Review: Shift (Backstage Music)
Backstage Music spotlights the works of artists with disability in a program rich with unique practices and fascinating considerations.
Backstage Music spotlights the works of artists with disability in a program rich with unique practices and fascinating considerations.
Featuring some of Australia’s finest pianists in a visually immersive performance space, this four-day festival is piano heaven.
Julian Day reports on the longest, and probably the loudest, noise set they have ever heard by experimental musician Marco Fusinato, who is representing Australia at the Venice Biennale.
Cat Hope talks about the electroacoustic music ensemble's first British tour in a landmark Australian cultural collaboration with the UK, and why electroacoustic music is in a constant state of flux.
With music by Australian composers including Corrina Bonshek, Anne Cawrse, Gambirra Illume, David John Lang and Chris Williams, this concert was the perfect way to mark World Migratory Bird Day.
The Canberra-based artist and musician's new sound sculpture draws on his own diagnosis to fight for Australians affected by cancer and immunodeficiency.
The hilarious new video game Trombone Champ will have you sliding from Mozart to merengue.
Why taking music out of the concert hall has been a key element in Lamorna Nightingale's programming for BackStage Music.
Inspired by an icy trek through Europe's largest glacier, composer Morgan Hickinbotham will transform an existing experimental soundscape into a performance for a vocal ensemble during his residency.
Sydney-based trumpeter and composer, Tom Avgenicos, has won this year's Jazz Fellowship, which he will use to develop his collaborative practice and work on an environmental project.
Paul Stanhope, Olivia Davies, Liza Lim and the Australian Art Orchestra are among the winners at this year's Art Music Awards, presented at the first in-person ceremony in two years.
Despite the plethora of entertainment options at our fingertips, Australians remain deeply connected to their radios – and sound designers, like Tivoli Audio, are taking note.
A new, experimental arrangement of Sue Healey’s iconic moving-image portraiture.