Blog — Page 245 of 277

The infrequently-updated site blog, featuring a range of content including show reviews, musical musings and off-color ramblings on other varied topics.

Cirque du Soleil's Kooza @ Entertainment Quarter

Posted by T • October 11, 2016

Kooza, Cirque du Soleil

Entertainment Quarter

Sydney, AUS

October 6, 2016

Kooza first premiered in 2007 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada where circus conglomerate Cirque du Soleil, the largest theatrical producer on this earthround, was founded in 1983 as part of the 450th anniversary celebrations of Jacques Cariter’s voyage to Canada.

Defining “nouveau cirque” by combining circus styles from around the globe, animal free thrills, continuous live music, death defying stunts and its theatrical, character driven approach, Cirque du Soleil expanded rapidly through the 1990s and 2000s, going from one show to 19 shows in over 271 cities on about every continent except Antarctica.

Accessible, earnest, yet undeniably artful – these were Cirque’s trademark qualities.

It became a brand.

A brand with a myriad of incarnations. 

As brands become bigger, financially successful and multi-faceted, extending its offerings whilst retaining vitality and relevance without compromising its artistic integrity can be a challenge.

Your humble narrator has had the pleasure of seeing Cirque du Soleil productions in different locations. Especially recent ones were hit and miss, especially when the shows derived from the realm of traditional circus traditions: it got bigger, flashier and at times over-poised and acrobatically underwhelming.

“When in doubt, go back to the basics” might be a worn out, clichéd phrase, but it certainly holds true for Cirque du Soleil’s Kooza, which sees a return to the trademark blue-and-yellow Big Top.

Kooza reflects Cirque du Soleil's return to more traditional circus arts with clowning and acrobatics: Inspired by the Sanskrit word “koza” – which means box, chest or treasure, the name KOOZA was chosen because one of the underlying concepts of the production is the idea of a “circus in a box” – only fitting that Kooza kicks off with the Trickster being unleashed like a jack-in-the-box to kick off the proceedings.

The return to the Grand Chapiteau creates an intimacy that is vital to foundation of the Cirque du Soleil experience: Kooza's stage is designed to evoke a public square that changes into a circus ring.

The sight lines offer views of up to 280 degrees which serves as the platform for an international cast of 50 acrobats, musicians, singers and actors presenting heart-stopping feats and clowneries to a seamless live soundtrack fusion of jazz, 1970s funk and Bollywood beats emanating from a dominating traveling tower dubbed the "bataclan."

The structure of the Grand Chapiteau is always in full view and all aspects of the performance are transparent - the fact that there is no effort made to disguise or conceal the performances helps to focus the attention on the artists and thus creates an environment where the danger of the acts is palpable.

The comic-book aesthetic of the more than 175 custom-made, intricate costumes complements the scenographic set design with its focus on archetypes and universal characters, drawing on a wide variety of sources of inspiration: Paintings of Gustav Klimt, Indian and Eastern European touches, Mad Max and timetravel movies laced with winks towards the Wizard of Oz and Alice in Wonderland.

Kooza delivers on every level with its ten acrobatic acts, which are supplemented by minor burlesque acts that develop the storyline:

Be it the house troupe creating human towers Nutcracker-style inspired by the Inuit game of “Blanket Toss,” jaw dropping feats of contortion creating a tableaux of sculptural beauty, an aerial hoop act, a pas de deux waltzing on a unicycle, fencing and other stunts on the high wire that most of us would have trouble with performing on the ground, the artist powered wheel of death or the teeterboard catapulting artists into lofty heights where they perform quintuple twisted summersaults with stilts strapped to their legs– with each act Kooza combines thrilling acrobatic performance with infectious fun and genuinely warm and funny undertones.

Kooza is engaging, charming and gradually upping the ante throughout the show.

A true return to form focusing on human performance in its rawest, most frail yet glamorous and awe-inspiring state.

If Cirque du Soleil’s mission was to invoke the imagination, provoke the senses and evoke the emotions of the spectators, Kooza as a colourful mélange and tribute to the core values of the golden days of the circus - accomplishes it.

Kooza does not only have the “wow factor” but firmly establishes Cirque du Soleil as the “wow factory”: This is Cirque at its best - an immersive, thrilling and entertaining night out.

---

Photos courtesy of Cirque du Soleil

KOOZA by Cirque du Soleil will conclude its Sydney season on November 13. Following Sydney, the tour moves to Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth.

 

T • October 11, 2016

Totally Unicorn @ Newtown Social Club

Posted by T • October 1, 2016

Totally Unicorn

Newtown Social Club

Sydney, AUS

September 29, 2016


Do not let the name deter you: You want to see Totally Unicorn in all of their unbridled beauty before they blow up and no longer grace the confines of small clubs with their sweaty, nude, booze-soaked presence.

It has been a while since I’ve been to a fun hardcore punk show that left everyone with a smile on their faces, singing along to Toto’s “Africa.”

Totally Unicorn’s recently released full-length album Dream Life draws influences from the likes of Converge, Dillinger Escape Plan, Botch, Cave In and the likes.

What reads on paper like a diligent mathcore band, is an entirely different beast in a live scenario -- a beast with a spiraling, large, pointed horn projecting from its forehead at that.

Some say there is a difference between grotesque and antic.

It might be a fine line but Totally Unicorn not only walks but inhabits it when it comes to their live performance: Take the best parts of early Fucked Up’s crowd engagement, i.e. front man buried in the pit -- clothes optional -- add ample measures of alcohol and medication generated oomph and hilarity, garnish with balloons, sprinkle with the trademark Australian pisstaking and stir with the barrel of a confetti canon.

Voilà! A fascinating, seriously fun and uncontrived live show that is greater than the sum of its parts.

Totally Unicorn is an example par excellence for the fact that being technically gifted and musically spot on, the ability to effortlessly bring the party and defying stereotypes do not have to be mutually exclusive.

---

Photos by T

 

T • October 1, 2016

Sounds of the Suburbs Festival @ Wilbar Lane

Posted by T • September 28, 2016

Sounds of the Suburbs Festival

Wilbar Lane

Cronulla, Sydney

September 25, 2016


Cronulla, the “place of the pink seashells," is a beachside suburb, about 30 kilometers south of the Sydney central business district in the Sutherland Shire, an area serving as the backdrop for the classic 1981 coming of age movie Puberty Blues, for which a big part of today’s laid-back, beachy crowd would have been the perfect cast – given that Sounds of the Suburbs festival is aimed at Sydney’s beautiful young things, people aged 18 to 24.

Squeezed into the Wilbar laneway behind the Space 44 gallery, which quintessentially turned a house into a live music and arts venue, and the Mexican restaurant/bar El Sol, the fourth installment of the boutique-y yet burgeoning Sounds of the Suburbs festival was held.

Sounds of the Suburbs is a laneway festival packed with Sydney’s newest and brightest of the indie variety, the odd touring band, Mexican food and culture located deep in the southern suburbs of Sydney. Summa summarum: All the key ingredients for a great DIY festival.

The 2016 all-day indie bill incarnated on multiple stages, one of which open for anyone bringing a device and plug whatever they wanted in, were supplemented by an art room displaying works from local creatively inclined folks, as well as Mexican food from El Sol and Italian wood-fired pizza.

Unfortunately only Budweiser was served on the beer front and while one was salivating at the prime selection of tequilas at display in the back of El Sol’s bar, only sangria and rum was served. Sacre bleu!

With DZ Deathrays (fresh off from an immensely successful Australian tour with Violent Soho), surf-inspired Guantanamo Baywatch, Peter Bibby, Alex Lahey, Verge Collection, Big White, Wild Honey, James Crooks, Tees, Pist Idiots, Baxter, Wash, Amyl And The Sniffers, Heads Of Charm, Red Wine Roses, The Cloacas, The Moving Stills, MVRKS, Mini Skirt, Uplifting Bell Ends and Stay At Home Mum this year’s incarnation of the festival lineup was not only eclectic, but even if you’re unaware of the protagonists, the names alone made you want to check them out.

For the most part, the bands gracing the main stage played fast paced, condensed sets, the lion’s share with an electric combination of lo-fi riffs coupled with energetic, offbeat stage presence, which did not fail to elicit boisterous and at time reckless responses from the willing, sold-out crowd.

Inside Space 44, in a more intimate environment bands like Wild Honey channeled their alchemy

Sounds of the Suburbs is a unique festival that has not merely found but created its very own and unique niche.
Having progressively gotten bigger and better with each year, one would not be surprised if it would evolve to a mainstream fest.

---

Photos by KAVV

T • September 28, 2016

Apocalyptica @ Metro Theatre

Posted by T • September 27, 2016

Apocalyptica, We Lost the Sea

Metro Theatre

Australia, AUS

September 24,2016

Rumor has it that Ritchie Blackmore tried to get into mastering the cello, the attention-getter among instruments – try to ignore a woman lugging one around, at some point of his career.

He came to the conclusion that one has to dedicate one’s whole life to it, after which he went back to playing guitar and turning it up a bit louder.

In classical music the bowed string instrument is often considered to be one of the less interesting instruments, eclipsed by the piano and the violin, because it tends to be used for drawn-out notes to give a melancholic tone.

Apocalyptica are a classically trained cello metal band and have mastered the art of exploring the range of the cello, showcasing how diverse and powerful it can be – playing it as low as the double bass and a high as the violin, along with making it sound like the human voice.

Apocalyptica started 20 years ago with an album solely consisting of Metallica covers played on cellos. Twenty years on, eight studio albums with compositions of their own along with collaboration with the likes to Ville Valo of HIM, Corey Taylor of Slipknot fame and Cristina Scabbia of Lacuna Coil later, they descended upon Sydney as part of their “Shadowmaker” tour.

The set list consisted of a mix of originals and crowd pleasing cover songs, including heavy hitters by Metallica and Sepultura, interspersed by a segment with their current touring singer, Frankie Perez, which was the most conventional part of their performance.

Bringing together fans from heavy and more traditional musical spheres, the multi-faceted range Apocalyptica draws from makes them a very powerful and fun live act to see, keeping the audience on its toes as they seamlessly slide from Wagnerian tributes via somber moments to their various collaborations/covers, which elicit reactions and participation from the audience that you normally would only expect from hard rock acts with more traditional instrumentation. A great evening for anyone into heavy and classical music.

The evening was opened by We Lost the Sea, a great post-metal instrumental band from Sydney. 

For some, music is nothing but a mundane distraction of background noise.

For others music can serve as a tool of survival and bring hope to otherwise hopeless situations.

Life is complex. The emotions it evokes even more so. Music can provide solace.

We Lost the Sea gives consolation by wonderfully executing lengthy, hefty instrumental songs with towering guitar arrangements that create an active, immersive and cathartic listening experience.

A band to look out for.

---

Photos by KAVV

 

T • September 27, 2016

Descendents @ First Avenue

Posted by Loren • September 21, 2016

Descendents, Modern Life Is War, Color TV

First Avenue

Minneapolis, MN

September 15, 2016

The only people luckier than those who get to see the Descendents are those who get to open.

Color TV kicked off the show with a surfy-garage punk vibe as the room filled in, while vets Modern Life Is War played to a mostly interested crowd in a surprise billing of hardcore and pop-punk. While it was fun watching Jeffrey Eaton straddling the banister as crowd control security rushed over, the real star of the show was the Descendents, now on tour in support of their 7th studio album (Hypercaffium Spazzinate, Epitaph, 2016).

“It’s been 20 years since we’ve played here,” Milo announced as they took the stage. You wouldn’t know it other than the gray hairs on both stage and in audience—except perhaps by the swelling enthusiasm of the crowd that seemed to dwarf the excitement of a more regular show.

Descendents live are something special. That’s the bulk of the story. There are bands who come and play a nice show that promotes their new album, then they move on and do it again. Then there are bands where the magic on a record isn’t reproduced, it’s created on stage and makes that record sound dull in comparison. The Ramones had it (or so I hear, I only have their live records to go by) and Descendents have it. Yes, the set list is sort of a best of compilation, but the manic energy from Milo on the mic to Stephen Egerton on the guitar and Karl Alvarez on the bass fill it out. With Bill Stevenson blasting at the kit, they still feel like a group of young kids who enjoy the songs, what they’re doing, and each other. That may sound trite, but it’s important, especially for a band pushing 38 years.

I felt a little young at this show and I guess that’s why. Descendents and I are essentially the same age, so naturally the crowd has a few years on me—though you wouldn’t know it by the atmosphere in the packed room. Despite it being a Thursday night with a lot of scheduled to get up early the next morning, it felt like the weekend. I’m sure 12 hours later it was all grumpy coffee mugs at the breakfast table in their suburban homes mumbling, “I don’t want to grow up” (see what I did there), but time stood still for their hour long set followed by two encores.

As stated, it really was a best of, though with a good chunk of new material and the oldest and best known material peppered within cleverly, never dropping momentum or losing a beat.

It’s tricky to summarize an hour and half of live Descendents because it’s a moment trapped in time where age and calendars and work fade away. The band is older and the stages are bigger, but it doesn’t feel like Milo and company ever grew up, and it feels great.

---

All photography by Loren Green.

 

Gallery: Descendents @ First Avenue on Sept. 15, 2016 (7 photos)

Loren • September 21, 2016

Latest news stories

Reverend Beat-Man on US soil

Posted in Tours on June 8, 2025

Reverend Beat-Man (Voodoo Rhythm Records) will be in America, announcing a 2025 summer tour that includes sets at Muddy Roots Festival in TN and Recess Romp in CA. The tour, dates listed below, leans heavily on the western section of the country. It is Reverend Beat-Man's first time in the … Read more

An uncertain future from Sloth Fist

Posted in Bands on June 8, 2025

Dallas-Forth Worth based band Sloth Fist has a new EP planned, sharing the title track "Mind Flayers" this week. While the band forme din Austin, various causes have pushed the members into new home cities, spread across 3 states. The EP's b-side is "Denim Demon," A Turbonegro cover -- which … Read more

Back to The Startline Line

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

The original lineup of The Starting Line has reformed, sharing a new single this week and plans for a new album on Sept. 26. Eternal Youth will be the band's first album in 18 years, releasing on their newly launched Lineage Recordings. It is the fourth album from the band. … Read more

Heartwells sing about lessons learned, announce an EP

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

LA, CA punk band Heartwells just shared a new single from the band's HEY!FEVER Records debut, an EP called Ollie, out on July 8 on vinyl and digital formats. "'Piss n gums' is a song about taking the beatings in life so much that it almost becomes masochistic. The metaphor … Read more

A Casual Hex Zig Zag Lady Illusion II

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

On June 13 the Seattle, WA based trio Casual Hex will release a new record, Zig Zag Lady Illusion II, available via Youth Riot Records. The post-punk, no-wave, meets noise rock trio shared a single, "No A," already, and the band shares a member with Big Bite. Read more Casual … Read more

A double Panopticon release

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

Preorders open on June 13 for two new Panopticon releases, the long-planned dark and melancholic folk album Laurentian Blue, described as a compantion album to ...And Again Into the Light, plus a 3-sided 2xLP Songs of Hiraeth, a compilation of rare material from the On the Subject of Mortality era. … Read more

Live & Dead: 504 Plan from DC

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

504 Plan, hardcore from Washington, DC, is the focus of DCxPC Live & Dead Vol. 6, announced earlier this month. The "live and dead" concept is a split 12" with one side of live recordings vs. one side in the studio. The band of teenagers chose the name because all … Read more

Umlaut adds Desolё

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Melbourne experimental band Umlaut has a new album on July 25, Desolё, coming out on Overdrive Records. The band is built around a trio of Clinton ‘Bär’ McKinnon, Angus Leslie, and Shane Lieber, playing with four to seven members depending on the day, but has recently solidified a four-member lineup. … Read more

Another Assertion (Sunny Day Real Estate)

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Assertion, a duo featuring drummer William Goldsmith (Sunny Day Real Estate, Foo Fighters) and vocalist/guitarist Justin Tamminga, has just announced their second album, sharing the lead single "Lock and Load." The band will release Basking In The Gaslight on July 25 via Spartan Records. It's a follow-up to Intermission, released … Read more

Meet Panels (ex-Soviettes)

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Minneapolis, MN band Panels will release their debut on June 13, A Great Time To Be An Empath, releasing on Don't Sing record label. The band is led by Annie Sparrows, best known for her work with Soviettes and also playing with Awesome Snakes, God Damn Doo Wop Band, Green/Blue … Read more

Return of The Depth Beneath Us

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Post-metal band The Depth Beneath Us, out of Harrisburg, PA, has announced their second album, fittingly called Descent. The album will release on August 1 with the band now sharing the title track (below). The full record spans 10-track and 55-minutes overall. Read more THE DEPTH BENEATH US - LIVE … Read more

"Harmony" by Porcelain

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Porcelain just shared the a-side from their upcoming 7" “Harmony” b/w “Torch,” out soon via TODO. The vinyl sill release on July 9, just as the band kicks off a tour with Pelican. “Harmony is a song about loss and how we cope with it," the band says via press … Read more

In The Company Of Serpents In July

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

July 121 marks the release date for A Crack In Everything from Denver, CO-based doom metal band In The Company Of Serpents. The new album is the band's fifth and marks a more personal approach to songwriting. The album title is a nod to "Anthem" by Leonard Cohen. "I wrote … Read more

Gina Birch (The Raincoats) second solo LP

Posted in Records on June 5, 2025

Gina Birch will release her second solo album in July: Trouble, out July 11 on Third Man Records. It follow's 2023's I Play My Bass Loud. Birch is known for her work with The Raincoats, as well as filmmaking and feminist causes. Read more GINA BIRCH – TOUR DATES 2025 … Read more

New Panther Revival single

Posted in Bands on June 5, 2025

Greenville, TX hardcore trio Panther Revival has a new record in the works, but shared a new politically-tinged track today -- well ahead of its actual release. “I wrote this song last year, and it has sadly only become more lyrically relevant as time has gone on,” vocalist/guitarist Kennedy Rice … Read more

All Leather reimagined

Posted in Records on June 4, 2025

All Leather has announced a reclaiming of their catalog with the upcoming release of a new compilation/anthology collection called Amateur Surgery on Half-Hog Abortion Island. The band featured Nathan Joyner (Psychic Graveyard, Some Girls, Hot Nerds) on guitar, either Jung Sing (Silent, Maniqui Lazer) or Tin Cagayat on drums, and … Read more

The Dropkick Murphys' For The People

Posted in Records on June 4, 2025

Dropkic Murphys have a nuw LP, out digitally on July 4, and then on physical format on Oct. 10 with 5 bonus tracks. Keeping the patriotic angle going, the band will perform this Friday live at The National Mall in Washington, DC at Unite For Veterans Rally on June 6. … Read more

Meet Bones Shredder and Morbid Little Things

Posted in Records on June 3, 2025

Randy Moore, of Get Married, The Moore Family Band, Teens in Trouble, and Spiritworld, as well as Dan Andriano & The Bygones and Lektron, now hsa a solo effort underway too -- Bones Shredder. He will release his solo debut under the Bones Shedder moniker this fall, coming Sept. 19 … Read more

Superchunk sets an appropriate tone for 2025

Posted in Records on June 2, 2025

“It’s always been the case that everyone is going through something that you may not be aware of,” Mac McCaughan of Superchunk says, via press release, when speaking of the band's upcoming new album. “This is currently more true than ever—but also the case that we are all going through … Read more

Today Is The Day summer plans

Posted in Tours on June 2, 2025

Today Is The Day, at work on a new album, has announced both a Rich Hall tribute show performanc ein Brooklyn, NY this summer, plus a North American tour with Buñuel and Murderous Again. The Rich Hall tribute lineup features not only Today Is The Day, but also heavyhitters Converge, … Read more