Whether tearing it up on stage with their
hard-driving harmonies or cutting up backstage with anybody primed and
ready to have a good time, Eddie Montgomery and Troy Gentry
are always operating at full tilt. Making their indefinable but
irresistible brand of authentic honky-tonking country music – and
having an absolute blast in the process – just comes naturally to
these two Kentuckians.
The duo's hardcore, raw-edged country sound – as
evidenced in full glory on their Columbia Records debut album
"Tattoos
& Scars" – is as unmistakable as their
distinctive personalities, and they make no apologies about the fact
that they like to shake things up.
After years
of burning roadhouses down with their incendiary sound all over
Lexington, Kentucky, they wouldn't really know any other way. Known for their rowdy onstage antics, the two readily admit their show can get a little out of hand. "We do get
kind of wild onstage," admits Eddie, "so sometimes when we
play in new places with the type of music we're doing, people are
like, 'Wham! Hold on, boys, I don't know if we want to go that far or
not!' We like to play music that sort of dares us, 'Can we step on
this side of the fence or not?' Just good ole boys doing a little bit
more than the law will allow...that's us!"
If Waylon, Willie and Haggard are the forefathers of
country's outlaw movement, Montgomery Gentry are surely its new
sons, with their seamless harmonies, heartfelt lyrics, and
no-holds-barred attitude. If sincerity seeps from the veins of every
song, it's simply because both Eddie and Troy have lived what they're
singing, and they wouldn't have it any other way. "We believe in
our music so much," says Eddie.
Both Eddie and Troy have rich musical backgrounds to
draw from and the two were friends long before they entered a
Nashville studio together. Coming up through the same music scene in
Kentucky, they supported each other's efforts for years before teaming
up to form Montgomery Gentry. Performing came as naturally as
breathing to Eddie, who spent his formative years in his family's band
along with brother John Michael Montgomery. "I basically just grew up in the
honky tonks," remembers Eddie. "The bartender was our
babysitter," he adds, laughing. "I wouldn't know anything
else. It was a way of life for us. We had music equipment in our
living room instead of furniture!"
Troy has fond memories of time spent in the living
room as well, singing with his mother to old LPs. "My mom and I
would sing with the record player to Elvis Presley, Tina Turner, early
Bruce Springsteen,
Stevie Nicks," remembers Troy. "She loved to sing and she was the
one who first got me interested in music." The fact that
performing would gain him notoriety in the halls in junior high didn't
hurt, either. "I did my first performance at a talent contest in
school," says Troy, "and that sensation of everyone patting
you on the back and appreciating what you could do made me want more!
In high school, I heard Randy Travis
for the first time and that's when I knew this was what I wanted to do
for a living. So from there on out, I did everything I could to get
myself out in front of people and be heard."
Troy and Eddie's first joint musical effort was as
part of a band called Young Country. After two years with that
band, Troy left to try his hand at a solo career. His efforts
materialized when he was awarded the top trophy in the Jim Beam
National Talent Contest in 1994 and earned a slot opening for acts
like Patty Loveless, Tracy Byrd and
John
Michael Montgomery. But he found Nashville a bit tougher nut to crack.
"I knocked on a bunch of doors in Nashville," he remembers.
"and had a bunch of them closed back in my face."
When Troy began to commiserate with Eddie about how
difficult it was getting a break, the two started toying with the idea
of working together. And after wowing the crowds together night after
night in Lexington, they began to realize they had stumbled onto
something really special. "We had worked together so well for so
long," admits Troy, "and knew each other so well that I knew
it couldn't be anything but right."
One listen to Montgomery Gentry's music
confirms the duo's compatibility without a doubt. Their voices blend
like smooth sipping whiskey and cool, clean ice, and their songs go
down just as easy. The two glide from rebellious, defiant, gritty
rockers to vulnerable, achingly humbling ballads with ease.
"We want our music to be real and from the
heart," says Troy. "We like Nashville, and hope it's a place
that will let us just be us. No vanilla, no doctoring. Just the music
we like to make."
"We want to be true to ourselves and to our
music," adds Eddie. "And we want to do music that's still
played 20 years from now – that's important to us. We have to do it
our way, though. Our saying is, 'There's a right way, a wrong way, and
the Montgomery Gentry Way!' And the way I see it, no matter
what, we're going to have fun with it, one way or another."
The old saying "what you see is what you
get" applies when you meet Eddie Montgomery and Troy
Gentry. Rowdy, fun loving, spontaneous and awesome talent all
describe what these guys are about. Whether you meet them in person,
hear their music on CD or see their live performance, the music and
personalities are so infectious that you will also instantly become a
fan.