Hel-lo Ruby Tuesday.
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The Agrestic Grocer's regular Tuesday night show has become a popular music event in Orange.
Pat O'Donnell and the newly-named The Original Masters Project band, including his brother Andy, Matt Arthur and Dave Egan, who performed two albums live in their entirety in the past few weeks, have been regulars at the venue.
The Beatles Rubber Soul album and America's Greatest Hits History were played to sell-out audiences.
And they are set to take the Agrestic Grocer experience on tour throughout Australia and Singapore.
Mr O'Donnell moved to Orange about 2002 after growing up in the Bega region and living in Sydney.
"I started in 1986, we started playing in pubs down in the Bega valley. There's a strong music industry down there."
He said the tour would be an exciting chapter in his career.
"We've given ourselves a two-year contract together. The music we do is our living," he said.
He said the tour starts from Wollongong and the south coast of NSW early next year.
"One night you are doing America and that next night we are doing Rubber Soul," he said.
"We get to travel with music which we're really happy about."
Mr O'Donnell said they wanted to replicate the Ruby Tuesday model in small venues and theatres.
VIDEO: The Original Masters Project
"Pretty much that model. People come in and have dinner and then you play side A, you have a break and then do side B," he said.
Mr O'Donnell said they approached The Agrestic Grocer with the idea.
"We started there around 2015. We'd seen people doing whole albums in Sydney at the Basement," he said.
"We went and approached The Agrestic Grocer to see if we could do it on a Tuesday night. They promoted it pretty well."
He said it had been a big hit with baby boomers.
Mr O'Donnell said they largely stuck to the album song order when performing Rubber Soul and History even though they did not always suit how artists would construct a live performance songlist.
For example, America's massive hit A Horse With No Name, is the first song on the album.
"It's very rare we change. We thought The Beatles would have liked that order," he said.
Mr O'Donnell said they had looked at other Beatles albums but decided to do Rubber Soul which was recorded in 1965 after Beatlemania and touring, but before they began making more complex studio arrangements.
"It was an interesting turning point for The Beatles. We really loved the album, all the songs," he said.
Before the tour starts he and wife Kellie will also be launching a new album titled Duets.
He said it featured songs that have been performed as duets and "some we have made into duets.
"We're excited about that," he said.
Mr O'Donnell said career highlights had included performing at the Sydney 2000 Olympic athletes' village and when the Olympic torch went on tour.
He said while the band would not be performing at The Agrestic Grocer in 2020 some of them would be performing the 1970 show with Kellie O'Donnell and Kyle Manning at the Civic Theatre in June.
Following this year's 1969 concert they will play hits from 1970 from artists including The Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, Led Zeppelin and Creedence Clearwater Revival.
"It is the 50th anniversary. We think someone who turns 50 wants to celebrate something about their lives," he said.
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