Review: Star Wars: Return of the Jedi presented by Queensland Symphony Orchestra

Last Saturday, the 15th of February, audiences far and wide gathered to watch Episode VI - Return of the Jedi (1983) in the Great Hall at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre. The best part about this performance is that audiences were able to watch as the Queensland Symphony Orchestra accompanied the score to the sixth episode of the original Star Wars trilogy. This was a Saturday well spent and there were two sessions available, one at 2:00pm and another at 7:30pm.

4ZZZ Top 20

1. Good Boy - Extended Heavy (Single)

2. Eliza & The Delusionals - Swimming Pool (Single)

3. Jaguar Jonze - Rabit Hole (Single)

4. Adele & The Chandeliers - Love You More (Single)

5. Martyr Privates - Ritual Hustler

6. Cable Ties - Self-Made Man (Single)

7. Sarah Mary Chadwick - Please Daddy

8. EGOISM - You You (Single)

9. Mitch, Please - Rubbish (Single)

10. Boomalli - The Promise (Album Of The Week)

11. Paul Kelly - Sleep Australia Sleep (Single)

12. The Double Happiness - Wild Bikini (Single)

Review: Emerald City presented by Queensland Theatre

A Boon for Queensland Theatre to Share Fifty Years of Australian Theatre with the Esteemed Playwright and Literary Legend, David Williamson

 

David Williamson’s iconic Emerald City from 1987 launched Queensland Theatre’s momentous 50th Season in 2020. In celebration for the opening night, the audience were treated to meeting on stage the most produced Australian playwright in history; who, coincidently is also celebrating his half-century in Australian theatre!

 

Lite Fails: The End Of The World Has Already Happened

<p><span><span>- “<em>I was safe but restless in Brisbane</em>”, said the man behind Lite Fails; time to create some ambient music, then! Composer, historian and archival explorer <strong>Henry Reese </strong>has been quite an agile explorer of Australia’s early, recorded audio heritage. His work to date, as far as I’m aware, has been more of a historical excavation, rather than composition: digging up both the written records and the forgotten shellac that contains the earliest echoes of an audible Australia.

Steve Spacek

The third album on Black Focus continues the South London
tradition, but this time in the form of one of the originators: a
triple OG, Steve Spacek.

Spacek recently released a solo record through Alexander
Nut’s imprint Eglo, dBridge's Exit Records as Blackpocket,
following on from his work with Ninja Tune under the Beat
Spacek moniker, and collaboration with Mark Pritchard as
Africa HiTech on Warp. He's also made formative work with
legendary artists J Dilla, Raphael Saddiq, Q Tip, Common
and made early drum'n'bass tunes with his brother dBridge.
It’s an incredible career resume and an honour to be
releasing this new work.

'HOUSES' sees Spacek return to his Detroit influences, with
house music at the heart of this record as its foundation but as with all Spacek's releases, it transcends
genre and focuses more on swing, melody and feeling.

There's elements of soul, jazz & r&b interlaced within the DNA of his electronic music, alongside his
signature falsetto vocals.

The entire project was produced using iPhone and iPad apps, an approach Steve champions and feels
liberated by using technology to join the past with the present.

Prophet: Don't Forget It

<p><span><span><span><span><span><span>- If it was possible for engineers and scientists to harness pure amounts of stoked-ness and in turn convert it into a useful energy source, my output in the lead up to Prophetʼs new record, well it would have easily filled up Elonʼs battery in South Australia many times over. 2018ʼs <em>Wanna Be Your Man</em> had me buzzing more than a four-year-old on an afternoonʼs worth of red cordial. </span></span></span></span></span></span></p>

Tame Impala: The Slow Rush

<p><span><span>- Tame Impala’s fourth studio album <em>The Slow Rush</em> landed today. An album examining time and the curious relationship we have with it; our nostalgia for the past and anxiety about the future. Since the release of 2015’s <em>Currents</em> <strong>Kevin Parker</strong> has headlined Coachella, sold out international stadiums, collaborated with artists from <strong>Lady Gaga </strong>to <strong>ASAP Rocky</strong> and well-and-truly become a household name.