Itâs been seven years since Eddie Montgomery lost his Montgomery Gentry duo partner, but the country singer still canât help but look to his left when heâs on stage.
Itâs a reflex born of sharing the spotlight for more than 20 years with Troy âT-Royâ Gentry from the time they were teens growing up in Danville, Kentucky, to the day Gentry died in a helicopter crash in September 2017.
âThereâs not a night that donât go by that we donât talk about T-Roy,â Montgomery, 60, said during a mid-July interview from Nashville. âIâm always used to lookinâ to my left there because itâs been me and him and John Boy, or John Michael as everybody knows him as, that started a band pretty much outta high school.â
Montgomery brings Montgomery Gentry to Fox Tucson Theatre on Friday, Aug. 30, as part of the bandâs 25th anniversary tour.
Montgomery, who released his first solo album with 2022âs âAinât No Closing Me Down,â said he promised his longtime friend and musical partner that he would keep the band going.
âWe made a pact, me and T-Roy did, years ago. Of course it was over some Jim Beam, I ainât gonna lie about it,â he recounted. âWe said if either one of us go down, we want the other one to keep the MG brand going. So I made that promise and Iâm gonna keep it.â
Years before Montgomery and Gentry were a duo they were a trio with Montgomeryâs younger brother John Michael, a multiplatinum-selling country singer. The three played together in the 1990s before John Michael went solo.
âMe and John Boy, I always make a joke about it: mom was a drummer, dad was a guitar player, bartenders were our babysitters and T-Royâs dad owned a bar,â Montgomery said. âWe literally grew up in honky-tonks. And I mean the ones back when we were kids, you walked in and they asked if you had a gun and if you didnât theyâd give you one. Thatâs how rough they were.â
Montgomery and Gentry formed their band in 1999 and released their debut album âTattoos & Scars.â The first single, âHillbilly Shoes,â introduced the duoâs high-octane country with scorching guitars, fiddle in the backdrop and a honky-tonk attitude developed from years of playing little dive bars in their native Kentucky.
âWhen you come up through the honky tonks, if you donât bring a crowd, you wonât have a job,â said Montgomery, who still wears the same stage outfit he wore in those early days: black jeans, red cowboy boots, a black wide-brimmed Charlie 1 Horse hat and black coat.
It didnât take long for the duo to get a reputation as country musicâs party boys. Their Jim Beam tour bus would pull into a festival like Country Thunder in Florence â they headlined the festival in 2009 â and everyone would watch the entourage make its way backstage.
âHere comes the honky tonk boys,â Montgomery said of the reaction from concert promoters, fellow artists and backstage festival security. âWe would set up and we would have TV on outside and we would have games and we would be grilling. Hell T-Roy even had a small pool. Heâd get in and out and all the other artists are like, âWhat the hell?â And theyâd end up gettinâ in it, too. It was one of them baby pools, that was what was so funny about it.â
The band released nine studio albums; Gentry and Montgomery had finished the last, âHereâs To You,â weeks before the fatal crash. The album came out in 2018 and Montgomery did 25 shows promoting it.
âWe were all lost, me and the band,â he said of going on the road after taking off for seven or eight months after the tragedy. âI miss T-Roy every day, but music heals everything. I wish all these world leaders would listen to it because it will fix everything.â
âIâll tell you what, man, itâs bittersweet. ... Itâs like starting all over after T-Royâs death and ... COVID,â he added. âAnd here we are. All of our guys are still together. Been together over 20-some years. Thatâs something you donât hear very often at all anymore.â
If you had told the younger Montgomery that his partnership with Gentry would take him into his 60s, he would likely have laughed. Gentry himself, in a 2007 Star interview, guessed that he and Montgomery had a good five, maybe 10 years before their career would fade.
âHereâs the way we look at it: If Iâm dreaming, donât pinch me and wake me up, please,â Montgomery said. âWe always said when they asked us âWhat do you want to get out of this when itâs all said and done?â Well, I wanna walk over to the jukebox, because you know when you walk up to the jukebox youâre going to see Waylon and Willie, Bob Seger, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Merle Haggard, TG Shepherd, the Marshall Tucker guys and Charlie Daniels. If we see our name in between one of them guys, oh, hell, we can turn around to one another and say, âWe done somethin.â If you donât make it to the jukebox in 20 years, sorry âbout your luck.â
Montgomery Gentryâs show Friday at the Fox, 17 W. Congress, starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $20-$65 through foxtucson.com.
The Fox Tucson Theatre has been a Tucson landmark for decades. Its history has been captured in photos since the 1930s, when it opened as a vaudeville venue and movie house. Video by Pascal Albright / Arizona Daily Star



