Review: Paco Peña – Requiem for the Earth (Brisbane Festival)
An intensely moving and timely work by flamenco great Paco Peña brings its audience to their feet.
An intensely moving and timely work by flamenco great Paco Peña brings its audience to their feet.
Outstanding performances and design rescue this fairy tale hodgepodge from the deep, dark woods.
Jacques Emery’s 90-minute "deep listening ritual" creates a lavish world of sound with only two-note chords.
Mozart and Boccherini’s woodwind music comes alive in the hands of an outstanding quintet led by flautist Sally Walker.
Loving, touching and bold, the standing ovation which greeted this performance was well deserved.
The West Australian reprise of Lucy Kirkwood's Fukushima-inspired drama squanders its potential in a production that never seems to settle.
That Gary Owen's scathing monologue has grown in relevance 10 years since it premiered only adds to its ultimate tragedy.
Some of the best if not-so-well-known local theatre talent deliver a minimalist production of Shakespeare’s tragedy to maximum effect.
Vondráček thrills; WASO responds in kind; audience thunders applause. And that was before the emotional highpoint of the concert.
The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is operating in a state of damage control and unfortunately it shows.
A much-anticipated production of Jonathan Mills' opera falls short of its abundant promise.
Well-argued, compiled, arranged and delivered, Peter Evans' Shakespeare lecture often feels like something with a theatrical pulse.
Think you know what it means to be passionate? You’ve obviously never met a Horse Girl.