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Monti Amundson
When Monti Amundson gets compared to Stevie Ray Vaughan or Johnny Winter he just says thank you. But the fact is the big man has his own style. His influences range from the aforementioned and fellow Texas rocker Billy Gibbons to B.B. King and rock legends Jimi Hendrix and Jeff Beck. The blending of these styles in combination with Amundson's fine vocals is what makes him stand out from the rest.
Above all Monti Amundson is a great live performer who gets his point across. Whether it's an acoustic slide number or an all out show stopper, Amundson knows how to move a crowd. Known to live out of a suitcase for years at a time, Amundson's music has already made a great impression throughout Europe. In his home base Portland, Oregon his music has been highly valued for almost twenty years. The blues of Monti Amundson comes straight from the heart, cuts through your soul and is as real as it gets.
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Concert Reviews
“Monti Amundson is sincere and flawless with an
expressive voice and an authentic and heartfelt presence.”
Freeway
Magazine, France
“A colossal vocalist, a superb guitarist, Monti left every single person in a
state of shock - it was unbelievable! If you’ve heard the word then you know the big man is a must see.”
Gazette
Des Gazzelles, France
“We’ve heard the future of blues and his name
is Monti Amundson.”
Music
and Media, Germany
“Drawing energy from the crowd, Monti Amundson’s battery charges throughout
the night, consistantly throttling blues in true break-neck speed. This guy is going places.”
Joey
Scruggs, Bluesnotes, USA
“Monti Amundson plays with a power and commitment that can’t be matched.
Playing a Stratocaster through a 1959 Fender Bassman amp in a clean and cutting
tone, he’s a blistering guitarist. The real deal, a no frills rock n’ roller.”
Richard
Glauber, What’s Happening, USA
“The second standout show came from Monti Amundson. Blues traditionalists may
challenge these guys as blues artists, but nobody can challenge the talent and energy of axeman Monti
Amundson. His on-stage charisma and lightning-quick guitar work had the crowd rockin’ from start to finish. A
tight schedule meant no encores, but the shouts of ‘Monti, Monti’ reverberated through the crowd well into Boozoo
Chavis’ set on the opposite stage.
Truly electrifying!”
Mike
Cronin, Nashville Bluesletter, USA
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John Foyston
It's not easy to make a Fender Stratocaster squawk and
squall the way Monti Amundson does.
The Stratocaster, after all, was designed in 1954 to be
the ultimate country-western guitar, so it's not surprising that it demands a
special player to turn its deficits into the glassy grind
that suffuses Amundson's shows and albums such as "Prove Me
Wrong."
In the wrong hands, a Strat can be downright wonky and unbiddable.
But a player who knows how to harness its idiosyncrasies, how to push the
guitar, will find an astonishingly rich sonic palette. Not a Gibson's dark,
smooth midrangey voice, but cascading octaves of harmonics and a whiplike, edgy
intensity that makes lesser guitars sound as if they brought salad forks to a
knife fight.
I've seen it happen -- I've handed Amundson a '62 Strat
I thought I knew fairly well.
Wrong. Amundson took that guitar and made it sound better than it ever had. He
squeezed out roars and screams, tickled out harmonics and Hendrixian echoes that
had been hitherto hidden in its swamp-ash carcass.
The guys
who can really do that are few: Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck and Stevie Ray Vaughan
head the list. Amundson's name may not be found on the same line as those, but
the sheer intensity of his playing argues eloquently for his inclusion on the
same page.
If you
haven't heard him in concert, you can spin up albums such as "Prove Me
Wrong”,
"Straight Out!"
or
"Big Monti", although they
can only hint at the effect of hearing
"99 Below" at 120 db
though a red-lit haze of cigarette smoke and beer fumes.
But the
real measure of Monti's particular genius can be found on his acoustic stuff ---
albums such as "I See
Trouble" or tunes such as "Calculatin' Woman”. Even in an acoustic
format, Monti's sound is
immediately recognizeable by the sparks he strikes, by it's sheer electricity, by the raw-nerve honesty of his singing.
That's a little something they call style and it's not something you learn in
books or by grimacing in front of the mirror. Monti has got it --- is as true a
rocker as ever tore up a stage. That makes all this talk about searing Strat
tones ultimately superfluous, the wishful thinking of people who --- if they
just had the right guitar --- could rock as hard and soulfully as Monti
Amundson.
Never happen. That fire burns from the inside.