Review: I Sing the Birth (Luminescence Chamber Singers)
A concert of contrasts underscoring how music and Christmas have held diverse meanings for composers across centuries.
A concert of contrasts underscoring how music and Christmas have held diverse meanings for composers across centuries.
Handel with care as Sydney Philharmonia Choirs delivers a hair-raising Christmas package.
Brevity is on its side but German playwright David Gieselmann’s frantic comedy is a test for its cast and for its audiences.
A perfectly poised and paced production, convincingly performed.
Full of new tunes and fresh takes on classics, this beautifully packaged Christmas showcase is a gift to audiences.
Music lovers give Heavenly Thanks as they farewell the incomparable Goldner String Quartet in the room where it all began.
Melanie Mununggurr and Nardi Simpson shine as storytellers in this NSW premiere program.
Hellgart Mahler, great niece of Gustav Mahler, lived a quiet life in Devonport, Tasmania. Her music resists precise classification – as did she.
This satirical drama about slavery in the West Indies is more than a period piece.
A top-shelf cast ensues little is lost in a stripped-back staging of Gilbert and Sullivan's rollicking melodrama.
Elegance in spades, but little electricity between the leads in this Shanghai Ballet showcase choreographed by Briton Derek Deane.
A shared life in St Kilda becomes a microcosm of deeper tensions and, for its audience, a mirror of universal concerns.
Meticulous design a rock-solid foundation for an intimate story of small town friendships, rivalries and tragedy.