Beatles in Symphony by the Canberra Symphony Orchestra at Llewellyn Hall
The next CSO concert will give a new sound to the music of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.
The next CSO concert will give a new sound to the music of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.
We still call Malta, and Bulgaria, Poland, France and Britain, home when it comes to the children's version of Europe's famous singing competition.
One Direction's split is all but cemented with Niall Horan releasing his first solo single since the band went on hiatus last year.
There are mere mortals who sing, and then there is the man in the hat with the melted-chocolate baritone
The country music trio ostracised for criticising the Iraq war is back and back in demand for an Australian tour.
Sticky Carpet: Reservoir Stomp, Pink Mountaintops, Kinky Friedman, Lost Ragas' tribute to James Cruickshank and more.
Wes Snelling's affecting vocals amp up the pathos for a singer who has seen better days.
Another sold out show meant quick disappointment for fans but another quick profit for those looking to resell tickets.
From local favourites Big Scary and Ball Park music, to ace female rockers Pup and the Coathangers, we have your weekend in live music covered.
Hillary Clinton supporter Katy Perry has stripped off in a new parody video encouraging US citizens to vote.
In 2011, when the Panics released their assured top 10 success Rain on the Humming Wire, affable frontman Jae Laffer came home from recording at Woodstock. Now, five years later, the peripatetic years have passed.
Longer songs and stranger bands hitting the right notes with music fans, says Brisbane group the Belligerents.
Pixies, Nick Waterhouse, Jenny Hval, EZTV and the Black Sorrows.
With tumultuous times behind them, the band members are discovering a new resolve and fresh inspiration.
Flume has dropped a new track in protest at Sydney's lockout laws.
A cobbled together quintent gave a confident rendition of Beethoven and Mozart.
New approaches from Justin Vernon's Bon Iver and Angel Olsen is balanced by happily familiar goods from Pixies and Teenage Fanclub. Meanwhile, there's something monstrous coming from Christopher Young Quartet.
Their acid-drenched, psychedelic-rock music has found a wider audience far from Canada, where they formed over a decade ago.
The Crowded House ticket disappointment for many fans shows that when the people selling the ticket also get a cut from a second sale, often at a far higher price, it could be the gamekeeper has turned poacher.
The writer of the international hit 1234 and a former member of The Avalanches are among the first time nominees for the awards recognising composers for film and TV.
The inaugural festival will see hundreds of performing and other artists descend on Melbourne to give us a taste of contemporary Asia.
Tickets for the Opera House forecourt shows started at $127 but almost immediately were sold out and re-selling for seven times that amount.
Tina Harrod and her sensational band could help power the electricity grid with performances like this
Sydney's lockout laws have deadened its live music scene, according to the DJs and artists who once played late into the night in the city.
Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon tried to find himself on a Greek island; it proved much more traumatic than collaborating with the likes of Kanye West, but it yielded the first song on his new album 22, A Million.
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