But back to the band at hand. Shandy is the brainchild of Brisbane punk rocker JJ Speedball (vocals and guitar) and takes its inspiration from the Sharps culture of his adolescence. Two guitars, bass and drums, Shandy plays boogie-glam music that’s rocking in a light way and highly effervescent. Singalong choruses and beaver boy backing vocals. Charge your glass. Put the lemonade to one side and this is great drinking music.
While songs like “Go You Good Thing” betrays a Ramonic heritage, “Dig Deep and Deeper” nails the Sharpie musical ethos brilliantly. “Beards and Banjos” is a musical beating for hipsters. “Boogie Woogie” is a lyrically clever homage to mindless ‘70s fun.
“Hey Sally” is spunky buzz-pop glam with ‘70s chord changes and “Dance” is both simple and inspired. No need for many lyrics when the tune is good.
The production is uncomplicated and clean - maybe a little too so as there are parts where some extra '70s glam crunch could have been applied to the drums and guitars.
The universal appeal of Shandy is evident when you realise the band’s taken its music to Europe twice now, recording one of these tracks in Belgium. What the Euro-rockers made of a patently Australian song like “Kookaburra Sings” (it refers to a look-out keeping a watch while other gang members go about illicit business) with a JJ birdcall as the central motif is a good question. I figure the answer is that they danced. Hard.
“Tougher Pucker” is available in LP and CD formats with two extra tracks on the latter. Drop an email to