Celebrated Australian rocker Ian Moss is bringing his distinctive sound to Club Sapphire Merimbula this Friday, February 1.
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Respected as one of Australia’s iconic musicians, Moss delivers an unforgettable sound – not only as a telling soloist on guitar but especially with his silken voice, ringing with clarity and resonating with pure soul.
While primarily recognised as an axeman of unusual tenacity and sweet melodic sensibility, Moss’s distinctive vocal is the essential signature of his soulful, bluesy muse – as it has been since his first tentative foray into music during the early 1970s.
Born and raised in Alice Springs, Moss started playing guitar in local teenage bands but moved to Adelaide after failing one of his high school years, planning to repeat in the big city.
Fate intervened when he answered an advertisement for a guitarist in a shop window in 1973, joining the band that was to become a legend in Australia – Cold Chisel.
After Moss joined organist and principal songwriter Don Walker and drummer Steve Prestwich, the group took shape with singer Jimmy Barnes and eventually bass player Phil Small, starting the hard grind of playing gigs on the back of flatbed trucks and in suburban hotels.
Barnes remembered young Mossy as “a boy from the bush who didn’t wear shoes but played fantastic”.
They hit the road and paid their dues, playing countless one-night stands across the country. The reputation and status of Cold Chisel steadily grew, mainly on the strength of blistering live shows, and in time their well-crafted recordings became staples of radio airplay.
By 1980, with the release of the seminal East album, Cold Chisel was the biggest band in the country. Moreover, they defined a national sound – hard-driving rock chased by a shot of blues, lyrics depicting the Australian experience and resonating powerfully with young working class fans.
Moss’s voice began to shine through such seminal Cold Chisel songs as Never Before, Bow River (written by Moss) and a gorgeous rendition of Ray Charles’ Georgia.
After evolving into a solo artist he began commanding the same respect as Cold Chisel. Moss’s debut single Tucker’s Daughter was released in January 1989, and caused an immediate sensation. The anthemic song sat in the Top 10 for 11 weeks and hit No 1 for two weeks, achieving gold sales status after 15 weeks and selling more than 73,000 copies.
Thirty years later and Moss is bringing his new Summer and Solo tour to the Far South Coast this Friday, Club Sapphire Merimbula.
Doors open at 8pm. Tickets $45 available form club reception.