Review: Swell (Annie Hui-Hsin Hsieh & David Li Sound Gallery)
Annie Hui-Hsin Hsieh's unsettling Swell conjures oceanic feelings of foreboding.
Annie Hui-Hsin Hsieh's unsettling Swell conjures oceanic feelings of foreboding.
Sydney Philharmonia Choir’s powerhouse debut concert sends a timely message but fails to electrify.
Perfect coherence and technical accomplishment set this performance at the pinnacle of the string quartet form.
In his fourth collaboration with the TSO, Spanish pianist Javier Perianes gave a performance of combined power and poetry.
Artistic forces successfully marshalled in a poignant and musically powerful commemorative concert.
Dutch violinist Simone Lamsma and WASO deliver a concert worth sending to the memory bank.
Mark Trevorrow reunites with "old friends" Rupert Noffs and Bev Kennedy for a fabulous new cabaret of well-known and seldom-heard material.
This bold, beautifully staged adaptation of an opera classic ditches the outdated bits so we can still enjoy Mozart’s glorious music.
This maximalist staging of the classic John Buchan spy caper needs to shorten its Umbilical cord.
Unsettling, uncanny encounters on Country make for a powerful radio-play-like experience.
This anthology of seven short plays lacks cohesion and complexity.
Vivaldi's violin concertos made electrifying – risky, imaginative and rhetorically charged.
Horns of plenty as Nexas Quartet dishes up a gourmet feast of Gershwin.