Review: Igor Levit (Adelaide Festival)
Levit himself deserved six out of five stars for his performance, but there were a few technical issues.
Levit himself deserved six out of five stars for his performance, but there were a few technical issues.
Magnificent moon-lit music that illuminates cultural history.
An absorbing and essential lesson in the art of listening.
This fun-filled family show, based on the much-loved television series, is well crafted and staged.
Cabaret and opera combine in this gleeful myth deconstruction, giving you plenty to think and talk about.
A beautifully programmed concert, which provides a snapshot for the Incredible Floridas: Chamber Landscapes series at UKARIA.
Oboist Diana Doherty and the Streeton Trio offer up a concert of the highest quality.
The SSO showcases the talent within its own ranks in this intimate concert of Bach favourites.
Béla Bartók’s only opera, first performed in 1918, sounds glorious and is astutely staged for 21st-century audiences.
Saxophonist Matt Keegan charts his great-grandfather’s journey from Vienna to Australia in a soaring song cycle, surrounded by a suite of players at Mary’s Underground.
For its first concert of the year, the Omega Ensemble unleashed a torrent of sound in three concertos, two of which were commissions.
The Adelaide-based contemporary circus troupe takes a bold leap forward with its latest, ambitious show.
WA's top operatic talent delighted the audience with a program of classics and favourites, though a broader mix of repertoire wouldn't have gone astray.