Peking Duk Become Children’s Authors

Looking for a cool Christmas gift for the little bookworm in your life? Peking Duk have you covered with their brand new children’s book, DJ Duks.

DJ Duks follows the adventures of Adam and Roobs, two feathered DJs dreaming of writing a banger and making it big in Bling City. But will fame and fortune fulfil them or will they learn true happiness is waiting for them back home in Ducklands? You’ll just have to read and find out!

“This is a very special project for us, we are proud of DJ Duks and excited to see how kids of all ages react to it. It’s been a pleasure working with the team at BMG and the super talented illustrator Alex Lehours on bringing this vision to life” said co-author and one half of Peking Duk, Adam Hyde.

Pre-order your copy of DJ Duks in a limited edition Banger Bundle or Fuegobundle online now for delivery before Christmas.

Image used with permission from Revolutions per Minute

Chitra Moves Me With “Better Than Before”

Prepare to feel all the feels when you press play on “Better Than Before,” the latest single from Melbourne-based chanteuse Chitra. This song has such heart and vulnerability, it made an instant impression on me.

There’s more where that came from, with Chitra releasing an EP early next year. Hear a sneak peek of the new material when Chitra plays the Our Golden Friend’s 3rd Birthday & Christmas Celebration at North Fitzroy’s Tramway Hotel on December 15.

Image used with permission from Our Golden Friend

The Hots Do It Old School With “Before You”

Sydney band The Hots are giving me retro vibes with their scorching new single “Before You,” lifted from their recently released self-titled EP.

This is the kind of straight-up rock you don’t hear anymore, delivered with power and a lack of pretension. Frontwoman Foxie Kelly is a real force, a singer in the tradition of Chrissy Amphlett or Ann Wilson. She’s aided beautifully by Ronnie Simmons on guitar, a demon with an axe who’s playing with Rose Tattoo, The Screaming Jets, and Richie Ramone of The Ramones.

If you love you rock old school, you’ll love The Hots.

Image used with permission from the A&R Department

Zolton Celebrates NYC With “When The Lights Come Up on New York City”

I fell hard and fast for New York City when I visited around 15 years ago. My now-husband lived a couple of hours away, and we bounced around from one mind-blowing museum, restaurant, and music venue to the next. It was a whirlwind that made such an impression on me. It seems the Big Apple got its hooks into Sydney artist Zolton too. His latest single “When the Lights Come Up on New York City” is a synth-soaked love letter to the City That Never Sleeps.

“I wrote it about my first year living in New York when I met my now wife and we explored the city together fascinated by the whole energy of the place. I ended up living in New York for eight years, and they were the best years of my life,” he explained.

I love the optimistic retro feel and delicate vibe of this song. New York can be painted as an aggressive beast with honking car horns and busy residents. But this track reveals another more magical side with its gentle electric guitars and bright, neon synths.

If you’ve never been to New York City or it’s been too long since your last adventure, let Zolton’s new single take you there.

Enjoy a Wild Ride With Donnarumma’s “Rollercoaster”

Strap yourself in for “Rollercoaster,” the latest single from Adelaide rockers Donnarumma.

Just like any good rollercoaster, this track starts small, with delicate vocals and guitar work. However, before too long it kicks in, launching the listener full throttle into its bold guitar riff and strong vocals. Once you’re in it you’ve got no choice but to just hold on and enjoy the ride.

“I based the narrative around the idea of being self-critical, almost like a person arguing with themselves in a mirror,” explained Louis Donnarumma, the man behind those amazing vocals. “At the beginning, I started with a lyric-less hook and developed the song from there over roughly a year. It took heaps of trial and error, loads of demos and fleshing out ideas with the band to get to the final product. We put heaps of ourselves into this track and it’s definitely the proudest we’ve been with our work.”

This song sounds awesome at home, but I imagine it’s going to be even better experienced live. You’ll get your chance when Donnarumma takes the single on tour in the New Year.

11 January 2019 – Crown & Anchor Hotel, Adelaide
17 January 2019 – Grace Darling Hotel, Melbourne
19 January 2019 – Frankie’s Pizza, Sydney
20 January 2019 – Hamilton Station, Newcastle
22 February 2019 – Heya Bar, Brisbane
23 February 2019 – Miami Shark Bar, Gold Coast

Image used with permission from GD FRNDS

Ruby Gill Releases Moving New Single “Your Mum”

She might sell out shows in her native South Africa, but Australia is taking a little longer to discover the brilliant talents of Melbourne-based muso Ruby Gill. Hopefully her new single “Your Mum” changes that, because it’s seriously one of the best songs I’ve heard.

It’s a melancholic indie pop ballad that’s given me tingles with its poignant lyrics and gut-wrenching delivery. If you’ve ever struggled with feelings of inadequacy (and let’s face it, who hasn’t?), this track will really hit home for you.

“We fall in love with people who remind us a little bit of our parents, but then, in a burst of 2am Freudian clarity and angst, we realise that those are pretty stifling expectations,” Ruby mused. “So this is about being not good enough. About trying to be yourself in someone else’s kitchen. About admitting that you’re not fucking fine. And it’s about your mum.”

Ruby is currently supporting Lime Cordiale on their local shows. Once that tour wraps, she’ll play Woodford. If you’re going to any of those gigs, make sure you catch Ruby’s set.

13 December 2018 – Tap House, Bendigo (with Lime Cordiale)
14 December 2018 – Karova Lounge, Ballarat (with Lime Cordiale)
15 December 2018 – Evelyn Hotel, Melbourne (with Lime Cordiale – Under 18s)
15 December 2018 – The Barwon Club, Geelong (with Lime Cordiale)
27 December 2018 – Woodford Folk Festival, Woodford

Image used with permission from Good Intent

Jimmy Barnes @ Lizotte’s, Newcastle – 4 December 2018

I always feel special being one of the 200 guests at a Lizotte’s show. But when the show is a Jimmy Barnes gig that sold out within minutes, as it was on Tuesday night, the word special doesn’t seem to cover it. Jimmy Barnes is a performer who can and does sell out large venues. In just a few short months he’s headlining the Red Hot Summer tour, taking top billing on a line-up featuring such talents as Joan Jett, Richard Clapton, and The Living End. Seeing him in a much smaller space lets Barnesy perform a different kind of show, one that’s more personal and less mainstream. It’s one I feel privileged to have witnessed.

Elly-May Barnes played support act, Jimmy’s youngest daughter and a real talent in her own right. She supported Jimmy the last time I saw him at Lizotte’s two years ago, although at that show she was flanked by Reece Mastin, Sarah McLeod, and Kara Jayne. She was a lot more exposed here, sharing the stage with only a keyboardist and her sister EJ for a few numbers, but I felt she was much stronger than last time. Clad in an LED covered cape and tight-fitting black outfit, she looked every inch the sassy rockstar. Her voice was strong from the start in a set of covers celebrating songs from David Bowie, Neil Young, Dionne Warwick, and more. Her song choice was spot on, her stage presence fierce, and her voice soulful. What a wonderful way to start the night.

Jimmy Barnes was the first musician I ever saw live. I’ve seen him countless times since then. I always enjoy his set, but I’m most excited when he delivers something new. Bigger shows don’t let you do that. Crowds of fans demand to hear the hits, to sing along from the start. Get together a much smaller group, a more select audience, and I find they’re much happier to experience something different. So we heard covers of songs from artists you might not expect Jimmy to cover like Nat King Cole and Mahalia Jackson. There were incredible new songs yet to be released. There was time to tell stories which made our experiences hearing these songs so much richer, because there were no hecklers telling him to get on with it and sing.

Jimmy doesn’t leave audiences without hearing the songs they came to hear though. While this was a set with fewer hits, we still enjoyed chances to sing along with old favourites like “The Weight,” “Khe Sanh,” “Flame Trees,” “Working Class Man,” and “When The War is Over.” His more poignant, understated take on “Working Class Man,” a world away from the pub rock number released, was especially moving.

Jimmy might have been the headliner, but this was really a Barnes family show. Elly-May and EJ both served as backing vocalists alongside their mum Jane. Son-in-law Ben Rodgers had lead guitar duties while son Jackie on drums kept the beat. EJ slayed a solo performance of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.” Seeing the members of the Barnes clan all up there supporting and admiring one another was beautiful to witness.

Beautiful isn’t a word that typically springs to mind watching a Jimmy Barnes performance. His shows are typically rocking, bold, ballsy affairs. But I feel so thrilled to have seen the softer side of one of Australia’s most enduring and iconic musicians in Newcastle this week.

Image source: Stephen Katulka

Discover That Gold Street Sound

Add some soul to your mid-week with That Gold Street Sound’s new single, “Rain.” Originally conceived as a folk-country song, the Melbourne outfit have given this stunning song a great, laidback groove and emotional gravitas. That epic 15-piece choir doesn’t hurt the sound either!

“I came up with a new chord progression, but I was struggling to write lyrics for it so I thought I would go through some old lyric books and see if I could find some inspiration,” explained guitarist Jim Griffiths. “The lyrics just worked. When I put them together I was imaging how Shaanika would sing it and when we played it as a band, it felt like it had finally become what it was supposed to be. Then, when we were in the studio, we kept adding layer after layer. The Hammond – played by Sam Cope (Blue King Brown, Dynamo, Buttered Loaf) – glued the whole track together and we went crazy on the outro with the multiple percussion, guitar and horn parts, wails, backing vocals and the choir. It just kept developing musically and it ended up sounding epic and joyful.”

“Rain” comes from That Gold Street Sound’s forthcoming album Trick of the Light, due for release on February 16. If you’re in Victoria, check out their forthcoming shows.

7 December 2018 – Major Tom’s, Kyneton
16 February 2019 – Geddes Lane Ballroom, Melbourne (album launch)

The Northern Folk Impress With “Cold”

Melbourne 10-piece The Northern Folk blend genres to dazzling effect in their latest single “Cold.” It’s a little folky, a little jazzy, with pop hooks to spare. It starts small but builds beautifully with brassy horns and a full-out stomping chorus.

It sounds brilliant in the studio, but I think this song will take on a life of its own on stage. See The Northern Folk doing their thing at the following festivals and headlining shows.

27 December 2018 – 1 January 2019 – Woodford Folk Festival, Woodford
3 January 2019 – Upper Lansdowne Memorial Hall, Upper Lansdowne
25 – 28 January 2019 – Newstead Live Music Festival, Newstead
15 – 17 March 2019 – Blue Mountains Music Festival, Katoomba
29 – 31 March 2019 – The Hills are Alive, South Gippsland

Image used with permission from This Much Talent

John Farnham @ Bimbadgen Estate, Pokolbin – 1 December 2018

You know it’s summer in Australia once the mercury soars and you find yourself with a bottle of semillon at a Day on the Green event. I wasted no time getting into the summer spirit, visiting Bimbadgen Estate in the Hunter for its first Day on the Green show of the season on Saturday.

It’s been so long since I’ve been to a Day on the Green that I didn’t anticipate the traffic. My party were enjoying a leisurely lunch in the same suburb and were sure 15 minutes would be enough time to get to the venue. Unfortunately, it was not to be. I was so looking forward to Bachelor Girl’s set too. Sadly though, by the time I got to my seat they were walking off stage. They sounded amazing though. Next time.

Thankfully I was happily in my seat with that important bottle of sem, necessary for combatting that summer heat, by the time Russell Morris graced the stage. He was the only artist on the bill I hadn’t seen before, so I was really excited to see what this Aussie legend could do. What a wonderful performance he gave, full of technical prowess and charisma, with classics, more recent bluesy hits from his latest smash albums, and some choice covers. I’d forgotten how much I love “Wings of an Eagle.” His takes on Dylan’s “It’s All Over Now Baby Blue” and “Hush” were inspired. And of course, “The Real Thing” was a psychedelic delight.

He might have been sandwiched in the middle of the bill, but Richard Marx was my headliner. His set was all too brief, but that meant there was no time for fillers. The hits came thick and fast. Most drew from Richard’s early days with a “fluffy mullet.” I adored these chart toppers like “Endless Summer Nights” and “Should’ve Known Better.” But I was also thrilled to hear “Angelia,” a favourite song that didn’t crack the top 30, and “Long Hot Summer,” a song perfect for this weather he penned for Keith Urban. Those tracks I didn’t expect to hear helped make amends to the fans like me who would have loved to hear him play longer. By the time he played his torch ballad and HotelsCombined anthem “Right Here Waiting,” he had the whole crowd singing along. I’m not sure whether the sound mix was a little off early or whether I simply got used to the problem though. It’s a shame that this factor beyond his control marred an otherwise stellar performance.

You know you’re in good hands when two of Australia’s most beloved artists, Daryl Braithwaite and John Farnham, close out a show. Dazza’s voice took a little time to warm up, struggling to hit the higher notes in opener “Higher Than Hope,” but we sang loud enough to cover his failings until he hit his stride. His greatest hits set, drawing from the days of Sherbet and his solo career, was perfect for an event like this. No sooner had I sat down for a rest I was back up on my feet dancing to another favourite. None is greater than “The Horses” though, the kind of track that today encourages millennials to don horse heads and thrust hobby horses to the sky as they sing out that chorus. I was in fine voice alongside them.

John Farnham remains the consummate Australian performer. He’s a man whose voice needs no warm-up, whose songs are embraced by Australians of all ages. Like so many Aussies I’ve seen John several times over the years. Recently the sets were sounding a little samey, so I was thrilled to hear a few tracks from the classic album Whispering Jack he rarely plays. I’d forgotten how much I love “One Step Away.” The beautiful ballad “Touch of Paradise” was a real highlight, along with the rocking crowd pleaser “Take the Pressure Down.” But I’m not sure anything beats being in a crowd of Aussies joining voices with Farnsy belting out “You’re The Voice.” What a special moment.

With a stellar line-up of Aussie talent and a special import, A Day on the Green has kicked off its 2018/2019 season with a bang. Bring on the rest of the events!

Image source: Stephen Katulka