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Interview: WILL K on Engineered Chaos, Club Momentum, and Letting Instinct Lead...

January 28, 2026

HELLBOUND HEAVY METAL CRUISE RETURNS JANUARY 2027

January 27, 2026

Nameless Friends Kick Off 2026 With Raucous New Single ‘I’m Afraid Of...

January 26, 2026

Julian Hunt Returns With Dreamy New Single ‘Marine Drive’

January 26, 2026

Awolk Embraces Vulnerability and Forward Motion on Intimate New EP Wild Rose

January 26, 2026

Arky Waters Finds Pure Adrenaline on ‘UGETME?’

January 23, 2026

HOWLIN’ COUNTRY REVEAL SET TIMES FOR 2026 EVENT EXTRA ARTISTS ADDED TO...

January 22, 2026

Terminal V returns to Croatia for summer 2026 with a huge phase...

January 21, 2026

BRUNSWICK MUSIC FESTIVAL REVEALS 2026 PROGRAMMING

January 21, 2026

Interview: FOLEY on Like An Actress: Romance, Nostalgia and the Joy of...

January 21, 2026
Monthly Archives

January 2026

Music InterviewsMusic News

Interview: Lynn Patrick on Water Stones – Letting Music Unfold, Heal, and Breathe

by the partae January 15, 2026
written by the partae

Water Stones feels less like a collection of songs and more like a continuous environment. When you were writing it, were you thinking in terms of individual pieces, or did the album slowly reveal itself as a whole?

The album slowly revealed itself as a whole. I started writing and recording and let it unfold as a collection of songs that reflected my life experiences at the time. Three of them I had written several years ago, but the rest reflected my current and recent experiences.

The title suggests gradual change rather than dramatic transformation. Was there a particular moment or experience that made that metaphor feel right for this record?

After losing several close friends, experiencing the pandemic, going through stage-three cancer, and witnessing the intensity of the 2024 election, I felt drawn to bring healing and positivity into my world and hopefully into the world of others. Holding my guitar, writing, and recording became truly uplifting for me. Through grief and healing, I felt my heart soften. During chemotherapy, instead of giving in to fear, I imagined light flowing through the IVs. My intention throughout the process was healing, staying open, and reaching for a higher vibration.

The last song I recorded was the title track, Water Stones, and my mother died that same day. I placed my hand on my heart and felt deep appreciation for my legacy with her, including the difficulty, the challenges, and the love we shared. That is why I called the album Water Stones. All of these challenges and hardships opened my heart, and a great deal of healing took place. It changed my life.

Your guitar playing on Water Stones feels very intentional, especially in what’s left unsaid. How conscious are you of silence and restraint when you’re composing?

I really don’t think about it one way or the other. Those songs are simply a reflection of how I feel, and I’m not analyzing the process as it’s happening. I’m just feeling. I follow a thread of intuition and whatever wants to come through in the moment. Each choice of notes stays in sync with a deep inner feeling, a sense of wonder and discovery. Writing songs feels like an adventure.

Nature feels present throughout the album, not as a concept but almost as a collaborator. Do you feel these pieces are shaped more by landscape than emotion, or are those two things inseparable for you?

Those two things are inseparable for me. Most of the songs I write happen when I’m at home in the mountains where I live. Sometimes when I’m writing, I zone out and feel that beauty come through as I go into a creative place. It gets into my hands. Because I love spending time in nature, taking walks in the mountains, being by rivers, kayaking on lakes, swimming, and backcountry cross-country skiing, these experiences are very healing and empowering. I always feel uplifted when I am with nature and that gets reflected in my songs.

There’s a calm confidence running through the record, but it never drifts into passivity. How do you make gentle music without it becoming something people stop actively listening to?

I think it’s because I feel fully engaged and truly connected to the music, and perhaps listeners feel that too.

Many of the tracks feel emotionally open without pointing the listener toward a specific feeling. Do you think instrumental music works best when it leaves that kind of space?

Yes. I used to sing and write lyrics, but I ended up writing instrumental music because I can express myself more emotionally. Words feel limiting for me. Without lyrics, listeners have the space to connect with the music in their own way. Rather than me creating a story, they can have their own experience.

The album moves at its own pace and doesn’t rush toward resolution. Was that a conscious response to the speed of modern life, or simply where you found yourself creatively at the time?

Just where I found myself creatively at the time. The music flows out of me, and I create a space that feels healing, uplifting, fun, or whatever wants to happen.

When you listen back to Water Stones now, does it feel like a snapshot of who you were while making it, or something that exists independently of you?

Listening back, it feels like a snapshot of my experience and what I was feeling at the time.

This is a record that seems to reward repeat listening rather than instant impact. How important is longevity to you when you’re releasing new work?

I don’t really think about it that way. The music unfolds from authentic experiences, not from anything forced or planned. It is spontaneous and real, without a specific agenda, and is just a flow of emotions and creativity that speaks from the present moment.

If someone sits with Water Stones for the first time, without context or expectation, what do you hope stays with them once the final note fades out?

That the music made them feel something, that it left them feeling better or inspired.

WEBSITE

January 15, 2026 0 comments
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Music InterviewsMusic News

Interview: Falling You on Metanoia – Change, Collaboration, and Letting the World In

by the partae January 15, 2026
written by the partae

When you began working on Metanoia, did you have a clear emotional destination in mind, or did the album reveal itself gradually as you followed the sounds?

I didn’t have any specific emotional destination, though I did have an initial theme. The basic idea at first was just to explore the concept of change through the lens of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, re-telling and re-interpreting those myths into versions that hew more closely to today’s world.

Every Falling You record has been about some core part of the human condition, and I thought it would be very interesting to see how that condition has changed since antiquity. However, when the pandemic consumed the entire world, it occurred to me that we were all going through profound — and often quite difficult — changes that we never expected.

The word “metanoia” implies a deep internal shift. Was there a specific moment or period in your life that sparked this theme, or did it emerge more subconsciously through the music?

I’d say the original theme started itself changing around autumn of 2020. There were these large wildfires across California and the entire western US and Canada, and there were days where it was difficult to breathe. I would just look at online maps, searching for anywhere within a day’s drive where the air quality was better.

I would tell my canine best friend (a 130 lb giant Alaskan Malamute I named Atlas, who has since passed), “Atlas, we’re going to Tucson because their AQI is green!” or “Atlas, we’re going to Elko, Nevada because we can breathe there!” We did this five or six times, once even driving to Eugene, Oregon to breathe better only to find — after arriving — that it had also fallen prey to the fires just in the intervening eight or so hours since we left.

I realized that, between the fires, the pandemic, etc., no one can escape — the only way out was through. We often use the word “grow” to describe the path of our lives, but I think that word doesn’t capture how the external world throws adversity at us, challenging us to re-examine deeply held belief and value systems we’ve constructed.

Just as arriving in Eugene only to find that it, too, was burning, made me realize that I couldn’t keep running, metanoia requires accepting that you can’t outrun a chaotic, external world breaking you down. What we can do, however, is let it crack open the protective shell we’ve built around these belief and value systems, allowing us to peer inside and take a long, hard look at them.

If we free ourselves from the ones that aren’t working for us, we can walk into a future that, while uncertain, allows us to hopefully create better ones.

Falling You has always felt collaborative at its core. How do you decide which voices belong in a particular project, and what do you listen for beyond technical ability?

Oh, it’s definitely very much collaborative, and I’m very fortunate — and humbled — to be able to work with these amazingly talented people and call them friends.

In the early days, I would attempt to match the vocalist to the music, but I no longer do that. Basically, what always happens is that the vocalist ends up taking the song to places far more beautiful than I ever imagined. Their ideas (they are the vocalists, after all) are always better than mine.

Regarding what I listen for, I just like a lot of different types of music. If the vocalist’s performance moves me, or if I think to myself that they’re way out of my league (hint: they always are), then I’ll ask them if they’d be amenable to collaborating.

Sometimes they’re just very busy (hence the rotation), and sometimes certain ideas will move them more than others, but when they can, it always makes me so happy.

Many of the tracks feel less like songs and more like environments. How conscious are you of space, silence, and pacing when composing?

Oh, I just adore ambient and space music, drones, that kind of stuff. Whenever I play with synths or guitars, I usually just naturally go slow and drone out, often just letting it swallow me for 10–20 minutes before I remember to start recording at all.

With Metanoia, though, a lot of the pacing was driven by the particular myth I had in mind. For instance, on “Throw the Stone”, the change from bluesy guitar to ambient electronica was informed by the myth of Deucalion and Pyrrha, where the stones the characters toss behind them morph into the new inhabitants of the world.

Similarly, on “Alcyone”, the changes were driven by different parts of the story of Alcyone and Ceyx — Ceyx’s decision to leave in the beginning, Alcyone’s prophetic dreams in the middle, and her finding his body in the waves (and then both turning into birds) in the last part.

There’s a sense of patience throughout the album — nothing feels rushed. Was slowing things down a deliberate response to the world around us, or simply where the music wanted to go?

I think it’s mostly the latter — thinking about how elements of the myths would manifest in the music kind of drove the slower pacing.

Also, we’ve been working on this since soon after our last record, Shine (which was much more active) was released in 2017. The whole world slowing way down from 2020 through 2023 definitely had an effect as well.

Your work often blurs genre boundaries without ever feeling unfocused. Do you think in terms of genre at all, or is emotion the only framework that matters to you?

That’s very kind of you to say. We do genre-bend quite a lot. I think a lot of it is driven just by emotion or mood, though sometimes it’s a bit more intentional — I wanted to explore a slightly bluesy motif with this record, as I thought it would complement the themes of loss in a lot of the myths in Ovid’s work.

Several moments on the album feel deeply intimate, almost private. Do you ever struggle with how much of yourself to reveal through music, or does sound make that easier than words?

That is a very insightful observation. The way I see it, I can’t help but reveal aspects of myself through music, since the most honest music involves bringing something inside of you outside of you.

However, given that I prefer to be more in the background — and since I feel that the vocalists deserve far more attention than I do, as they bring the magic and all — I think for me it’s less of a private act and more of an anonymous one, though I guess this interview has shattered that illusion.

The album carries themes of grief and resilience without ever becoming heavy-handed. How do you approach difficult emotional material without overwhelming the listener?

This is actually something I put a lot of thought into. The majority of Falling You material is definitely on the moodier end, and I honestly find a real beauty in a deep, sorrowful melancholia.

Artists who do that really well — David Sylvian, First Aid Kit, This Mortal Coil, Billie Holiday, Stars Of the Lid, Opeth, a lot of bluegrass and folk — are some of my favorites.

However — and I know this is quite cliché — I find that adding uplifting or hopeful elements does two things: they better define the darkness, yet also provide a respite from it.

Another thing is that the vocalists really do a lot of the emotional heavy lifting themselves. The soundscapes can help set the mood and occasionally speak to it, but the vocals and lyrics really deliver it on a human level.

After completing Metanoia, do you feel changed by the process itself, or do you only discover that transformation once the music is released into the world?

Yes, most definitely. Every record changes me. Every time I manage to dig around inside and expose something through music, it affects me.

Every time I work with someone and they show me — through their contributions — things of such immense beauty that I can’t create any words with this tired alphabet that do it justice, I am moved to a different square on the board.

When listeners sit with this record in silence — headphones on, no distractions — what do you hope they come away feeling, even if they can’t quite put it into words?

Firstly, I’m grateful for anyone taking the time to experience the music we make. If they listen to the entire album — all almost 80 minutes of it — I hope they feel that the investment of their time was worth it, that the journey was an interesting one.

I hope they come away appreciating the value of stories. Many of these songs are retellings and reinterpretations of stories from antiquity. If we’ve managed to add our story to the countless others humans have professed, sung, and played for one another, that’s a success for me.

January 15, 2026 0 comments
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Music News

FOLEY announce brand new EP with stunning single ‘CINEMATIC’ LIKE AN ACTRESS EP out Feb 25th

by the partae January 15, 2026
written by the partae

Photo Credit: Arianne Armida

Sydney-based pop duo FOLEY have been on a dream run in the last 12 months – the innovative pairing of Ash Wallace and Gabe Everett have truly redefined their chemistry through the release of their acclaimed sophomore album That’s Life, Baby!  

Following on from their infectious track ‘HONEY’ in 2025, the group returns for a brand new year: ushering in a new EP titled Like An Actress and sharing a brand new cut from it in ‘CINEMATIC’. Recorded on home turf in Aotearoa, New Zealand with collaborator Josh Naley, FOLEY pour bright pop and electronic influences into matured lyricism and delivery. 

“‘Cinematic’ is about a love so beautiful and promising that you feel like it may not be real – at the start of a relationship the glow around a person can be so overwhelming and you find yourself romanticising everything. 

Often we can have that self doubt of ‘is this actually real’, but ‘Cinematic’ is about embracing that feeling and leaning even further. Kissing in the streets at night, breaking into a stadium, and going home with butterflies in your stomach. It’s nostalgic even in the moment it happens, and you know that this could be encapsulated in a Hollywood movie because it’s so outrageously perfect.” FOLEY

Mastered by Grammy nominated engineer Nathan Dantzler (Sabrina Carpenter, Niall Horan) and mixed by acclaimed engineer Pedro Calloni (Chappell Roan, Alex Warren), the single is an opportunity for FOLEY to navigate themes of love and expression in a striking way.

Like An Actress adds to the impressive catalogue of work FOLEY have been building in recent years. As FOLEY describes, this project captures the essence of the group, balanced by music that allows for nuanced themes.

“We approached this EP with more organic instruments – so that the studio experience was more physical and band driven. The live show is such a crucial part of the project, so we wanted to write the songs even more locked into the show, with live instruments and feel. A lot of them were written with live piano, acoustic guitar, and live drums which is a real change up for us. It really unlocked a new energy in the studio – and the songs have a joy in them that I think you can really hear. 

Thematically it’s built upon the topics we frequently chat about in our friendship – love, loss, exploration, identity. Because it was written way more organically than previous records, the themes and lyrics feel more joined into the sonics of each track, rather than being a layer of emotion over the top. Everything feels very cohesive, dreamy and fluid which is a fun change!” FOLEY

FOLEY’s music has been attaining new levels of success with each release; ‘HONEY’ itself landing a #1 position on the Hot 20 Aotearoa Singles charts, as well as coming in as the #1 Most Added Song on NZ radio in November.

That’s Life, Baby! – released in February 2025 – was included on Rolling Stone AU/NZ’s list of THE 80 BEST NEW ZEALAND ALBUMS OF THE 2020s SO FAR, coming in at #50. For FOLEY, the accolades bolster numerous award nominations, including one for ‘Best Group’ at the 2025 Aotearoa Music Awards, as well as an expansion of their live footprint. They have toured internationally through South Korea and North America, while also continuing to blaze a trail for themselves in Aotearoa and Australia.

PRAISE

“Foley are setting the stage for a massive 2025”

ROLLING STONE AU/NZ

“You two are experts when it comes to producing pop music that’s as considered and clever as it is playful and hooky.”

ABBY BUTLER, TRIPLE J

“The songwriting, production, arrangement – everything. You’ve both done a madness on this. This the kind of song people should get VERY excited for.”

JERRY AGBINYA, TRIPLE J UNEARTHED 

“Foley immediately pull you into their world of perfect pop! <3 Obsessing over the fresh feel to this upload! This is the ONE!”

ANIKA LUNA, TRIPLE J

PLAY/LISTEN

 

‘CINEMATIC’ is out Wednesday 14 January 

‘LIKE AN ACTRESS’ is out Wednesday 25 February

Foley:  Facebook | Instagram | YouTube | Tik Tok | Triple J Unearthed  

January 15, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

The Rock Show That Stunned Thousands: YUNGBLUD Makes His Return Down Under With His First Show in Aus in 3 Years

by the partae January 13, 2026
written by the partae

Of course a singer as dramatic as YUNGBLUD, full of raw energy and flair, would choose a 42° day to make his return to Australia after a whopping 3 years.

This heat didn’t deter any of his superfans though, people queuing up from as early as 3pm the day before the show, with at least 40 people lined up by midnight. Absolute dedication. More fans queued throughout the burning heat that day. I myself delayed my arrival in favour of sitting in my car until it was time to head in. Upon approaching the venue, the aircon leaked out from the front gates, and all I could think was “Thank you Qudos”.

The energy was electric as people trickled into the venue, the pit slowly filling, just a sea of people waiting to see this rising rock star.

“Have you heard their new stuff?” the PA asked just before the opener’s set. Yes, I have, and it is excellent. As promised, Dune Rats certainly got the stage warmed up (if it wasn’t already, thanks again heat wave). The crowd was jumping and it was all around just an epic, sweaty time. Leaving the stage with a dramatic guitar throw (that thing went meters into the air, I swear), it was time for the countdown to the Idol himself to begin.

As we waited with extreme anticipation, Black Sabbath rang out over the arena, and just like that, we knew it was time.

To say that YUNGBLUD was anything other than absolute mayhem and electricity would simply be a lie. From the very moment he took to the stage, Dominic Harrison absolutely dominated.

From confetti to pyrotechnics, there was never a dull moment. In true YUNGBLUD fashion, Harrison invited a crowd member on stage to play “Fleabag” and we were honestly blown away, as this fan from Wollongong performed the song on a guitar that was upside down. Talk about a high-pressure performance. During this incredible display, the crowd seemed to brace themselves for what was coming next, and it did not disappoint.

Dom dove headfirst into a sea of adoring fans, only after standing tall with them, chanting the lyrics to a fan favourite.

But the moment that really stole the show was when Harrison paid tribute to his “friend in the sky”, the late great Ozzy Osbourne.

His cover of “Changes” has already received critical acclaim, earning him one of his first Grammy nominations for Best Rock Performance. It was an emotional moment for the crowd and for the singer himself, but no one in the building let him sing alone.

YUNGBLUD has been performing in Australia since he was 15, the singer saying that we were “the first country to believe in us”. It truly felt like such a special moment to share. Even in an arena of 20,000 people, it felt like he was talking to each of us personally.

Closing out the show with the lead single from the Idols record, “Zombie” was another emotional performance, but also one filled with energy from fans who screamed the lyrics back at him. With just a touch more confetti and a promise to meet fans outside by the merch stand, the rock show that stunned us all was over. YUNGBLUD is truly an incredible performer, and we can only hope it’s not another 3 years before we get to see this icon in his element again.

Photography: Jordan Munns

Words: Charlotte Najjar

                              

January 13, 2026 0 comments
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Music InterviewsMusic News

Interview: YUBIK – ‘Never Alone’ Power Through Restraint

by the partae January 10, 2026
written by the partae

‘Never Alone’ brings together three very distinct creative voices. At what point did the collaboration stop feeling like a feature and start feeling like a shared organism with its own identity?

A collaboration with Adriatique had been discussed for quite some time, and I knew that sooner or later it would happen. It really started to feel like a shared organism once the track was finished and ready to be released, especially after the Adrians played it all over the world.

You’ve spoken before about evolution rather than repetition. What was something in your own sound or process that you consciously refused to fall back on while making this record?

I consciously tried not to overproduce the track, or in other words, not to get lost in too many details. A minimalist approach and an openness to something new were very important to me.

The track is engineered for peak-time impact, yet it carries a strong emotional undercurrent. How do you personally judge when a record has the right balance between physical energy and emotional weight?

That happens in the places where the track is played and through the feedback from the people there.

Working with Adriatique often carries a certain expectation within the melodic techno world. Did that pressure sharpen your instincts, or did it give you permission to push further than usual?

To be honest, it never felt like pressure. I make music as well as I can and try to stay true to myself. Only when I feel connected to what I’m doing and genuinely enjoy the process do the best things emerge.

Vincent Vossen’s contribution adds a subtle emotional tension to the track. How did his approach reshape moments of the arrangement that might otherwise have gone in a more traditional club direction?

Vincent and I share a special connection, and that’s something you can clearly hear reflected in the track.

There’s a sense of restraint in ‘Never Alone’ — nothing feels overcrowded. Was minimalism a deliberate philosophy here, or did it emerge naturally through collaboration?

My approach is always to work in a minimalist and very structured way (very German of me, I know), even though it doesn’t always work out that way.

You’ve released music across Afterlife, Siamese, and now X Recordings. Do different labels subtly change how you think about storytelling within a track, even before a note is written?

Everything in life influences us, so I’d be lying if I said it didn’t. That said, it’s less about the labels and more about the music itself, which is where I draw my inspiration from.

When DJs respond early and strongly to a record, as they already have with ‘Never Alone’, does that validation influence your confidence, or do you deliberately tune it out to protect your long-term vision?

It strengthens my confidence 100% and gives me energy and reassurance that I’m on the right path.

Looking back at your output since 2018, what part of your earlier work feels most distant from who you are now, and what part still feels fundamentally unchanged?

Everything feels exactly right. Every release was a step that led me to where I am now.

‘Never Alone’ suggests connection, unity, even dependence. In an industry that can often feel isolating, what does that title reflect about where you’re at personally as an artist right now?

Never Alone means you can’t do this on your own. I’m grateful to have people who believe in me, and that gives me strength.

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January 10, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

I hate Models – Friday, January 2, 2026 – The Works – Sydney

by the partae January 10, 2026
written by the partae
Photography: Josh Ma
Review: Hudson Reed
Walking into the I Hate Models show in Sydney on January 2, 2026 felt less like entering a club and more like stepping into a pressure chamber. From the first kick drum, the room was locked in. No warm-up, no easing in, just raw, relentless momentum. The crowd knew exactly what they were there for, and within minutes the dancefloor turned into a single heaving body, moving on instinct rather than rhythm.

What stood out most was the emotional range in the set. It wasn’t just hard techno for the sake of intensity; there were moments that felt almost cinematic, where distorted melodies cut through the noise and gave everyone a split second to breathe before being thrown straight back into chaos. Those transitions hit hard. You could see it on people’s faces. Eyes closed, jaws clenched, hands in the air like they were bracing for impact.

The sound system was pushed to its limits, but in the best way possible. Every low end punch landed square in the chest, while the highs sliced cleanly without ever feeling muddy. The lighting stayed dark and aggressive, perfectly matching the mood: minimal, strobing, unforgiving.

By the final stretch, sweat was dripping from the ceiling and nobody wanted it to end. Walking out into the Sydney night felt surreal, like waking up from something intense and slightly unhinged. It wasn’t just a set, it was a full-body experience. One that’ll stick with me for a long time.

January 10, 2026 0 comments
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Music News

Falling You — Metanoia An Album That Lives in the Space Between Memory and Transformation

by the partae January 10, 2026
written by the partae

There are albums you listen to, and albums you inhabit. Metanoia, out now from Falling You, belongs firmly to the latter.

Created by composer and sound sculptor John Michael Zorko, Metanoia unfolds as a deeply immersive emotional environment rather than a conventional collection of tracks. Built from atmospheric synths, textured guitars, and cinematic sound design, the album moves slowly and deliberately, allowing space for reflection, memory, and emotional shift.

The title Metanoia—a word describing a profound change of heart or mind—perfectly frames the listening experience. Across eleven tracks, Zorko explores grief, beauty, cosmic longing, and quiet resilience. Nothing here is rushed. Each piece feels intentional, patient, and inward-looking.

Collaboration sits at the heart of the album. A carefully curated group of guest vocalists drift through the record, their voices carrying much of its emotional gravity. Rather than dominating the compositions, these performances emerge organically, blending into the soundscape and reinforcing the album’s sense of shared emotional space. Songs like “Alcyone,” “Flesh to Tree,” and “Ariadne” feel both intimate and vast, while the closing moments of “(trying to weave) A Thread of Happiness” land with a rare softness.

Genre lines dissolve throughout Metanoia. Ambient, dream pop, and cinematic post-rock coexist without friction, creating a sound that feels expansive yet deeply personal. It is an album best experienced in full—headphones on, distractions removed—where its slow-building arcs can fully take hold.

In a culture defined by speed and noise, Metanoia offers something increasingly rare: music that asks for presence rather than attention. It doesn’t demand reaction. It invites stillness.


January 10, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Haçienda Bangkok Reveals Full Lineup w/ 808 State, Peter Hook (New Order), Basement Jaxx and more

by the partae January 8, 2026
written by the partae

On 24th January, the legendary FAC51 The Haçienda returns to Bangkok to transform Ambience Space into a multi-room, day festival experience and the venue’s first event of this scale in a landmark moment for the city’s evolving cultural landscape. A Bangkok debut DJ set for Basement Jaxx headlines with ex Joy Division and New Order bassist Peter Hook playing alongside Manchester legends like 808 State, Jon Dasilva, DJ Paullete, and more heady house and tech from Move D, Huerta, Liquid Earth and others.

Born in Manchester in 1982, The Haçienda defined modern club culture and launched a global movement that still resonates today. Its return to Bangkok celebrates a long-standing musical connection between Manchester and Krung Thep, first forged in the 80s, carried forward by new generations and still live on today’s dancefloors.

Basement Jaxx are Brit Award-winning pioneers whose explosive DJ sets blend house, breaks, carnival energy and timeless classics. 25 years on from Rooty, they remain one of dance music’s most electrifying forces.

Very Special Guest Peter Hook makes a rare appearance. He is the Haçienda’s original owner and founding architect of Manchester’s sound with his bass playing in Joy Division and New Order and is a direct link to the club’s origins, bringing its spirit, stories and attitude to Bangkok.

Fellow Manchester legends 808 State, acid house trailblazers and electronic music pioneers, Jon Dasilva, a seminal Haçienda resident and early sonic architect, DJ Paulette, another Haçienda resident, LGBTQ+ pioneer and UK club icon also play. Add in Move D, a deep, emotive selector and long-time cult favourite, Panorama Bar regular and modern house standout Huerta and hardware-driven house, electro and tech-funk innovator Liquid Earth and together, the line-up reflects the Haçienda’s original forward-facing ethos by bridging legacy and future dancefloor sounds.

Room 2 is hosted by Mixmag & Transport. Celebrating Transport’s 10th Anniversary, this room unites one of the world’s leading dance platforms with Bangkok’s longest-running underground party.

Room 3 is a Bangkok Collectives Showcase featuring Yellowfang, Pissawong, More Rice, Kangkao, Romrom and more, alongside pop-up record stalls and official Haçienda merchandise.

Produced with support from Maho Rasop, Bar Temp, Transport and Bangkok Community Radio and with tickets strictly limited to 2,000, this is a must-attend event that will go down in history.

 

Full Line-up:

Basement Jaxx (DJ Set) • Peter Hook • 808 State • Jon Dasilva • DJ Paulette • Move D • Huerta • Liquid Earth • Yellowfang • Pam Anantr • Ché Wax • Overmars • Transport 10th Anniversary (Room 2) • Pissawong • More Rice • Kangkao • Romrom • Olbi Iyah (Room 3)

 

Tickets are strictly limited to 2000 and are on sale now at; https://www.ticketmelon.com/FAC51/HaciendaBangkok

FAC51 THE HAÇIENDA, BANGKOK

24 Jan 2026 | 14:00-24:00

Ambience Space, City Centre (10400)

https://ambiencespace.co/

First-ever multi-room dance festival with 2,000 capacity

 

January 8, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Music Venue 77 Announces 2026 opening schedule w/ Dennis Ferrer, Zamna & More

by the partae January 8, 2026
written by the partae

77 Unveils First Events of 2026 to build on a breakout first year

Zamna, Dennis Ferrer, Trikk, Julya Karma, Magdalena and more feature​

As it enters the new year, London music venue 77 has announced its 2026 opening schedule, continuing its focus on music-led events within a purpose-built space designed around sound, lighting and a deep connection between artist and crowd.

After a hugely successful inaugural Autumn/Winter season, the new programme continues 77’s commitment to bringing together a community of dedicated music fans, showcasing house and techno from internationally respected artists in a space crafted for an immersive music experience.

Alongside its in-house programme, 77 will also be partnering with Zamna and Lone Collective, marking the beginning of a new series of collaborative event nights that bring globally recognised brands and distinctive curatorial identities into the space.

Successful event ACASO have also chosen 77 as their preferred destination, adding further depth and profile to the line-up and cementing the venue’s reputation as a trusted home for electronic music.

January is led by a standout collaboration on Saturday 24 January with Lone Collective and the globally recognised Zamna brand which hosts immerse showcases across the globe.

February sees house and techno royalty step into the booth, including US pioneer Dennis Ferrer on Friday 6 February as he brings his timeless, soul-driven sound to Marylebone. Later in the month, Magdalena and Yvonne Simone land on Friday 20 February with a refined blend of melodic depth and groove-led energy. The cult Zamna brand then returns on Friday 27 February.

March continues the momentum with line-ups including CIZA, Julya Karma, Nowa, Trikk and Novak, with Julya Karma, Nowa and Trikk all part of the Innervisions label family, reinforcing 77’s commitment to genre-spanning programming.

More artists and events will be announced across the coming weeks, with the opening setting the tone for what promises to be a defining year ahead.

 

77 A-Z Lineup 2026

ACASO

Amirita

AYA

CIZA

Culoe De Song

Dennis Ferrer

Indigenous

Julya Karma

Kasango

Le Blanc

Lone Collective

Magdalena

Novak

Nowa

Temple Tales Presents

Trikk

Vidojean

Yvonne Simone

Zamna

More to be announced

Tickets | Website | Instagram 

January 8, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Chinese Laundry Brings Global Tastemakers and Local Trailblazers Together for an Immersive Summer Season

by the partae January 8, 2026
written by the partae

Chinese Laundry is underway with its most expansive summer program to date, continuing its legacy as Sydney’s home for tightly curated electronic music events. The clubbing institution welcomes global icons, rising experimentalists, national heavyweights, and community-shaping collectives, reinforcing its role as a vital platform for Australian talent and a destination for discerning dancers.

For 30 years, Chinese Laundry has championed underground electronic expression with a community-first ethos, supporting emerging artists while attracting the world’s most respected selectors across a myriad of scenes and subgenres. Its intimate atmosphere remains a space where club enthusiasts come for music-first experiences: close-knit dancefloors, a phone-free dancefloor, and diverse programming that strengthens Sydney’s nightlife.

This summer channels that legacy with a lineup spanning techno, house, drum & bass, and deep progressive journeys, welcoming standout local collectives and residents.

Program Highlights

  • January 9 sees Berlin-based Alex Kassian kickstart the year with his signature blend of psychedelic house, cosmic disco and melodic techno.
  • January 9 sees Berlin-based Alex Kassian kickstart the year with his signature blend of psychedelic house, cosmic disco and melodic techno.
  • January 10 welcomes Merve b2b Ben Fester, delivering a high-energy, back-to-back session that cuts across house, techno and breaks. Joined by Marli, expect fast-moving selections and dancefloor-focused momentum built for peak-time club energy.
  • January 17 brings UK DJ/producer IMOGEN, who delivers a raw, club-focused sound spanning techno, electro and bass, shaped by her roots in London’s underground and appearances at venues like fabric and Berghain. Joined by Amsterdam-based AMORAL, whose driving grooves and rolling basslines balance power and precision for a high-impact club session.
  • January 23 presents Mandidextrous. Expect a fusion of free tekno, 4×4 beats and D&B-inspired energy from the Bristol-based artist, a pioneering figure in the tekno and speed bass scene known for explosive, high-velocity sets that push beyond genre boundaries.
  • January 24 sees Olivia Mendez take a vinyl-only approach, delivering deep, minimal and hypnotic techno selections. Her sets prioritise groove, texture and flow, creating an immersive late-night atmosphere.
  • January 31 closes out the month as trance legend John 00 Fleming returns with an extended progressive odyssey. With a career dating back to the late 1980s and founder of the influential JOOF Recordings, Fleming’s transcendent sets blend progressive, psy and classic trance.

While more names are yet to be announced for the months ahead, Chinese Laundry collaborates with Sydney collectives and resident DJs, expanding pathways for emerging talent and nurturing sonic communities that represent the depth of Australia’s electronic landscape.

Chinese Laundry’s fresh approach to programming reflects decades of community development, mentorship, and cultural stewardship in Sydney nightlife. Together with collectives, residents, and visiting tastemakers, the team curates weekly experiences with artist discovery at their core, bridging new electronic movements with the club’s long-standing reputation for unforgettable electronic music experiences. Tickets are available here.

ABOUT CHINESE LAUNDRY
Chinese Laundry is a landmark of Australian club culture, celebrated for its rave rooms, underground spirit, and three-decade legacy in electronic music. Chinese Laundry’s Sussex St location has an illustrious history dating back over 100 years. The venue became notorious in the ‘60s for hosting underground parties, both legal and illegal, to celebrate music, expression, and freedom. Today, the club delivers intimate dancefloors, discovery-led programming, and state-of-the-art sound. Chinese Laundry was a key platform in supporting emerging talents like Flume and Dom Dolla, while hosting electronic luminaries such as Sasha, Jeff Mills and Goldie. Chinese Laundry remains steadfast in its commitment to nurturing both current and future generations of musical talent, eagerly supporting innovative and distinctive concepts.

FOLLOW CHINESE LAUNDRY

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Music News

Water Stones: Lynn Patrick’s Quiet Masterpiece of Grace, Motion, and Emotional Clarity

by the partae January 8, 2026
written by the partae

There’s a quiet confidence to Water Stones that’s felt almost immediately. It doesn’t announce itself or lean on spectacle. Instead, it settles in slowly, the way certain records do when they’re built on feeling rather than intention. For Lynn Patrick, this album feels less like a statement and more like a reflection—one shaped by time, patience, and an instinctive understanding of space.

The record is rooted in acoustic guitar, but calling it guitar-led undersells what’s happening here. Mandolin, violin, upright bass, and gentle percussion move around the melodies with a natural ease, never crowding the frame. Everything feels considered, but never careful. There’s a looseness to the arrangements, a sense that the music is allowed to breathe rather than be guided.

Patrick’s playing is expressive without being showy. Notes are chosen for how they feel, not how they impress. Melodies arrive unforced, often lingering just long enough before moving on. Tracks like “Surfing Lu Lu” and “Breezy Sassafras” carry a quiet sense of lift, while others—“Unknown Changes” or the title track—slow things down, creating space for reflection rather than resolution.

The idea behind Water Stones is simple, but deeply effective. Like water shaping stone, the album reflects the way experience gradually alters us. There’s no urgency here, no dramatic peaks or forced emotion. Instead, the record moves gently, trusting that time and repetition will do the work. It’s music that doesn’t demand attention so much as reward it.

What stands out most is how natural the album feels. Nothing sounds overworked. Nothing feels placed for effect. There’s an organic flow from track to track, as though the songs are part of the same landscape rather than separate ideas stitched together. That sense of continuity makes the album easy to sit with, whether you’re listening closely or letting it play in the background of a quiet afternoon.

Nature has clearly left its mark on this record. You can hear it in the openness of the arrangements and the way the music seems to move rather than progress. It evokes wide spaces and slow moments—the kind where nothing is happening, yet everything feels present. Rather than telling a story outright, Water Stones allows listeners to bring their own into the frame.

There’s also a warmth running through the album that’s difficult to fake. It’s not nostalgia, and it’s not sentimentality. It’s the warmth that comes from an artist who knows when to step back and let the music speak for itself. Patrick’s restraint is one of her greatest strengths here, allowing emotion to surface naturally instead of being pushed forward.

Across its twelve tracks, Water Stones maintains a steady emotional clarity. It never overwhelms, but it also never fades into the background. It’s the kind of record that grows more familiar with time, revealing small details on repeat listens—an unexpected harmony, a subtle rhythmic shift, a melody that lingers longer than expected.

In a landscape crowded with urgency and noise, Water Stones feels refreshingly unhurried. It’s an album built on trust—trust in melody, in silence, and in the listener. Not something to rush through, but something to return to, again and again, when quiet feels like the right place to be.

About Lynn Patrick

Lynn Patrick is an award-winning guitarist and composer whose work is deeply shaped by nature, movement, and emotional intuition. Raised in Florida in a musically active family, Lynn grew up surrounded by song and instruments, while early experiences spent in and around the ocean—swimming, sailing, snorkeling, and exploring—helped form the foundation of her creative voice. After earning a Humanities degree from Florida State University, she moved to Boston to pursue music before settling in Colorado, where the Rocky Mountains became a lasting source of inspiration. She has lived west of Boulder for more than two decades, drawing creative energy from the surrounding landscape.

Lynn has independently produced and released six instrumental albums and one vocal album, earning recognition for her expressive, melodic guitar style. Her work has been honoured with two Independent Music Awards for Best New Age Song, along with finalist placements in the USA Songwriting Competition and multiple acoustic music awards.

Her music has appeared widely across film, television, and broadcast media, including a three-year feature on The Young and the Restless, documentary soundtracks, and outlets such as NPR, SiriusXM, and The Weather Channel. With more than 16 million streams worldwide, Lynn has also performed at iconic venues including Red Rocks Amphitheatre, The Bitter End, The Bluebird Café, SXSW, and festivals throughout Colorado.

WEBSITE

January 8, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Summer in the Park returns in 2026 with free arts and music across Boroondara gardens

by the partae January 7, 2026
written by the partae

Summer in the Park 2026 champions sustainability, local artists, cultural diversity and community connection and the full program features over 70 artists and 21 vibrant performances in the inner-East’s most iconic parks and gardens.

The 2026 program commences with a special night of Indigenous storytelling, ceremony, dance and music curated by Jason Tamiru. Wander through the magical Maranoa Gardens from 6 pm, then gather for a deeply moving evening featuring evocative dance group Culture Evolves, opera, First Nations folk music and more.

The Camberwell Civic Precinct Hub, which will feature a solar-powered stage hosting live music, dancing, and community activities every Friday from 30 January to 27 February.

Friday 30 January: Party in the Park
Features powerhouse First Nations vocalist Bumpy, party-starter DJ Mz Rizk, and iconic soul trio Cookin’ on 3 Burners.

Friday 6  Dannii Disco in the Park
A celebration of local icons with Perfectly Queer and DJ Chelsea Wilson (Disco gear and sequins are encouraged!)

Friday 13 February: Zorba in the Park
An evening of classic Greek melodies, dance lessons, and big community energy from beloved Melbourne Greek outfit, Estudiantina of Melbourne

Friday 20 February: Country in the Park
Boot-scootin’ and line dancing fun with the Country Struts and toe-tapping live bluegrass by the Canyon Callers

Friday 27 February: Gusto Gusto in the Park
The Friday Hub series closes with a euphoric global-music party featuring one of Australia’s hottest festival bands, Gusto Gusto, fresh from stages like Glastonbury

Slow Art Collective will be installing a progressive artwork at the Camberwell Hub, with all festival-goers invited to contribute to its colourful structure over five festive weeks

Other festival events include Lunar New Year in the Park (Sunday 15 February) at Balwyn Park, Classical in the Park (Saturday 7 February) at Alexandra Gardens, Jazz in the Park (Saturday 21 February) at Riversdale Park, and Opera in the Park: La Dolce Vita (Saturday 28 February) at Canterbury Gardens

Enjoy more Family Fun with Woody’s Bush Bash at Maling Road (kids’ cabaret: puppetry, ukulele, Aussie stories) and Cinema in the Park: The Addams Family at Greythorn Park (outdoor spooky movie screening, costume prizes)

Alternative Valentine’s Day at Junction Skate offers young people a chance to skip the clichés for Valentine’s Day with skate and BMX competitions with pros, followed by a free concert featuring popular Indie bands Krystal Rivvers and Vollie.

“Summer in the Park is a wonderful opportunity to enjoy free, family‑friendly entertainment in Boroondara’s beautiful gardens and parks. With music, kids’ activities, outdoor cinema and more, there’s something for everyone – so bring a picnic and join us for a safe, welcoming celebration of community.” – City of Boroondara Mayor, Wes Gault

This accessible and inclusive festival is completely free, no booking required. Simply bring a picnic blanket, gather your friends, family and neighbours, and enjoy the magic of summer in Boroondara.

Dates: 
29 January – 28 February 2026

Schedule:

Djirrungana Kulture – Maranoa Gardens, Thursday 29 January, 6 to 8 pm

Party in the Park – Camberwell Civic Precinct Hub – Friday 30 January, 5 to 8pmWoody’s Bush Bash in the Mall – Theatre Place, Maling Road – Saturday 31 January, 10 to 11:30 am

Kylie and Dannii Disco in the Park – Camberwell Civic Precinct Hub, Friday 6 February, 5 to 8 pm

Classical in the Park – Alexandra Gardens, Saturday, 7 February, 5 to 7 pm

Zorba in the Park – Camberwell Civic Precinct Hub, Friday 13 February, 5 to 8 pm
Cinema in the Park – Greythorn Park, Friday 13 February, 6 to 8 pm

Alternative Valentine’s Day – Junction Skate Park, Saturday 14 February 4:30 to 8 pm
Lunar New Year in the Park – Balwyn Park, Sunday 15 February, 4 to 6 pm

Country in the Park – Camberwell Civic Precinct Hub, Friday 20 February, 5 to 8 pm

Jazz in the Park – Riversdale Park, Saturday 21 February, 5 to 8 pm

Gusto Gusto in the Park – Camberwell Civic Precinct, Friday  27 February, 5 to 8 pm
Opera in the Park: La Dolce Vita – Canterbury Garden, Saturday 28 February, 5 to 8 pm

Stay tuned for more event updates and announcements.

FREE and un-ticketed

Event Link

January 7, 2026 0 comments
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AO LIVE: Supports just announced

by the partae January 7, 2026
written by the partae

FIVE stacked nights await us at the end of January as we take over John Cain Arena for the next rendition of AO LIVE.

With under three weeks until it all kicks off, lock in your tickets now or miss out.

TICKETS & INFORMATION

TOUR DATES

Wednesday 28 January 2026 – 5-9 pm AEDT
The Kid LAROI
+ May-a & Will Swinton

Thursday 29 January 2026 – 5-9 pm AEDT
Spacey Jane
+ Mallrat & The Belair Lip Bombs

Friday 30 January 2026 -5-9 pm AEDT
The Veronicas + Sofi Tukker
+ Memphis LK

Saturday 31 January 2026 – 2-7 pm AEDT
Renee Rap

+ Cat + Calmell 
AO Women’s Final – 7.30pm

Sunday 1 February 2026 – 2-7 pm AEDT
Peggy Gou
+ Shygirl Presents Club Shy, Baby J & Bryson Hill
AO Men’s Final – 7.30pm

TICKETS & INFORMATION

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January 7, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

RECORD STORE DAY RETURNS SATURDAY 18 APRIL 2026

by the partae January 7, 2026
written by the partae

Record Store Day Australia returns for 2026 on Saturday 18 April, celebrating the vital role independently owned record stores play in Australian communities and the people who make them thrive; from store owners and staff, to artists, labels and music lovers.

Since its beginnings in 2008, Record Store Day has grown into a global celebration of independent music retail. The day continues to support music communities, labels, emerging and established artists, while supporting our local indie record stores, highlighting their unique role as cultural hubs and community spaces.

The continued resurgence of physical music formats from vinyl to CDs, cassettes, and more has people coming together in record stores to discover music, connect with their communities, and celebrate the culture that exists beyond streaming platforms.

Artists and labels are invited to submit expressions of interest to release music as part of Record Store Day Australia 2026. Releases may be presented via OG formats, vinyl, CD, and cassette, or via KiTbetter, the new hybrid physical and digital music format designed to blend the collectible appeal of physical music products of albums, photo cards, booklets, and merchandise, helping restore value in music ownership by giving fans something tangible to hold and as well as the connected digital experience. Record Store Day Australia aims to provide flexible pathways for artists to participate while celebrating physical and collectable formats. EOIs close Friday, 30 January.

Previous years have seen releases issued as part of Record Store Day Australia from Ninajirachi, Ruel, You Am I, Pond, The Grogans, Olana Janfa, Beth and Blue, Heavy Moss, Ella Thompson, Ocean Alley, Underground Lovers, Montaigne, Tasman Keith, Confidence Man, Peking Duk and Darren Hayes collaboration, The Wiggles, Bluey and more.

Record Store Day Australia recognises record stores as more than retail spaces, but also as community hubs, where shared musical passion forges connections that digital, algorithm-driven platforms often fail to replicate.

These physical spaces facilitate intergenerational connections, from first-time vinyl buyers to seasoned collectors, who share their knowledge and help ensure that culture remains accessible. The continued existence of the physical music and vinyl ecosystem is a conscious choice, and Record Store Day highlights the unique benefits of physical music retail over digital alternatives: human-driven discovery, the promotion of intentional listening experiences, and community support for artist development.

Save The Date
Record Store Day – Saturday 18 April 2026

Artists & Labels: Expressions of interest are now open for Record Store Day Australia releases in Vinyl, CD, Cassette, or KiTbetter formats.
EOIs CLOSE 5 PM FRIDAY, 30 JANUARY.  Submit HERE 

Stay tuned for more announcements soon!

For more information on how to participate in Record Store Day Australia, or sign up to receive updates, visit recordstoreday.com.au

FOLLOW RECORD STORE DAY AUSTRALIA

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