while
Mike Alonso provided able backup on the drums.
Concert
highlight
And
Eric Oblander on vocals did his best to excite the small crowd,
but while his in between song chatter appeared to go over the heads
of everyone in the audience, his harmonica playing was a concert
highlight, holding its own alongside the heavy guitar, rather than
getting buried beneath it.
This
was especially evident in the track Lightning When I Need, which
closed the show. Brad's solo was exceptional, and Eric's energy
was boundless while his harmonica was pressed to his face, rosy
cheeks blowing out some excellent blues sounds.
The
band had a lot going against them during this gig, but they overcame
it to put on a good show to those who had endured the support bands
and hung around. For that alone, they deserve praise. But Five Horse
Johnson sure know how to boogie too.
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