Kev Carmody

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
From Little Things Big Things Grow 05:49 Tools
Thou Shalt Not Steal 04:54 Tools
Cannot Buy My Soul 02:33 Tools
I've Been Moved 02:49 Tools
Moonstruck 04:37 Tools
River of Tears 02:32 Tools
On the Wire 04:36 Tools
Elly 04:52 Tools
The Young Dancer is Dead 03:32 Tools
Darkside 05:23 Tools
Images of London 05:23 Tools
This Land Is Mine 02:55 Tools
Comrade Jesus Christ 02:13 Tools
Droving Woman 09:16 Tools
Blood Red Rose 03:21 Tools
Eulogy for a Black Man 04:11 Tools
Eulogy For A Black Person 04:12 Tools
Spirit of the Ancients 02:18 Tools
Freedom 06:48 Tools
Pillars of Society 03:22 Tools
Flagstone Creek 04:12 Tools
Jack Deelin 03:08 Tools
Attack Attack 03:08 Tools
Black Deaths in Custody 04:06 Tools
Black Bess 04:06 Tools
Twisted Rail 06:39 Tools
Living South of the Freeway 04:03 Tools
White Bourgeois Woman 03:19 Tools
Rider in the Rain 06:39 Tools
Messenger 05:11 Tools
Asbestosis 04:32 Tools
Black and White 01:49 Tools
Sorry Business 03:19 Tools
Bloodlines (return) 03:10 Tools
Bloodlines 03:07 Tools
Earth Mother 03:27 Tools
Some Strange Strange People 03:29 Tools
Sexual Teaser 03:27 Tools
Eulogy (for a Black Person) 04:10 Tools
I'm Still In Love With You 03:27 Tools
You Beautiful 04:35 Tools
Jessica 04:35 Tools
Tom Shane 03:53 Tools
Dirty Dollar 06:17 Tools
Night Shadows 01:44 Tools
Haunted Man 04:58 Tools
Solar Wind 03:53 Tools
Eulogy 18:38 Tools
A 1930's Fam-Lily 06:17 Tools
Needles in the Nursery 03:53 Tools
Fire and Wind 03:53 Tools
B.D.P. 03:53 Tools
Blue You 03:53 Tools
The Anti-Christ 04:19 Tools
Ya Can't Rush An Old Rooster 04:21 Tools
Cometh The Desert Wind 03:53 Tools
Back Block's Shire 03:53 Tools
River Road 04:13 Tools
Shades of Violet 04:13 Tools
Travellin' North 04:13 Tools
Charon 04:13 Tools
Just For You 04:21 Tools
Chippin' the Cotton 04:13 Tools
Georgina River 04:21 Tools
B.D.P 04:26 Tools
Spirit Of The Ancients - Reprise 02:19 Tools
Moonlight On The Desert Wind 04:13 Tools
Kelly E. 04:21 Tools
Comin' Home 04:26 Tools
“Black Jimmy”? 04:21 Tools
Dajarra Night Wind 04:26 Tools
El Diablo Blanco 04:26 Tools
Refugees 04:26 Tools
Terra Australis… Danu 04:58 Tools
Cold Damp Air 02:32 Tools
Doors Of Love 02:32 Tools
Wollumbin (...The Cloud Gatherer) 04:58 Tools
Didjeridu 04:58 Tools
People's Captain Said 04:58 Tools
Hometown 04:26 Tools
Milky Way 04:58 Tools
An Dubh ina Gheal (Assimilation) 04:58 Tools
Campfire Rain 04:58 Tools
Month of May 04:58 Tools
Organic Butterknife Boogie… Surfin' Cyberspace...Trying to Find I... Me Me's Identity… and Proper Coffee 04:58 Tools
Sistem An' You 04:58 Tools
Are You Connected? 02:32 Tools
Earth Mother's Woman Child 04:58 Tools
Building A Holy City 04:58 Tools
Highway 1 02:32 Tools
A Tracker's Song (1930's) 02:32 Tools
Droppin' the Weights 04:58 Tools
Footsteps 02:32 Tools
Who Are They? 04:58 Tools
Slidin' Into Chaos 04:58 Tools
An Ol' Man's Question 02:32 Tools
The Young Dsncer is Dead 04:58 Tools
Vickery Parish 02:32 Tools
Bewdy Song 04:58 Tools
Dubya Love Ya? 02:32 Tools
Livin' In The Country 02:32 Tools
Droving Women 02:32 Tools
Wizard Of The Wind 02:32 Tools
Travelin' Stranger 02:32 Tools
A Life Experienced Voice 02:32 Tools
New Town Dogs 02:32 Tools
Plain Song 02:32 Tools
Graves Of The Unknown Soldiers And Civilians 02:32 Tools
Cannot Buy A Soul 02:32 Tools
From Little Things Big Things Grow (feat. Paul Kelly) 02:32 Tools
Organic Butterknife Boogie… Surfin' Cyberspace...Trying to Find I... Me Me's Identity… and Prop 02:32 Tools
Sistem' An' You 02:32 Tools
Spirit Of The Ancients (Reprise) 02:19 Tools
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Kev Carmody grew up on the Western Darling Downs area of Southern Queensland. His early childhood was simple but happy, mixing mostly with stockmen, drovers, fencers, ring-barkers and timber-getters. His family, although poor lived largely off the land growing vegetables near the small three roomed ant-bed floored hut and hunting and catching everything from kangaroos to fish. In 1956, when he was ten, Carmody was sent to a “Christian school” which he has described as “little more than an orphanage”. After school Kev returned to his rural roots working for seventeen years as a back country labourer doing everything from bag lumping, cane cutting to wool pressing. He told one newspaper that his musical career was “a far cry from the 15 year old who thought he’d spent the rest of his life pressing wool. Mind you, I had a job then, I was actually making bloody money. Not with this music caper….” When he was 33 he got the opportunity to go to University where he studied history, geography and music eventually progressing to work on a PhD. His thesis topic, not surprisingly, was the history of the Darling Downs between 1830 – 1860. His career in music started while he was at University. He explains: “They accepted me in there on probation, and it was a bit of a funny one really because I could hardly read or write. I had no mastery of the written language… But I was lucky. I had good lecturers and they let me bring the guitar in for the first six months as a means of implementing oral history and my background and what I wanted to say into the tutorial. And it worked really bloody well.” Music had always been around him. As a child he listened to old records on the family’s wind-up 78 gramophone and, absorbed everything from country music to classical from an old valve wireless, and spent many nights singing folk and popular songs around the campfire. He did not, and still does not see himself as “a musician” in the way that most musicians see themselves. Still the influences upon him were powerful and profound. Carmody’s initial inspiration came from a truly rural, oral tradition. Both his second generation Irish father and Murri mother came from powerful oral traditions. Carmody still talks about the stories and songs he was told and taught by his first generation Irish Grandmother, Murri grandparents and his extended Murri family. Kev Carmody has lived out the life of a modern troubadour. He was a travelling singer/songwriter with a base in southern Queensland and an itinerary which found him touring the world. He has played concerts in Australian gaols for all inmates. He has worked with marginalised children as part of a community education program at Logan City “to encourage the kids to come up with artistic ideas, find their spirit, and, most importantly, their self-esteem.” You could often find him at a Greenpeace rally or fund-raiser, a world music celebration, an Aboriginal musical festival, on a university campus, or playing at regular concert venues. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.