Australian contenders for World New Music Days festival announced
Six works highlighting the rich variety of new Australian music have been submitted for consideration at the 2023 World New Music Days festival in South Africa.
Six works highlighting the rich variety of new Australian music have been submitted for consideration at the 2023 World New Music Days festival in South Africa.
The addition of three new female busts to the collection in the Sydney Conservatorium of Music library seeks to redress age-old inequities.
The latest arts appointments and departures.
A five-day broadcast celebrates the achievements of female composers across the globe and at home, including Deborah Cheetham Fraillon, Ella Macens, Anne Boyd and Hildegard von Bingen.
Five world premieres, 34 concerts and 39 musicians make for an illuminating North Queensland chamber music festival.
First Nations soprano, composer and educator Deborah Cheetham Fraillon announced as the inaugural Elizabeth Todd Chair of Vocal Studies.
Inspired by a collection of magnificent tapestries, Deborah Cheetham's Woven Song benefits from the first-hand communication of its composer.
The new Artistic Director for this year's 3MBS Marathon talks about her program, bringing the rich diversity of Melbourne music to the stage.
Touring opportunities, co-commissions and digital innovation top an ambitious wish list.
Celebrating his 20th year as Artistic & Music Director, Brett Weymark has put together a program that focuses on voice, energy and joy, and features popular favourites along with new commissions by First Nations and Australian composers.
The Sydney venue’s 2023 season launches its Australian-first immersive sound system with a lineup featuring Peaches, Deborah Cheetham, Paul Grabowsky, Emma Donovan and Krautrock legend Michael Rother.
"Employ more women," says Opera Australia CEO Fiona Allan, one of six women, including Simone Young and Deborah Cheetham, interviewed in a new documentary by Miriam Gordon-Stewart.
This collaborative work for the 2021 Pythia Prize was developed partly during Wilcox's residency in France, and is inspired by the colour washes of pioneering artist Helen Frankenthaler.