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JIMMY BARNES SOUL SEARCHIN’ ALBUM DEBUTS AT #1

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And surpasses THE BEATLES with 15th #1 career album

 

It’s not often that you can lay claim to surpassing a legendary group like The Beatles, but Jimmy Barnes has managed to do just that with the debut today of his 15th #1 career album, Soul Searchin’ (out now through Liberation Music).

The Soul Series started 25 years ago in 1991 with the seven times platinum Soul Deep and the #1 Australian chart debut of the fourth and final instalment in this hugely successful soul series sees Jimmy pull ahead of the Beatles 14 #1 albums in Australia, and sees him draw ever closer to the career #1 totals for Paul McCartney and George Harrison of 16 apiece and John Lennon 17.

Jimmy Barnes said of the feat:

“I feel blessed to still be making music after such a long time in the business and equally I feel privileged that people are still buying our records and coming to the shows – it’s very humbling.

“As for achieving another #1, it’s an absolute honour to be counted amongst such iconic bands and legendary artists.”

Michael Gudinski, Managing Director of the Mushroom Group said;

“I am so proud that all 11 of Jimmy’s solo number ones have been in partnership with the Mushroom Group.  

“Jimmy’s singing better than ever and he continues to raise the bar for every Australian performer.”

Soul Searchin’ sees Jimmy uncovering lost soul gems, presenting a glorious snap shot in time.  He was joined in the studio by some of the greatest soul musicians ever assembled, including Steve Cropper (Booker T. & the M.G.’s, Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, and later gaining fame as a member of the Blues Brothers band), Dan Penn (musician, songwriter, and record producer who co-wrote many soul hits of the 1960s) and, of course, The Memphis Boys who date back to original recording sessions from the mid ‘60s to the early ‘70s with Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett and Joe Tex, amongst many, many others.

Produced by Kevin Shirley, Soul Searchin’ is full to the brim with hidden gems and certified soul classics, all given the inimitable and unmistakable Jimmy Barnes treatment.

MOST #1 ALBUMS IN AUSTRALIA

17 – John Lennon (3 solo + 14 Beatles)

16 – George Harrison (2 solo + 14 Beatles)

16 – Paul McCartney (2 solo + 14 Beatles)

15 – Jimmy Barnes (11 solo + 4 Cold Chisel)

14 – The Beatles

11 – U2

11 – Madonna

09 – Bon Jovi

09 – John Farnham

The soaring guitar riffs, bedazzling horn arrangements and old-school backing vocals that give the new album its alluring, old-fashioned charm will come alive on stage in his August Soul Searchin’ Tour.

The first volume of Jimmy’s autobiography – a childhood memoir called “Working Class Boy” – will be released on September 19.

Soul Searchin’ Tour – all shows on sale NOW.  

For all tour info visit www.frontiertouring.com/jimmybarnes

Fri 12 Aug Entertainment Centre (Theatre) | Adelaide, SA (All Ages)

ticketek.com.au | Ph: 132 849

Sat 13 Aug Crown Theatre | Perth, WA (All Ages)

ticketmaster.com.au | Ph: 136 100

Sat 20 Aug Jupiters Hotel & Casino | Gold Coast, QLD (All Ages)

ticketek.com.au | Ph: 132 849

Sun 21 Aug QPAC Concert Hall | Brisbane, QLD (All Ages)

qpac.com.au | Ph: 136 246

Thu 25 Aug Palais Theatre | Melbourne, VIC (All Ages)

ticketmaster.com.au | Ph: 136 100

Sat 27 Aug Enmore Theatre | Sydney, NSW (All Ages)

ticketek.com.au | Ph: 132 849

One Electric Day – on sale NOW (All Ages)

Featuring Jimmy Barnes, Icehouse, James Reyne, Russell Morris + The Badloves

Sun 27 Nov One Electric Day, Werribee Park on the Great Lawn, Werribee VIC ticketmaster.com.au | Ph: 136 100

SOUL SEARCHIN’ IS OUT NOW THROUGH LIBERATION MUSIC

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Punk’s legacy, 40 years on

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punk’s legacy, 40 years on

Like many youngsters of the late 70s, my first exposure to punk rock was memorable and social – perhaps, even, societal. It was some time in 1977, I was having dinner with my parents and siblings at my grandparents’ place, and the Sex Pistols were a featured story on Weekend Magazine, the ABC’s Sunday evening infotainment program.

In my dim recall, the band were simulating a live performance against a black background (it was probably the clip to Anarchy in the UK– of course, entirely new to me then, very familiar now) with sound grabs from members and some footage of everyday punks on busy thoroughfares evincing menacing idleness. This was very starkly and clearly not Supertramp, 10CC [youtube.com/watch?v=ZdHI3LrAYiE&feature=youtu.be], or Fleetwood Mac [youtube.com/watch?v=IT1q7L4QA0A&feature=youtu.be] with their fey, wry, decadent meanderings.

Whereas the late David McComb – soon after, the central songwriter and singer in the Triffids and eventually a late 20th century Australian musical legend – told me had the rest of his life shaped by what he saw that night, I have to say that I don’t recall anyone at our dinner at Mavis and Norm’s semi-detached bungalow expressing disgust, despair, angst, delight or exhibiting any other response to the clip. It was grist to our mill, so worldly were we in suburban Caulfield in the late ‘70s.

Punk is now, apparently, 40 (which must make me 51).Double J [doublej.net.au/programs/jfiles/punk-in-the-uk] is running what it calls “a month long celebration of the seminal artists, albums and moments that make up four decades of disruption”. As a musical form – and even though it was regarded, when it first emerged, as a retro throwback eschewing a decade of progress in pop music – it was obviously the most exciting thing going in western music when it sparked. It spoke about ideas, the having of them and the diffusion of them, and about the fate, role and obligation(s) of the individual in society.

It was cool, but it was also extraordinarily difficult to access: public radio was not only just coming into being, it was obscure and, well, elitist; the records themselves were hard to find and, when found, expensive. But it was at least as much about attitude as it was about sound or style: I, like others interested in counterculture and “scenes”, put reading about it (which I did, avidly) above finding ways to hear it.

The weekly New Musical Express, easily the best music paper of the late ‘70s and still a British institution today (sadly, in very reduced form), was a world in itself. I still probably wouldn’t recognize more than a couple of songs by The Damned [youtube.com/watch?v=–erJSsmraY&feature=youtu.be], but I read every word about their trials and tribulations in 1977-8. Funny, that.

Early Australian innovators

punk’s legacy, 40 years on
The Saints.

Since then, I have come to realise that Australia had its own very valid and important punk scene, too, and I feel those early innovators must be acknowledged partly for their contribution but also as a phenomenon. I was semi-aware of greats like The Saints, already gone, but it was hard to find their music anywhere.

There were brilliant magazines like Adelaide’s Roadrunner that covered the right stuff, but popular music, while it obsessed me, was vast and varied and, as I mentioned, expensive for a teenager.

There are Australian stories of legendary acts with a Stooges-brand punk attitude. In 1973, Perth had a band called Pus; Sydney had The Rats; Melbourne had Judas Iscariot and the Traitors. Brisbane had the aforementioned Saints, a band with a unique musical vision rooted, like the others’, in the unpretentious and bratty 1960s. None of these bands knew about each other but they, or various key players, had enough gumption and critical mass to form a “scene” by 1976 or thereabouts.

As was typical of Australians then, when the international equivalent sprang up, the locals (and their “street” fellow travellers – think The Sports [youtube.com/watch?v=TryAj1Jd0PI&feature=youtu.be] or evenPaul Kelly [youtube.com/watch?v=ALDBia-izio&feature=youtu.be]) were classed as imitators. In this case, most of the artists were sufficiently self-assured to not give the proverbial toss, but the damage was done to their reputation as originals. The difficulty of fitting these stories into a recognisable narrative, however, means that in the main they are forgotten or unknown: not influential, just undeniable.

By the beginning of the 1980s, I was fully immersed in punk’s less strident and more arty sibling, new wave – even faking being adult to see bands, on occasion, starting with the Serious Young Insects, International Exiles and Kids in the Kitchen supporting Snakefinger.

Soon, out of school and on the dole, still living at home undertaking what would later come to be known as a “gap year” (the gap actually extended about five years) there were many options to help the local musical arts economy, for instance with regular visits to Melbourne’s great record shops of the era: Exposure, Missing Link, Greville, Gaslight.

I recall two elderly ladies walking past Missing Link and observing a display advertising the Birthday Party’s album Prayers on Fire. “Punk rock”, said one.
The other made a noise to convey the concept of, “I just threw up in my mouth”.

Gruelling Thatcherism

punk’s legacy, 40 years on
A mural in Shoreditch, London by French street artist Tilt includes the lyrics to the Sex Pistols ‘Anarchy in the UK’.

In 1986, I was able to avoid my grandparents’ Sunday dinners for an extended period of time, swapping them for six months of gruelling Thatcherism within earshot of the tyrant’s heartbeat – London.

Of course, punk was a postcard caricature by then and its memory only discernible to the knowledgeable in new wave, postpunk (both of those terms were, by the way, beneath contempt in the mid-80s), new romantic, and whatever else had come along since.

But what Michelle – my girlfriend at that time – and I did do one Saturday afternoon (the 19th July, I now discover: there’s a Wikipedia page!) was hop on a train to Manchester to be a part of a celebration of punk’s tenth anniversary.

Her diary – which she dusted off when I asked her about the event – reveals a lot of detail I’d forgotten; that we were “shocked and distressed” on arriving at the venue to find it cost £14 to get in (I think that was a week’s dole).

Michelle, apparently, was able to sneak down the front for The Smiths set [youtube.com/watch?v=V-9Gc7COu8Q] and was “scared to death in a crush to the front”. Other acts that day were The Fall [youtube.com/watch?v=gDTTisFHw0A&feature=youtu.be], New Order, Orchestral Manouevres in the Dark, A Certain Ratio and Cabaret Voltaire (I have absolutely no recollection of seeing these last two, though I was and remain a fan of both).

It’s weird now to look back on this event and appreciate that what might now be seen as bands who in many instances typified slick English New Wave – albeit with a very Manchester flavour – were seen as appropriate to celebrate a decade since “punk”.

A very drunk Bill Grundy – the TV presenter still to this day primarily famous for his ad hoc “filth and the fury” Sex Pistols interview – berated the audience. But Grundy’s presence notwithstanding, the festival might seem to show very conclusively how much “punk” – the spirit, the attitude, the values, and even to some extent the sound – was being co-opted into not only popular music, but also popular attitudes.

This was only going to accelerate: no-one could possibly have conceived of the Sex Pistols being so much a part of “history” to have been commemorated at the London Olympics – but that’s what the establishment does, it keeps its enemies closest of all.

As mentioned, I’m 51, and I deal with enough young people to know it’s foolish to try and typify what “they” think. There is some truth, it would appear, to the often evoked (by my generation) notion that young people have so much access to music past and present that, in many instances when they really engage with the popular music of former generations they have trouble stringing the beads of influence into the necklace of historical chronology.

That said, if we are going to celebrate the impact of punk as a form and a style, we need to make some points about its lasting value. I think there are quite a few – and I offer them as one who firmly believes that their impact is hard now to fully appreciate: as if we were living in a crater so large we don’t notice the meteorite that made it.

A voice for women

punk’s legacy, 40 years on

Firstly, I would say that punk gave women a voice in a way that (for instance) the pompous megabands of the early 70s tended not to. Even the most popular female musicians of that era – Joni Mitchell and Kate Bush are two geniuses who spring to mind – were frequently willfully misunderstood by the patriarchal rock business and fans. Of course, a lot has changed yet of course, a lot has stayed the same.

British punk of ‘76-77 alone served up X Ray Spex’s Poly Styrene, Siouxsie Sioux, the Slits and, soon after, the Raincoats, PragVec’s Barbara Gogan and my own favourite from that era, Essential Logic, led with verve by the redoubtable Lora Logic. All of them forceful, individual, passionate women who didn’t give a loose root what men thought (or at least, they didn’t seem to; the Slits’ Viv Albertine’s recent memoir suggests that toughness was hard to sustain).

On top of that, women were – seemingly for the first time, with a few very notable exceptions – musicians in bands (that is, with all due respect to singers, not “just” singers).
In Australia in the late 70s, there were women playing as apparently equal members in groups; Karen Ansell in the Romantics and the Reels; Denise Rosenberg in the Primitive Calculators; Cathy McQuade in the Ears; Helen Carter in Friction and, later, Do Re Mi; Clare Moore in the Sputniks and then the Moodists; this small list, of Australians only, goes on and on. The opportunities these inspirational women took from punk rock continue to resonate.

Secondly, there’s something punk rock has done to the dynamic between audience and artist, and it’s healthy. Back in the early 70s there was a compact between performers and consumers that wasn’t that different from Weber’s cult of celebrity: indulge me, the big names said, and I will show you the way to something deeper. Most music fans of the early 70s accepted that rock stars were better than them; they almost needed them to be.

Punk put paid to that, in the main. The new breed was virtually compelled to be down-to-earth in their opinions and self-estimation – at least in their public pronouncements. There were to be no more self-indulgent LP-side-long workouts; two and a half minutes (preferably two) per song, verse chorus verse chorus and then onto the next thing.

punk’s legacy, 40 years on
Thomas Eger

Yes, almost immediately there were challenges to the form (Buzzcocks’ overlong Moving Away From the Pulsebeat springs to mind – with a drum solo, no less!) but they just proved the rule. Of course, there is self-indulgence in popular music today and there always will be: in an individualistic form like music, you can’t expect otherwise. The critic and the consumer, however, are less likely to wave it through because a special class of person is expressing him or herself.

A DIY smorgasbord

Thirdly, punk – particularly when it came to the wicked Malcolm McLaren, the Sex Pistols’ manager and later, creator of the absurdist early 1980s group Bow Wow Wow – highlighted the economic relationship between consumer and creator as mediated by industry.

McLaren almost seemed not to understand the Sex Pistols’ appeal (or rather, cared less about it than he did about the band’s capacity to shift units). With Bow Wow Wow, a band which McLaren stuffed with ideas – few of which actually meant much to the musicians involved – he promoted the notion of home-taping and individualistic op-shop style as piratic appropriation. The kids, McLaren said, were killing the music industry by just taking its wares (Bow Wow Wow tried to sell records on the basis that no-one should pay for them).

But the notion that music should be for all intents and purposes free, and that far from feeling guilt about theft, music lovers should be proud to take, has a resonance that has only strengthened in an era when delivery modes have gone far beyond recording from radio to cassette.
The nascent Sex Pistols, notoriously, stole their equipment from established bands (and their sound from the Stooges via glam rock, but that’s another story).
Most younger people’s musical experience (once again, I’m probably oversimplifying for argument – yet to some degree it’s everyone’s musical, and cultural, experience now) is of a pastiche, and not just because Ramones t-shirts outsell their records to an infinite degree.

punk’s legacy, 40 years on

That the 21st century aural experience is a mélange, bordering on cacophony, might ultimately be the most lasting legacy of ’76 punk: you take what you want from the smorgasbord and give it your own individualized meaning.

In fact, feel free to manufacture something new from what’s on the table; it may only be the sum of its parts but it’s yours and those who don’t like it can fuck off and/or do their own.

Looking back at the “tenth summer” in Manchester in ’86, I can only speculate on what Michelle and I, and everyone else present, thought we were doing. Ten years seemed like an extraordinarily long period of time back then, and it stretched back to preadolescence for us.
We were trying to be cavalier, perhaps, about the idea that a groundbreaking musical/fashion movement was still resonating around the world too loudly to yet be properly understood.

The reconstruction that was going on around us – New Order with their embrace of fabulous synthesizer pop with truly dreadful throwaway lyrics, the indescribably unique and uncompromising layered rock of the Fall, the similarly unique, but far more universally embraced disaffected literary Byrdsian pop of the Smiths – were ways through après le deluge and, in hindsight, attempts to deal with the horrors of neoliberalism.

punk’s legacy, 40 years on
Johnny Rotten performing with the Sex Pistols in 2007.

Any real punk, however, would readily see through the stupidity of fixating on an anniversary: why should that be the time to reassess and evaluate?

That time, she or he would no doubt say, comes every hour of every day – and not to adhere to an ethos, but to be a rounded and perceptive human being. This was most definitely a central tenet of John Lydon’s philosophy – only heightened when he quit the Pistols and their subsequent output devolved to the most extraordinary dross (Friggin’ in the Riggin’anyone? [youtube.com/watch?v=XvsdlIY9sJw&feature=youtu.be]).

Michelle’s diary only records that she wanted to stay in Manchester another day and see the Smiths again; they were playing in Salford the next night. (I wish we had done that – I love the Smiths – but I don’t think it was in the least bit affordable).

She doesn’t record any philosophical musings between us about the meaning the “spirit of ‘76”. However, we were living by a standard of maintaining an independent perspective, respecting the rights of others to expression, and generally not being a dick.
In that respect, I am pretty sure, we had learnt our punk rock lessons well.

 

This article was written by David Nichols

 

 

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Yarn

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There is so much to digest here in this performance, it’s well crafted, spine tingling theatre, that is as obscure as it is relatable. Central to this work, is a tight and well-crafted script which places the story of Adam and Eve, Salom and John the Baptist against moments that are all together more autobiographical. Yarn is as intimate as it is at time’s an uncomfortable experience. The way in which Lily Fish masterfully weaves these two counter narratives into a tightly woven and densely lyrical performance is a sheer joy to watch. Drawing on her continued training in physical theatre Fish’s physicality is impressive; director Andrew Gray should be commended for drawing up this and really utilizing such strengths to this performance’s advantage. At onepoint Fish quite literally climbing the walls of the theatre, the site specificity within this imagined world is perhaps the best example of the form in recent times.

If you go deeper into this work however, you also uncover at its heart themes surrounding feminism, belonging and identity, and though these themes are often recurring in works presented in the “now”, taking them back and relating them to stories from the bible, helps differentiate this work from others, and giving it a certain edge.

Originally staged at The Tapestry Workshops in South Melbourne, however beautiful, this setting gave a sense of polish to this performance, which in this remount is thankfully lacking. Taking Yarn out of a somewhat pristine environment and placing it in the raw, gritty atmosphere of La Mama, provides a darker shade to the performance, the interior of this theatre embodies the ugly side to these stories, allowing the performer to further transcend into a dark and reflective world. Yet, however shady the material central to Yarn is, it to affords some much needed moments of reflective humor, which in turn helps strengthen this work, painting a far more details picture.

The lighting design is beautiful, creating dramatic shifts which propel the story through various scenes, different lighting states also helping to activate space, creating greater depth not just to the performance but within the physical space that is the La Mama Theatre. Sound design is masterful, using recognizable sounds and excerpts that create further resonance and emotional hooks of which in turn foster a greater sense of connection between performance and audience.

Set design, drawing upon the performance title see’s the space filled with large amount of twisted rope, and yarn, however beautiful, one thing that is lacking here is a greater sense of integration between this device and the performance itself, at times it is seemingly nothing more than a superfluous add on’s, creating nothing more than visual noise.

It’s not often that independently produced theatre gets the chance for a second airing, even less often that a production is deserving of this opportunity. However, Yarn, in its quality of story and impressive deliverance, matched equally by such a dynamic production, is an exception to both these rules. Melbourne needs more of this style of theatre, it’s playing at La Mama until the 19th of June book your tickets here

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Head of the German Imperial Family turns 40

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While the Commonwealth countries and everyone who is interested in our royal family celebrate the 95th birthday of Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, in Germany Prince Georg Friedrich of Prussia can celebrate his 40th birthday.

In March 2015 Prince Georg Wilhelm welcomed the British Ambassador, Sir Simon McDonald, KCMB, on the castle of Hohenzollern, the family’s ancient home.

Prince Georg Friedrich is the only son of Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia (1944–1977) and Countess Donata of Castell-Rüdenhausen (1950-2015), born a member of a mediatized princely family. In 1991 she married her former sister-in-law’s ex-husband, Duke Friedrich August of Oldenburg and was then known as Duchess Donata of Oldenburg.

His grandfather, Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia dedicated his memoirs to his grandson and heir.

After the death of his father in a severe accident during military maneuvers Prince Georg Friedrich spent much of his youth in the care and under the guidance of his paternal grandfather. He attended grammar schools in Bremen and Oldenburg and completed his education at Glenalmond College near Perth, Scotland, where he passed his A-levels.

Prince Georg Friedrich and his mother, Princess Donata at Glenalmond College near Perth.

He volunteered for a two-year stint in the Alpine troops of the German army, where he was known simply as “Preuße” (“Prussia”). Georg Friedrich took his degree in business economics at the Freiberg University of Mining and Technology in Saxony.

Prince Georg Friedrich succeeded his grandfather, Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, as Head of the House of Hohenzollern on 25th September 1994.

On 21st January 2011, Prince Georg Friedrich announced his engagement to Princess Sophie Johanna Maria of Isenburg (born 7th March 1978), daughter of Prince (Fürst) Franz-Alexander of Isenburg (from the Catholic branch of Isenburg-Büdingen-Birstein) by his wife, Princess (Fürstin) Christine, neé Countess of Saurma and Baroness von und zu der Jeltsch. The wedding took place at the Church of Peace (Sanssouci) in Potsdam on 27th August 2011.

On 20th January 2013, Prince Georg Friedrich‘s wife Princess Sophie gave birth to twin sons in Bremen:

HRH Prince Carl Friedrich Franz Alexander of Prussia
HRH Prince Louis Ferdinand Christian Albrecht of Prussia

Prince Carl Friedrich, the elder of the two, is the heir apparent. The boys were baptized in the Chapel of St. Michael at Hohenzollern Castle on 24 June 2013.

Visitors of the castle of Hohenzollern can see the genealogical tree of the Hohenzollern family. At the top end are the latest heads and heirs of the Imperial House: Crown Prince Wilhelm +1951, Prince Louis Ferdinand +1994, Prince Louis Ferdinand Jr. +1977, Prince Georg Friedrich (present head of the family) and Prince Carl Friedrich, the heir who was born in 2013.

Their third child, a daughter, was born on 2nd April 2015.

HRH Princess Emma Marie Charlotte Sophie of Prussia.

Princess Emma was baptized in the Chapel of St. Michael at Hohenzollern Castle on 13th June 2015. Her godparents are Archduchess Katharina of Austria (mother’s sister) and Prince Otto of Castell-Rüdenhausen (father’s first cousin).

Prince Georg Friedrich is also in the line of succession to the British throne. At present he is holding position 179 according to the William Reitwiesner‘s list.

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First World White Girls

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The butterfly club have really out-done themselves for this years Melbourne Cabaret Festival, adding to the already heady mix of top notch performances scheduled to play at this much loved Melbourne icon during this years festival is First World White Girls. The story surrounds Tiffany, a trust fund princess, and Kendall, a day-drinking trophy wife, delve into the trauma of first world problems. They deal with kale shortages, un-bespoke furniture, battle FOMO and in times of crisis, ask themselves, What Would Kim Kardashian Do? These spoiled songstresses invite the audience into their den of entitlement to laugh, vent and share in their first world pain.  Hailing from Brisbane, this performance is the creative love child of Judy Hainsworth and Kaitlin Oliver Parker, it comes fresh from a sell out season at Adelaide Fringe Season and Queensland tour, they had a chat with writer Jessi Lewis, a fellow Brisbanite, about what it’s like coming from “the sunshine state” white privilege, and first world problems.
 
Girls, explain for our readers what it’s like living in Brisbane, do your characters in this performance some how embody the “new breed” of Brisbanite?
 
Brisbane has changed a lot, even in just the last ten years. It used to be that you’d have to go to Sydney or Melbourne to shop at Zara or get Krispy Kreme donuts, but now Brisbane has stepped up in terms of luxury brands, restaurants and lifestyle. Just walk down James St in New Farm or the Emporium in the Valley and check out the (sometimes obscene) wealth on display. We totally hold our own now, just on a smaller scale.
 
The #FirstWorldWhiteGirls, Tiffany and Kendall, embody this affluence and luxury. But they’ve taken it to the extreme – metres of hair extensions, dogs in handbags, tax-evading husbands. And they top it off with an overwhelming sense of entitlement and white privilege. And they still complain about their first world problems. ‘My house is too big for my wifi’. ‘My cleaning lady parks in my driveway’.
 
Talk to us about Brisbane, is it better then Melbourne?
 
I should probably suck up to you Melbourne-ites so you’ll come see my show, but…Brisbane all the way, baby! For me, it’s all about the weather. It rains maybe five days a year up here. How can you argue with that?? And we’re an hour away from some of the most beautiful beaches in the country, nay, the world. Beautiful blue skies, less traffic, and winter lasts about two weeks. Although I wish I had more opportunities to wear my awesome beanies and coats… Sure, Melbourne’s cultural scene is richer, you’ve got more cool bars and restaurants and your laneways are pretty awesome, but you’re a bit bleak for someone from the sunshine state.
 
What can people expect from the show musically?
 
The show has all original songs (written by me) and they’re super catchy. There’s a few different musical styles – 60s swing, some pop, R&B, country and even a bit of rap. We ask that age-old question – can white girls rap? Come and judge for yourself! Kaitlin (who plays Kendall) and I are both trained singers so we love harmonising and getting a chance to show off our voices. The most common bit of feedback we get after the show is ‘you’re such good singers!’. But I have a theory that people just say that because they would feel awkward saying ‘you’re such horrible bitches!’ (our characters of course, not us…).
 
What do you hope Audiences will take away from this show, behind the comedy, is there a message you are trying to communicate?
 
We want the audience to have an awesome night with their crew, have a few drinks and laugh themselves stupid at these ridiculous women. We also want them to share their first world problems with us and maybe they’ll realise they have more in common with these girls than they first thought. Audiences will also probably take away with them some of my hair – my cheap extensions are moulting like crazy.
 
Aside from Brisbane, are their any other points of inspirations, pop culture, celebrity etc?
 
Pop culture is our main inspiration – The Voice, macarons, food trucks, fitbits, Nutribullets – everything is fair game. The idea of celebrity is a huge part of the show. Kim Kardashian was a big inspiration – there is a whole song devoted to her. I really had to research it because I knew nothing about her – I thought she was the devil. How can you be famous just for being famous? That’s not a thing! But now I know more about her, I have to admit she’s an amazing businesswoman. And I downloaded her mobile phone game for ‘research’ and I’m totally addicted. #help
 
Famous last words?
 
In the words of Tiffany and Kendall – First world problems are real problems! Let your privilege shine, Melbourne.
 
First World White Girls opens on Friday the 17th of June, it’s certain to be a smash hit with local audiences, avoid disappointment, book your tickets here
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MASSIVE GIVEAWAY ? Win tickets to every single Frontier Touring and a day on the green tour + Sugar Mountain festival for a whole year!

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ED SHEERAN • ELTON JOHN
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Family Secrets

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family secrets

We’ve been sitting at the kitchen table looking over old family photos. My mother was never one to talk about or delve into the past. A conversation with an old friend, (they’d met in a refugee camp and came out to Australia on the same ship after The War), the subject of their youth came up.

My mother became visibly emotional, “What youth, I was robbed of my youth. There was the War and then there were those years after the War. I didn’t get to enjoy my youth.”

I recently asked her about a battered old silver knife, part of a set I remember from my childhood-the odd fork and knife are still being used.

“You’ve had these for years mum.”

“I got them in Germany.” She replied

She’d been in a displaced person’s camp in Germany in 1950 before sailing to Australia and I couldn’t fathom how she came across a set of silver cutlery.

“ I traded a fur for them.”

“ What were you doing with a fur coat in a refugee camp?”

“ It wasn’t a coat, just a fur collar.”

“ Who gave it to you ?”

She told me she couldn’t remember but I was struck by her resourcefulness and canniness. A fur collar coat would have raised a few eyebrows in amongst Europe’s ‘flotsam jetsam’ at Bonegilla in 1950 but a set of silver cutlery was far more practical for starting a new life in Post War Australia.

family secrets

Her mother died of tuberculosis when she was 8. She was forced to stop her schooling to help around the farm-her family were sharecroppers. Her father was left to raise 6 small children and couldn’t cope.

He ended up hanging himself and the siblings were farmed out to aunts, and the youngest to an orphanage.

I understand why she never liked talking about The Past.

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Digital Pill – Bob Sedergreen

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Digital PillBob Sedergreen – piano
Gordon Pendleton – drums
Gareth Hill – double bass
Recorded by Myles Mumford at Rolling Stock
Video by Leo Dale http://thirdeyevideos.com

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THE HONEY BEES

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the honey bees

the honey bees

Hello,

I’m sitting in the rehearsal room, quite early, waiting for the actors to arrive. It’s a chilly Melbourne morning outside but to me, the room is already humming with the atmosphere and landscape of a family apiary in Darradup, Western Australia.
Directing THE HONEY BEES by Caleb Lewis is a wonderful, joyful challenge. It also kind of breaks your heart on days like yesterday when we dug into some of the final scenes on the farm.
Caleb captivates us with both the personal and the universal, simultaneously. To bring a new play of such scope to the stage for the first time is a gift, and the terrific cast and I are relishing each day of the process. The Honey Bees asks big, urgent and difficult questions. It is full of heart and humour. We can’t wait to share it with you.
See you at the theatre,
the honey bees
Ella
Artistic Director
the honey bees  
by Caleb Lewis
Directed by Ella Caldwell
14 June – 16 July
WORLD PREMIERE
Developed through INK
With Eva Seymour, Christopher Brown, Rebecca Bower, 
Marta Kaczmarek & Katerina Kotsonis
the honey bees
Director Ella Caldwell in rehearsals with Christopher Brown as Daryl
Photography by Playdate Media
 
As the world’s honey bees disappear, a family-owned apiary struggles to keep up with overseas demand. Driven by matriarch Joan’s iron will, the business continues to grow. And then Melissa arrives from out of the blue.
The Honey Bees is a tale of family and empire; action and consequences; and what happens when the bee finally stings.
THE HONEY BEES
By Caleb Lewis
Directed by Ella Caldwell
Production Dramaturg Tom Healey
Set & Costume Design Sophie Woodward
Lighting Design Daniel Anderson
Composition & Sound Design Daniel Nixon
Stage Manager Hannah Bullen
Assistant Stage Manager Maddie Lyman
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THE KILLS return to AU&NZ + we’re giving away a prize pack to celebrate!

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MAKING THEIR LONG-AWAITED RETURN TO AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND NEXT MONTH!

They’re the most fearless duo in rock & roll: enigmatic, multi-faceted, minimalist. Jamie Hince (guitar/vox, hails from England) and Alison Mosshart (vocals, USA born + bred) are The Kills, and we’re thrilled that they’ll be making their long-awaited return to Australia and New Zealand this July.

Touring in celebration of their fifth studio album Ash & Ice (out now via Domino Recording Co), audiences will be among the first to hear new tunes like ‘Doing It To Death‘ and ‘Heart Of A Dog‘ live in all their glory.

It’s clear that fans are excited too, with The Kills’ Melbourne show already completely sold out and tickets to all other shows flying out the door! Best get in quick.

Sat 23 Jul | Forum Theatre,Melbourne (18+) | Sold Out!
Tue 26 Jul | Enmore Theatre, Sydney (All Ages) | Get Tickets
Thu 28 Jul | Powerstation, Auckland (18+) | Get Tickets
Fri 29 Jul | Shed 6, Wellington (18+) | Get Tickets

WIN THE KILLS PRIZE PACK!

INCLUDING ASH & ICE ON CD, A TOUR POSTER + AN EXCLUSIVE TOTE BAG

To celebrate The Kills’ return, we’re giving two lucky ticketbuyers (one from Australia + one from New Zealand), an exclusive The Kills prize pack that includes their new albumAsh & Ice on CD, a tour poster and an exclusive The Kills tote bag!

For your chance to win, simply email us with your name, phone number, postal address, which The Kills show you have purchased a ticket to + your answer to the following question (in 25 words or less):

Which The Kills song are you most hoping to hear live at their shows + why?

CLICK TO ENTER

 

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UPCOMING EVENTS