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Puckett promises a night of rock ‘n’ roll nostalgia
from CityNews 230202
By Helen MUSA
WHEN Gary Puckett and the Union Gap take the stage at the Southern Cross Club on February 15, audiences can expect a night of serious rock ‘n’ roll nostalgia, for unlike a lot of admittedly well-performed tribute shows we see yearround, this is the real deal.
Of course, today’s line-up of Puckett, Woody Lingle, Jamie Hilboldt and Mike Candito is not the one Puckett formed in San Diego in the late ‘60s, but it is the one he’s been touring with for a few years and, at age 80, lead singer Puckett is still very much there.
Apart from a short time in the ‘70s when he went solo, he’s been a band performer all of his life, with an unmistakable, ringing voice that gave us hits such as “Young Girl” and “This Girl is a Woman Now”.
The band is also still wearing the signature Yankee soldiers’ uniforms from the American Civil War, in which they became famous. The name “Union Gap” is a real place in Puckett’s native Washington state, a nod to the northern Unionists in the war.
When I ask him how on earth that went down with southern audiences, he roars with laughter.
“I wanted us to dress differently from other bands,” he says.