Monday, June 16, 2025
HomeCultureMusicCummings: ‘I can still do it’

Cummings: ‘I can still do it’

Last month at the Camelot Lounge, Marrickville, the legendary Australian singer-songwriter Stephen Cummings with guitarist Sam Lemann took their audience on a “wonderful spiritual journey” they’d never forget.

From 1976 to 1981 Cummings was the lead singer of iconic rock band The Sports, following which he has pursued a fruitful and critically-acclaimed solo career – with records described as timeless, moving, funny and utterly unique.

One song, “Hot Dog”, performed with The Sports and which appears on his retrospective album Good Bones, was played twice at Camelot Lounge, including an encore. Cummings said he played “Hot Dog” with The Sports at the Settlement in Darlington many years before.

“The Settlement was where a friend, Paul Worstead, who lived in a factory in the area, worked as a social worker at an Indigenous youth centre. Paul did lots of artwork associated with the Tin Sheds up at Sydney University and did most of the posters and artwork for Mental as Anything.

“The Sports played at the Settlement monthly dance as did many of the alternative groups from Sydney.”

Cummings had a farewell tour last year. But he’s cancelled his retirement. “I found retirement a bit anticlimactic. I started feeling guilty reading so many books and watching so many movies!”

Cummings has written, “Whatever comes next is better than what went before. Nostalgia is death.”

After last month’s show he said, “I’m old but I can still do it”. Apparently there is to be a new album of self-penned country blues later this year. Until then, enjoy last year’s Prisoner of Love or the anthology A Life Is a Life.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Aunty Millie Ingram recognised in King’s Birthday Honours List

Respected Wiradjuri Elder and long-time Redfern community leader Aunty Millie Ingram has been appointed as a Member (AM) of the Order of Australia in the 2025 King’s Birthday Honours ...

Volunteers’ News – June 2025

Volunteers’ News – June 2025.

Sydney Writers’ Festival 2025 – guest curator Nardi Simpson on storytelling, the body and First Nations voices

At this year’s Sydney Writers’ Festival, guest curator Nardi Simpson didn’t just help design the program, she created a space where relationships, connection, the body and the written word intersect.

Weaving a way to knowledge and healing 

I was born Karleen Green in Brisbane, even though my family lived at Fingal on the Tweed River in Bundjalung country, northern NSW.

Resilience, truth and faith – Jeffrey Samuels and the power of art

On Sunday May 25, ahead of National Sorry Day, a powerful moment of reflection and recognition unfolded at the Uniting Church in Ashfield.

590 beanies for 590 lives – Hats for Homeless marks Sorry Day with powerful tribute

Hats for Humanity, a special project of the Sydney-based grassroots initiative Hats for Homeless, marked this year’s Sorry Day with a striking gesture of remembrance and solidarity ...