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Linkin Park Deliver an Emotional and Electric Night Two in Sydney

March 18, 2026

Riley Green – Hordern Pavilion- 16 March 2026

March 18, 2026

Peach PRC At Hordern Pavilion – 15 March 2026

March 16, 2026

A Perfect Circle Return to Australia in 2026 With Special Guest Puscifer

March 16, 2026

ICONIC MELBOURNE DJ MARK PELLEGRINI – CELEBRATES 40 YEARS BEHIND THE DECKS

March 16, 2026

Interview: LAMOUR on KARMA, Crooner Energy and Life After Touring with Peter...

March 16, 2026

Interview: Julia Sound Explores Emotion, Politics and Hope on New Album midlife

March 16, 2026

The Lemon Twigs (USA) announce new album Look For Your Mind! out...

March 16, 2026

INTERVIEW: Nautical Mile Return With ‘Daydreamer’ After Four Years Away

March 16, 2026

Clay Hazey Finds Hope in the Frost on ‘Tulips’

March 14, 2026
Monthly Archives

March 2026

Music InterviewsMusic News

Interview: Strange Fruit – Rebuilding the Signal After a Decade in the Shadows

by the partae March 10, 2026
written by the partae

How did the long period away from releasing music reshape the way you think about Strange Fruit as a band, both creatively and personally?

Baldi: Throughout our hiatus, it’s not like we stopped making music. Irza and I kept writing songs and exploring sounds we wanted to shape into the Strange Fruit identity. The process took a long time because we each had our own things going on, but that didn’t mean the music ever stopped.

For me personally, the hiatus turned into a kind of spiritual journey back to the band. Getting to where we are now required a long process. We’ve always wanted to give the best quality from Strange Fruit, and we truly believe quality takes time. It took us a while because we weren’t fully confident in the material until it was completely finished.

Over those 10 years, we actually drafted two albums. The challenge was that we were never fully satisfied, so we kept rerecording and refining. Eventually, that process led us to the material for the Drips EP, and to discovering our new sonic identity. We finally found the sound that truly feels like us as a band.

Irza: Took a bit to find space for everything — digital pulses, analogue bits, and that grey area in between. Didn’t quite line up at first.

We let it all collapse into itself: Moog Grandmother and Erica Synth’s Delay & LXR, cold TR8’, scattered CR-78, and 808 percussion, drifting guitars hanging in the dark.

Mad thing is, sometimes you land on a sound that’s proper on tune’s there, then next go it’s gone. Can’t get it back the same.

But it all comes together into something hypnotic, strange, and oddly “santai”.

A lot happened during the hiatus. We needed to step back, breathe for a moment, and return to the same room, just to see what was still there.

John: But it’s not only about music and sounds, I think this process has given us an opportunity to be more solid in our friendship and collaboration.

When you look back at your earlier shoegaze-driven work, what felt limiting about that version of the band, and what finally unlocked the shift toward this more electronic, rhythmic sound?

Baldi: Wherever Irza and I go, or whatever music we’re listening to, it somehow always leads us back to shoegaze. That will probably always be our main reference point. If it ever felt limiting, it wasn’t really the genre itself—it was more about us feeling bored or stuck with our songwriting.

Before Drips, when we were recording the two albums I mentioned earlier, everything was built around the guitar. The guitar was the foundation of our sound. But over time it started to feel a bit stagnant, like we weren’t really growing or exploring new sounds.

During our hiatus, I was working at a record store around 2015. I met a lot of people there and got exposed to more electronic music. I started listening to it more seriously, and it really opened up my perspective. That’s when I began thinking that Strange Fruit could grow further if we started adding electronic elements. Those sounds brought a different kind of richness and depth that we couldn’t get from guitar alone. I felt that if we kept relying on guitar as the main base for writing, we might not develop much further.

Bands like Broadcast, Kraftwerk, Silver Apples, Stereolab, CAN, Primal Scream, and LCD Soundsystem were big inspirations for us. Watching them perform surrounded by synthesizers—and hearing how huge and powerful the sound could be—made us want to try something similar with Strange Fruit. Since then, we’ve been exploring, collecting synths, and experimenting with drum machines.

Irza: Honestly, I don’t think we’re quite there yet. Maybe we’ve found the key, but the door’s still locked. Might open up with the next batch of tracks for the LP — or maybe through something a bit more spontaneous, like a split EP with artists from different corners of the world.

For me it’s always been about connecting through music. That’s the real thing, innit. That’s partly how “Iridescent” ended up leaning into the Madchester sound.

But I’ve chucked in a bit of Mort Garson’s cosmic Moog energy, a bit of Neu!’s motorik pulse sometimes. Still, none of it would’ve come together without Baldi, Nabil, John, and Dino. That’s the real key, to be honest. Haha.

Sometimes I wonder if there’s a ceiling to this whole electronic thing in the future. Might just end up nicking a proper high-end futuristic AI limiter software and call it a day. So where’s the line, then? Part of the game, I suppose.

John: Electronic tones and rhythm have limitless sounds, so when we shift towards electronic based music we found our new identity but still preserving our guitar driven past with a new nuance.

“Iridescent” has been described as spiritual and healing — was that feeling something you consciously set out to capture, or did it reveal itself as the track came together?

Baldi: It all happened pretty naturally. Irza first drafted the song back in 2020. We tried to finish it soon after, but we got stuck and eventually left it unfinished. That’s kind of been one of this band’s weaknesses—when we hit a wall with a song, we tend to move on instead of pushing through and finishing it.

Eventually, we decided to record it with our producer, Bernardus Fritz. Fun fact: we had actually recorded demos for a completely different album with him—eight songs in total. The demos were done, and we only needed to finish them in the studio. But in the middle of that process, we started doubting the material again and lost confidence in those eight songs.

So I went back and opened our old drafts, including Iridescent. I listened to everything again, re-curated the songs, and picked the ones that felt worth developing further. In 2024, we began working on what would eventually become the material for our Drips EP. As we continued, we slowly regained confidence in our sound. What we had been imagining for years finally started to take shape.

For Iridescent, we finished the music first and wrote the lyrics afterward. Once the music was done, the phrase that came to mind was “radiant colours.” To me, the song feels spiritual and healing, because the lyrics reflect what we’ve gone through as a band over the past ten years. In a way, telling that story feels healing.

Irza: It was during Covid, so everything was locked down and I ended up spending most of the time stuck in the studio. No festivals, no raves, no cinema — nothing really moving. It felt a bit numb.

But in a strange way we were lucky. We still had our little virtual world, and out of that a different kind of creativity started to appear. I needed some sort of refreshment, so “Iridescent” came out of that odd moment. I’d never really worked like that before — it’s usually an in-the-room process — but somehow the music still found its way.

It was written in a bit of a depressive haze, but with small bits of hope stitched into it. Almost like moving through a modern kind of plague-era mood — dark, uncertain, but still pushing forward.

A lot of Drips EP feels built around movement and repetition rather than traditional song structures. What draws you to that hypnotic approach right now?

Baldi: Consciously or not, it may stem from the fact that I’m also a DJ—someone who spends a lot of time listening to quite repetitive dance music. I’ve been particularly inspired by Andrew Weatherall, especially his slower-tempo sets. For me, repetition carries a strong hypnotic quality. When an arrangement is crafted carefully, repetition doesn’t have to feel monotonous; it can become immersive and powerful.

That said, this album wasn’t intentionally conceptualised around repetition. It’s simply a reflection of the way I naturally write, which may be influenced by the amount of dance music I listen to. I don’t see repetition as a limitation in songwriting; when used thoughtfully, it can be incredibly engaging. Every piece of music has its own character, and as long as it’s shaped with care, repetition can create a hypnotic effect—something I feel very comfortable embracing.

Irza: The first time I heard Kraftwerk’s “Autobahn”, something just locked in — that steady 4/4 pulse, the endless motorik motion. A rhythm that doesn’t really go anywhere, it just keeps moving forward. I’ve always had a soft spot for that sort of mechanical repetition.

I live a bit outside the centre, so driving becomes part of the routine. After a while I started thinking about writing something specifically for that space — the road, the hum of the engine, that constant forward momentum. That’s where “Pouvoir Moteur” came from. It roughly translates to “motor power”, or the idea of a motorik engine quietly starting up.

The track is really about movement — how an engine ignites, gathers rhythm, and settles into its own pulse. That moment when the machine stops being just a machine and starts feeling almost alive.

Whether the engine actually wakes up… we’ll see. Maybe it’s already buried somewhere in someone’s files. Or maybe that’s just me nonsense.

John: It’s not a coincidence at all. Baldi and Irza, the main composers, came from an electronic music scene. Both of them are DJ’ing and also producing modular tracks, and these types of music are usually based on loops and repetition, escalating through different variations of fills and movements through the notes and grooves. That’s why our music sounds repetitive.

How did living in Jakarta shape the sonic world of Drips — do you feel this EP reflects a more urban, contemporary version of the city than your earlier releases?

Baldi: This EP may not directly reflect what it feels like to live in Jakarta. However, consciously or not, the fact that we live here—a city that is loud, chaotic, and densely crowded—likely seeps into Strange Fruit’s sound. You can sense it in the layers, in the noise, and in the way the band’s textures come together. At the same time, there is a certain irony within the music and the lyrics.

Many of Strange Fruit’s songs sound melodically “sweet,” with arrangements that don’t immediately suggest tension or anxiety. Yet if you listen closely to the lyrics, much of them revolve around feelings of restlessness and unease. That contrast probably reflects the environment around us in Jakarta—the relentless traffic, the fast pace of the city, and the broader political climate.

So even if it wasn’t a deliberate intention, the city inevitably influences this release. Jakarta can be a harsh place to live, and that reality naturally finds its way into the music.

Irza: It’s a bit of a reflection of a huge metropolis — massive population, plenty of chaos, and, well, corruption woven into it. But at the same time the music scene in Jakarta has been growing incredibly fast, and in a really exciting way.

There’s so much energy coming out of the city right now — new bands, new sounds, people constantly experimenting. It’s honestly one of the most vibrant scenes around.

A couple of great Jakarta bands even played our showcase recently — Crayola Eyes and Negative Lovers — both well worth checking out.

What’s even more exciting is what’s happening outside the city. Across the islands of Nusantara there’s a massive underground movement bubbling away — bands, collectives, small gigs popping up everywhere. It’s been brilliant to watch it grow.

So we figured it was time to step things up a bit. Try writing tracks we’d never really attempted before.

John: Yes it does, because people (mostly that are close to me) are listening to various kinds of music here, and it shapes how we made the music. The electronic elements that we use do reflect on how the city flows.

Each of the remixers brings a very distinct energy. What were you hoping Sean Johnston, Tom Furse, and Jonathan Kusuma would uncover or transform in your original tracks?

Baldi: It goes without saying that I’m a fan of each of the artists who contributed remixes. I’ve been listening to their original work for quite some time, so when we reached out and agreed to collaborate on these remixes, I felt there was really nothing to lose. I was confident the results would exceed my expectations and certainly wouldn’t disappoint.

To be honest, I didn’t approach the process with very specific expectations. I simply trusted that they would do a great job.

What made the experience even more rewarding was that, when we first approached them, they genuinely connected with our material. Knowing that they already appreciated the original tracks gave me confidence that whatever they created would be thoughtful and compelling.

Irza: I’ve been listening to The Horrors since their first record. I saw them at Laneway Festival in Singapore, and when they played “Sea Within a Sea”, hearing Tom Furse’s arpeggiator live was unforgettable — easily one of the best synth arps around.

So having Tom add his touch to “Monopolar”, weaving those sequences with a bit of breakbeat energy and those low-ends, it feels great, “Feels like you in my machine..” just like Baldi said, lol. Anyway, it’s been a real honour.

Those two Hardway Bros remixes felt like the perfect way to close the whole thing — playing with an SLA console must be amazing, with a completely different take on the 303s and drum machines.

John: We would like to see how the music unfolds through their perspective and we do hope that it could bring more colours from how our music sounds.

Jonathan Kusuma’s Hypnodubmix strips “Iridescent” down to something slower and heavier. How did it feel hearing your own song reinterpreted in such a minimal, almost meditative way?

Baldi: When he first sent over the remix, I listened to it and we ended up having a pretty long phone call afterward. I really liked what he did with it. I even told him, “Jon, I love this remix—I’ve never heard your drums sound like this before.” The first thing that stood out to me was how raw the drums felt. His version is called the Hypnodubmix, and to me it really feels meditative, like his own interpretation of that headspace.

What’s interesting is that, compared to the other two remixes, this one is actually the most danceable and groovy, while the others are slower and sit at a lower tempo. At one point he asked me what the song was really about, and I told him it deals with a kind of anxiety we both feel, especially about the current state of the world. Once we talked about that, everything made even more sense—his sound and the meaning behind the song really lined up, and you can hear that same sense of anxiousness in the remix.

Irza: Jonathan Kusuma’s version is another favourite of mine — he turns everything into something hypnotic. The way he processes each element, pushing the tempo and chopping Baldi’s vocals into a single piece, is brilliant. Massive respect to him.

After stepping away for so long, was there any pressure to “come back strong,” or did you give yourselves permission to simply follow instinct?

Irza: It’s not a comeback. It’s an arrival. Where it goes next depends on the departure — we’ll find our way soon enough.

John: Of course there are doubts and insecurity when we start to write again after stepping away for so long. Even the process of recording that we took is long enough to create doubt, but this doubt and insecurity does sharpen how we sound and how we elaborate.

Looking ahead to the mini-album planned for 2026, do you see Drips EP as a bridge from your past, or the foundation of something entirely new?

Baldi: We’re definitely building something new sonically—something that feels more forward-looking. For the foreseeable future, we’ll be focused on writing and continuing to develop this direction. We’re already working on another album planned for 2027, so Drips really serves as a bridge into the new sound of Strange Fruit and the material we’re creating now. In that sense, it’s less about looking back and more about moving forward.

Irza: I already wrote some demos. We’ll see what happens next.

John: The emotion and attitude is still the same, but how the repertoire sounds is far sharper now and very different from what we made in the past, so I personally think that our new music is a foundation of something entirely new.

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Festival NewsMusic News

Nautical Mile return with nostalgic new single “Daydreamer” LAUNCHING LIVE IN PERTH ON SATURDAY 28 MARCH

by the partae March 10, 2026
written by the partae

Perth pop-punk favourites Nautical Mile are officially back, returning with their nostalgic new single, “Daydreamer“. The track will make its live debut at the band’s first show in four years at Amplifier Bar in Perth on Saturday 28 March – tickets on sale now.

“Daydreamer” is an energetic, heart-on-sleeve throwback that taps into the nostalgia of simpler times, before adulthood and the grapplings of growing up set in. Written just before the band went on an indefinite hiatus, the track found new life when Nautical Mile began jamming again in 2024, quickly revealing itself as the perfect reintroduction.

Bursting with the same upbeat spirit that defined their debut album The Only Way Is Through, “Daydreamer” leans into the bright hooks, driving guitars and energy that first put the band on the radar. It reflects on better days and on reclaiming the feeling of who you were before life got complicated. “During our time away we all had a fair amount of life happening, so coming back to the band felt like us recapturing the spirit of those happier, lighter times,” says the band. “It’s a lot of fun to play, and we’re keen to get out and share it with the world.”

Forming in Perth in 2016, Nautical Mile – Brodi Owen, Caleb Wynter, Dan Ray, Nick Henrisson and Jake Vimini – quickly made a name for themselves in Australia’s pop punk space, sharing hometown stages with Trophy Eyes and Hawthorne Heights (US) early on before expanding their reach across Australia.

Since they released their debut album in 2019, featuring leading singles “Marionette” and “Regicide“, Nautical Mile have toured nationally, supporting the likes of Hellions, Senses Fail (US) and Hands Like Houses, and have amassed over a million streams online – including close to a million alone for their cover of Jesse McCartney’s “Beautiful Soul“. Along the way, they’ve received support from triple j, Unearthed and key editorial Spotify playlists including All New Punk and Rock Out.

Now, Nautical Mile step back into the spotlight with renewed momentum. “Daydreamer” marks the beginning of a new chapter, one that will be celebrated at their first show in almost four years at Amplifier Bar in Perth, before they set their sights on the east coast later in the year for the first time since 2019.

“Daydreamer” is out today and streaming everywhere now.

TICKETS

March 10, 2026 0 comments
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Music News

Hua Li Reimagines Sophia Sanford’s World on Violet Gave Willingly: Remix Vol. 1

by the partae March 10, 2026
written by the partae

The remix album Violet Gave Willingly: Remix Vol. 1 has officially arrived, and one of its most striking reinterpretations comes from Montreal-based rapper and multidisciplinary artist Hua Li. Released through producer and studio founder Sophia Sanford’s rural creative hub, Noise Machine Studio, the collaborative project brings together women and non-binary electronic artists to reimagine Sanford’s original compositions. The album expands the sonic world of Sanford’s earlier work while also serving as a community-building exercise—highlighting producers who remain underrepresented in the technical side of the music industry.

Sanford’s relationship with music has always been deeply personal. After spending her early years playing bass, piano, and trombone and touring internationally with choral and jazz ensembles, she developed a lasting fascination with the human voice and the textures of sound. That curiosity now informs both her production work and her role as a mentor at Noise Machine Studio, where artists gather to collaborate, experiment, and share knowledge. The remix album itself grows out of Sanford’s original record Violet Gave Willingly, which is closely tied to the award-winning documentary Violet Gave Willingly, directed by her sister Claire Sanford. The film centers on their mother, textile artist Deborah Dumka, offering an intimate look into her seaside studio as she reflects on memory, creativity, and a past long left unspoken. More than a portrait, the documentary unfolds as a conversation between mother and daughter—one that explores the generational impact of gender-based discrimination and the power that comes from speaking difficult truths.

Since its premiere, the film has received significant recognition on the festival circuit. It won Best Female-Directed Short at the Whistler Film Festival in 2022 and later earned a nomination at the Canadian Screen Awards in 2024. It has also screened internationally at major festivals including Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, DOC NYC, International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, and Dokufest, as well as appearing in gallery installations and workshops focused on confronting systemic sexism and violence.

Within that broader artistic world, Hua Li’s newly released remix stands out as one of the project’s most inventive transformations. Rather than approaching the track as a conventional remix, she treated it as a creative dialogue with Sanford’s original ambient material. “I think of every remix project as a negotiation with—and homage to—the original work,” Hua Li explains. “But the nature of remixing an ambient piece meant that where often my first choice as a remixer is how much of the original vocal melody I want to keep intact, I had to change my approach.”

Instead of preserving Sanford’s vocals as a lead element, Hua Li used them as the foundation for the track’s sound design. “I chose to sample Sanford’s voice for the synth sounds throughout the track, and I love how it ended up mimicking a detuned analog synth,” she says. “Sampling Sanford’s original piece in this way gave a warm, organic depth to the remix that works in contrast with the starkly electronic drum sounds.” For Sanford, collaborations like this reflect the spirit behind the entire project: artists supporting one another while pushing the boundaries of electronic production. As Violet Gave Willingly: Remix Vol. 1 begins to reach listeners, the album stands not only as an artistic extension of the original work, but also as a collective effort—bridging film, sound, and personal history while opening more space for women and non-binary producers shaping the future of electronic music.

SOCIALS

Hua Li 化力

WEBSITE / SUBSTACK / FACEBOOK / INSTAGRAM / TIK TOK / SPOTIFY / APPLE

Sophia Sanford

WEBSITE / FACEBOOK / INSTAGRAM / SPOTIFY / APPLE / BANDCAMP

Noise Machine Studio

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March 10, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Linkin Park – Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne – 8 March 2026

by the partae March 10, 2026
written by the partae

Photography: Darren Chan

TOUR DATES

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Music InterviewsMusic News

Interview: Anna Jeavons – Finding Meaning in the Chaos Inside Anomie

by the partae March 8, 2026
written by the partae

Anomie feels like a line in the sand. Did you know you were making a “chapter opener” while you were writing it, or did that realisation only come later?

When I was writing these songs, I was really in the thick of it – the loneliness, the existential angst, the fear. But recording the songs came so much later, so I’ve really been able to look back on it all as a specific time in my life, to reflect more objectively, and to more neatly package it up for presentation. The 12 songs on Anomie are all from my twenties, and reflect how I was feeling then. Not that everything has changed necessarily – I don’t think I’ll ever be free of existential anxiety. But one can hope!

Dropping a triple A-side straight out of the gate is confident. Was that decision about showing range, or about setting the emotional tone early?

A three-song release is unconventional, but felt right for me. It was definitely about showing range. While ‘Woo Me’ is the lead track, it’s very big, bright and shiny, which is not necessarily the tone of the whole album. I wanted to back it up with some more mellow, intimate tracks. That way there’s something for everyone. It’s nice to not have all the pressure on one song too. I’m not sure any one song on the album represents the project as a whole!

‘Woo Me’ has that bright, almost glossy optimism to it. When you wrote it, were you actually feeling that confidence — or reaching for it?

Woo Me is a very old song. I think when I wrote it, in my early twenties, I was genuinely a lot more bright, confident and optimistic as a person. I have since been a bit humbled – and slightly traumatised – by the world. Not necessarily in a bad way, it’s good to be aware. But you’ll see that as the album progresses I go into some much darker and more existential places. I do come out the other side though. I want it to be hope, not self pity, that’s left lingering in the listener’s ear.

You sing about wanting someone to put in effort and “show me something better than the city lights.” What does effort look like to you now? Has that definition changed as you’ve grown?

I still think it’s important to have standards and to not settle just because you’re lonely. But it’s also important to be realistic. We’re all humans at the end of the day. Crushingly imperfect. I’m lucky to now have a caring partner who makes me feel adored. But I think it’s good to aim for peace in a relationship, not necessarily heady sparks. And it shouldn’t all be about finding a partner. Your friends are often the ones who’ll be able to show you things better than the city lights.

There’s a sense in the song of being done with half-hearted love. Was there a moment where you genuinely thought, “I’d rather be single than settle”?

I think we all get that feeling. And then we forget, when in the grips of loneliness. And then we remember again. But it’s true. Don’t settle. Hold out for someone great. Who makes you feel calm. In the meantime, at the very least, you can use your big feelings for making great – and terrible – art.

Working with Benjamin Stewart, did he pull anything out of you that surprised you? Maybe a take or lyric you weren’t sure about at first?

Ben taught me so much, and took each and every song to a new level. He made sure we got what we wanted, rather than giving up when it was hard. He’s an incredibly hard worker. There were many times when he pushed me to try something new, like attempting ad libs or adding harmonies, and the final result was much better for it.

The three tracks each live in slightly different sonic spaces — from lo-fi intimacy to bigger emotional swells. Did you overthink that balance, or did it all come together pretty naturally in the studio?

My aim for most of the album was “pathos pop”, which means having a poignant quality that evokes sadness. But Ben, the genius behind Slowly Slowly, is amazing at making arrangements big and powerful. So some of the songs take it up a notch. For some, I wanted a specific feel. For example from the start, I wanted A Song About Root Vegetables to have a crackly lo-fi bedroom recording style vibe – because it’s a really vulnerable song. I’m just so grateful to Ben for helping bring these songs to life in the way I wanted.

‘A Song About Root Vegetables’ is such a left-field title. Where does that playful, almost absurd edge sit alongside the more existential parts of Anomie?

It’s a melancholic album, but there’s a lot of humour to it too. I navigate life with a lot of absurdity and playfulness – you have to right? Humour is a much more productive alternative to despair. So it makes sense that that’s come out in the songs.

Adelaide has really backed you over the years. When you step onto bigger stages or release something nationally, do you still feel that hometown energy with you?

I love the Adelaide music community. The only reason I make music is because my friends here have been aggressively supportive over the years, pushing me onto stages and making me put myself out there – even when I didn’t know what I was doing. It’s a big part of why we started Girls Rock! Adelaide, a music mentorship program for girls, trans and nonbinary young folk. I just wanted everyone to feel as accepted and encouraged as I did as a young person.

When someone presses play on Anomie for the first time, what’s the feeling you hope lingers after it ends? Not the review-ready answer – the honest one.

Music is a place where I can open up free of judgement and reflect. In sharing my songs, I give others permission to do the same. I hope that it can help listeners feel less alone: that it helps them recognise and accept their loneliness, and reassure them that their griefs and disappointments are not so strange or shameful. I hope it’s cathartic. And that it encourages listeners to consider, however tentatively, that things might just be alright.

 

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March 8, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

The Jungle Giants – 12 Shows Across AU & NZ This winter

by the partae March 5, 2026
written by the partae

The Jungle Giants are back!

The energetic 4 piece return to stages down under with with their 5th studio album, ‘Experiencing Feelings of Joy’. Supported by up and comers The Tullamarines and Tear Drive (AU only) these shows are for tastemakers and dancefloor demons alike.

With close to half a billion streams under their belt and a reputation for lighting up festival stages this tour unveils a bold new evolution of The Jungle Giants’ signature sound.

SIGNUP FOR PRESALE ACCESS
TOUR INFORMATION

SHOW DATES

Fri 5 June 2026 — Theatre Royal — Castlemaine, VIC

Sat 6 June 2026 — Forum — Melbourne, VIC

Fri 12 June 2026 — Enmore Theatre — Sydney, NSW

Sat 13 June 2026 — Fortitude Music Hall — Brisbane, QLD

Fri 19 June 2026 — UC Refectory — Canberra, ACT

Sat 20 June 2026 — Hindley Street Music Hall — Adelaide, SA

Fri 3 July 2026 — Forth Pub — Forth, TAS

Sat 4 July 2026 — Odeon Theatre — Hobart, TAS

Fri 10 July 2026 — Meow Nui — Wellington

Sat 11 July 2026 — Powerstation — Auckland

Sun 12 July 2026 — James Hay Theatre — Christchurch

Sat 18 July 2026 — Astor Theatre — Perth

PRESALE

Thu 5 Mar – 10:00am local time

Presale tickets are available to purchase from a presale link from 10:00am local time on Thu 5 Mar. Subject to further availability, the remaining ticket allocation shall be available for sale to the general public from 10:00am local time on Tue 10 Mar.

ON SALE

Tue 10 Mar – 10:00am local time.

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March 5, 2026 0 comments
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Music News

Arky Waters Captures Lightning in a Bottle on ‘OMG’

by the partae March 5, 2026
written by the partae

Australian producer/dj Arky Waters returns this week with ‘OMG’, a song born from a flash of inspiration and the next preview of his forthcoming album.

Built around a striking vocal sample that instantly caught his ear, ‘OMG’ captures one of those rare, fast-moving studio moments where everything clicks.

“I was in the studio with a friend, and he showed me this ‘omg’ sample that I completely fell in love with. I went home and the song came together rather quickly, one of those bursts of inspiration moments. After that I spent a lot of time detailing the bass on this track, carving out all the different layers. I wanted it to feel really immersive and textural.” says Arky Waters.

That attention to detail shines through in the finished track, with ‘OMG’ balancing immediacy and depth, punchy, playful and club-ready, while layered with rich low-end and finely sculpted production. It’s a confident showcase of Arky Waters’ evolving sound, rooted in groove and driven by texture.

Following a run of releases that have steadily built anticipation for his upcoming album, ‘OMG’ signals an artist in full creative flow, refining his sonic identity while leaning into instinct and momentum.

‘OMG” is out now via
Mammal Sounds Records:

https://bfan.link/arkywaters-omg

Socials:

https://linktr.ee/arkywaters

Credits:

Written & Produced by Arky Waters

Mixed by Doug Wright

Mastered by Suture Mastering

Artwork & Photos by Arky Waters

Visuals by Version Khan

March 5, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

THE RIONS ANNOUNCE DELUXE EDITION OF DEBUT ALBUM WITH NEW SINGLE ‘IDOL’ AUSTRALIAN REGIONAL TOUR UNDERWAY + UK/EU TOUR THIS MAY

by the partae March 5, 2026
written by the partae

Photo by Pat O’Hara

Kicking off their Australian regional tour just last week, today The Rions announce the deluxe edition of their debut album Everything Every Single Day out May 8 with new single ‘Idol’. LISTEN HERE + PRE-SAVE THE DELUXE HERE

Driven by a catchy guitar riff, ‘Idol’ carries a sense of nostalgia for the band, who recall repeatedly playing its opening riff at soundcheck simply because they loved it so much. While the initial outlines first came to life years ago, it wasn’t until recently that the song’s deeper narrative revealed itself. The Rions share, “Idol explores how truly powerful love is, even if it’s just for a fleeting moment.” This theme of love and self-discovery that permeates throughout their debut album continues to evolve with ‘Idol’, cementing it as a defining feature in their narrative.

Also out today is the official music video for ‘Idol‘, directed by Vanilla Tupu. “My parents have been together 40 years, and being able to immortalize their love in this music video is one of the true honours of my life,” Tupu shares. “The emotion, joy, love and heartbreak you see on screen is completely real, and I’m so grateful to The Rions for entrusting me to bring this little story to life, for one of the most beautiful tracks I’ve heard in the Aussie music industry for a long time.”

Recorded across a year with ARIA Award-winning producer Chris Collins (Ruby Fields, Pacific Avenue, Matt Corby), their first full-length project delivered a thoughtful, introspective, and emotionally charged collection of polished pop-rock. Charting at #1 on the ARIA Australia Album Chart, #2 on the Vinyl Chart, and #5 overall, the album was the triple j Feature Album upon release with two singles cracking the 2025 Hottest 100 countdown, and saw wider support across Rolling Stone AU, 10 Magazine, ELLE Australia, Frankie Magazine, The Music, fbi.radio and more. Inspired by artists such as Sam Fender, The Japanese House, and the ever-influential Beatles, the album represents a significant evolution in The Rions’ sound, while preserving the sincerity and warmth that have defined them from the start.

The deluxe version of Everything Every Single Day builds upon their breakthrough debut with the addition of 6 new songs and a piano rendition of a fan favourites. Speaking on the deluxe project, Harley Wilson reveals, “A lot has happened since we finished writing our debut album “Everything Every Single Day”. Relationships that inspired songs that made it onto that album naturally evolved, more songs were written, and eventually we had more to say. The deluxe is a continuation of some of those songs, the second part of the narrative, which as a band, is important to us to tell. We wanted to write about the experience of finally letting love in, and how it feels to shed the fear of loss. We wanted to write about the evolution of overcoming loss, and the unique feelings of each stage, eventually becoming part of something bigger than yourself. I think ultimately, Everything Every Single Day (The Deluxe Edition) is about the perseverance of love.”

Having played their first show of their Australian regional run close to home at The Mona, The Rions are officially back on the road, bringing their memorable live show to every corner of the country with support from Chloe Parché, Hey So Hungry, Gordon’s Grandson and Bella Amor. In May, The Rions will be heading to New Zealand for three just-announced headline shows in Wellington, Christchurch and Auckland, before making their return to the UK and Europe for a 6 show tour across Rotterdam, Hamburg, Cologne, London, then Bristol and Nottingham for Dot To Dot Festival. For all dates and details, see BELOW.

‘Idol‘ is out now, buy/stream it here.

THE RIONS – EVERYTHING EVERY SINGLE DAY TOUR DATES

AUS REGIONAL
presented by triple j

Sat 28 Feb – The Mona – Mona Vale * [SOLD OUT]
Thu 5 Mar – Dunsborough Tavern – Dunsborough ^
Fri 6 Mar – Froth Craft Bunbrewery – Bunbury ^ [SOLD OUT]
Sat 7 Mar – Astor Theatre – Perth ^
Thu 12 Mar – Barwon Heads Hotel – Barwon Heads #
Fri 13 Mar – The Pier – Frankston #
Sat 14 Mar – Bass In The Domain – Hobart
Thu 19 Mar – King Street Bandroom – Newcastle *
Fri 20 Mar – UOW Main Hall – Wollongong * [VENUE UPGRADE]
Sat 21 Mar – UC Refectory – Canberra *
Fri 27 Mar – Hoey Moey – Coffs Harbour *
Sat 28 Mar – Finnians Tavern – Port Macquarie *
Thu 9 Apr – Brothers – Cairns >
Fri 10 Apr – JCU Uni Bar – Townsville >
Sat 11 Apr – Mcguires Hotel – Mackay >
Sun 12 Apr – Leichhardt Hotel – Rockhampton >
Thu 16 Apr – Hotel Brunswick – Brunswick Heads >
Fri 17 Apr – Miami Marketta [Laneway] – Gold Coast >
Sat 18 Apr – Blackflag Brewing – Coolum >

* w/ Chloe Parché
^ w/ Hey So Hungry
# w/ Gordon’s Grandson
> w/ bella amor

NEW ZEALAND
Thu 7 May – San Fran – Wellington
Fri 8 May – Loons – Christchurch
Sat 9 May – Double Whammy – Auckland

EUROPE + UK
Sun 17 May – Rotown – Rotterdam (TIX)
Tue 19 May – Molotow TopTen Bar – Hamburg (TIX)
Wed 20 May – Garagen – Cologne (TIX)
Fri 22 May – Islington Assembly Hall – London (TIX)
Sat 23 May – Dot To Dot Festival – Bristol
Sun 24 May – Dot To Dot Festival – Nottingham

For all ticketing information, visit HERE.

Stay connected with The Rions:
23 Profile | Website | Instagram | Facebook | X | Unearthed | YouTube

March 5, 2026 0 comments
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Music News

Monsieur Mellow Finds His Flow on ‘Slow Down’ with Taj Ralph

by the partae March 5, 2026
written by the partae

Monsieur Mellow, the new solo project of Australian songwriter/producer Callum MacDonald, returns with a new single ‘Slow Down’, enlisting Sydney artist Taj Ralph for a collaboration that leans into feel, flow and restraint.

Following the release of debut track ‘Paris Strut’, ‘Slow Down’ continues to shape the sonic world of Monsieur Mellow into a space that Callum has been building quietly alongside his work as a core member of R&B/soul project daste. With the band currently developing new material for a 2026 release, the solo project has become an outlet for ideas that feel instinctive, groove-led and refreshingly unforced.

Built around warm rhythms and subtle swing, ‘Slow Down’ finds its stride through Taj Ralph’s smooth vocal delivery and relaxed cadence, bringing an added sense of personality and ease to the track. The collaboration came together organically, driven by mutual creative trust and a shared sense of atmosphere rather than over-planning.

Reflecting on the track, Monsieur Mellow explains: “After I locked in the sound of the project with Paris Strut, everything just started flowing. I went on a bit of a run, making track after track that all lived in the same world and felt completely natural to me. It’s hard to pin down exactly what that sound is, but Slow Down came together only a few days after that first track. I took a similar approach, experimenting with a handful of sampled vocals that all sounded great, but something was missing and I felt it was still lacking in originality. Around that time, I’d been listening to Taj a lot after my bandmate Tyler Harden put me onto his music. One morning, while making coffee and listening to Taj’s track Lay Lo, I realised he’d be the perfect voice for this song. I sent him the instrumental that day, and not long after he got back to me saying he was down to try something. I gave him total freedom creatively, with the only suggestion being that a triplet-style rap moment could feel really vibey. He sent his ideas back pretty quickly, and from there everything fell into place. He absolutely finessed the energy of the track, and I knew straight away we had something special.”

Taj Ralph adds; “When Callum reached out to me with the beat I was living in London, writing and immersing myself deeply in such a vibrant music scene. Callum’s funk gave me the perfect excuse to bring that energy out and into the track. I wrote about love and good times with new people.”

‘Slow Down’ reinforces Monsieur Mellow as a project rooted in momentum and intuition, where tracks are shaped by mood, movement and collaboration, rather than strict rules or expectations.

Praise
“Yes, yes and YES. Vibes are unreal and I never want this to end” ~ Claire Mooney (Triple J)
“This just might be my favourite discovery of the week. Head over heels for Monsieur Mellow” ~ Anika Luna (Triple J)

“This track just took me to a happier place” ~ Andy Gav (Triple J)
“I’m digging this record, thanks for sharing! Thinking of spinning it on my radio show this Thursday night” ~ Tyler Bourdreaux (KCRW)

Stream/Watch:

https://bfan.link/mm-slowdown

Credits:

Co-Written by Callum MacDonald & Taj Ralph

Produced by Callum MacDonald

Mixed by Callum MacDonald

Mastered by Paul Blakey

Artwork by Callum MacDonald

Visuals by Callum MacDonald

Photos by Photos by Lauren Whitehill

Monsieur Mellow:

https://linktr.ee/monsieurmellow 

Taj Ralph:

https://linktr.ee/Tajralph

March 5, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

BECK ANNOUNCES FIRST EVER AUSTRALIAN ORCHESTRAL SHOWS – TICKETS ON SALE NOW

by the partae March 4, 2026
written by the partae

BECK ANNOUNCES FIRST EVER AUSTRALIAN ORCHESTRAL SHOWS

TICKETS ON SALE THURS 5 MARCH

Having dazzled crowds at landmark venues from London’s Royal Albert Hall to New York’s Carnegie Hall to the Hollywood Bowl, Beck has confirmed that Australian audiences will soon have their first chance to experience the magic of his live orchestral performances.

This May, Beck will be accompanied by native orchestras for a very special limited run of five shows – three at the Sydney Opera House and two at the Palais Theatre in Melbourne – reimagining a body of work including hits and deep cuts from classic Beck works including the multi-platinum Odelay, world-tripping Mutations, somber and reflective Sea Change, and GRAMMY Album of the Year winner Morning Phase, plus a share of surprises.

Beck – credit Brent Goldman

Praise for Beck’s previous orchestral dates has been uniformly effusive, including:

‘Other cities and other coasts deserve a piece of this big a musical win, too… deeply gorgeous stuff’ – VARIETY

‘The orchestral arrangements were the real star of the night, a signpost of [Beck’s] maturity as an artist… This was Beck’s Golden Age, and he succeeded in putting his all into a performance worthy of a brick in the 57th St. subway’ – Rolling Stone

Melbourne: Performing with Beck at the Palais Theatre will be Philharmonia Australia (Orchestra Director Leah Zweck), with Orchestra Supervisor Chong Lim AM.

Philharmonia Australia is one of the country’s leading session orchestras and has been the orchestra of choice for numerous national tours with Josh Groban, John Farnham & Olivia Newton-John, Hans Zimmer, Michael Bolton, Harry Connick Jnr and Ministry Of Sound.

Frontier Members can get early access to tickets for the iconic Palais Theatre performances via the Members Presale, which starts today at 11am (AEDT). Tickets will then go sale Thursday 5 March (11am AEDT) – head to frontiertouring.com/beck for all full tour information.


BECK
​AUSTRALIAN TOUR
​MAY 2026

​Presented by Frontier Touring


FRONTIER MEMBERS PRE-SALE
​
via frontiertouring.com/beck
​Runs 24 hours from: Monday 2 March (11am local time)
​
or until pre-sale allocation exhausted

GENERAL PUBLIC ON SALE
​Begins: Thursday 5 March (11am local time)


Thursday 12 May
​Palais Theatre | Melbourne, VIC

​Licensed. All Ages
​ticketmaster.com.au

Wednesday 13 May
​Palais Theatre | Melbourne, VIC

​Licensed. All Ages
​ticketmaster.com.au


Also playing Sydney Opera House, May 7-9
​** Not Frontier Touring shows, head to 
www.sydneyoperahouse.com/whats-on for info


Patrons are advised to purchase tickets only through authorised ticket sellers. We cannot guarantee any ticket purchase made through any means other than the official ticketing agents listed on the Frontier website.

FOLLOW BECK:

Website | Facebook | Instagram | X | YouTube | Spotify | Apple Music ​

frontiertouring.com/beck

 

March 4, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Shinedown x Bush Co-Headline Australian & New Zealand Tour

by the partae March 4, 2026
written by the partae

Australia and New Zealand, get ready! Two indisputable rock icons will join forces in 2026, with American chart-toppers SHINEDOWN and British alternative legends BUSH teaming up for a massive co-headline tour this September, with the tour also marking SHINEDOWN‘s first performances down under in over 15 years.

Commencing on Thursday 17 September in Auckland, this monumental rock’n’roll extravaganza will head through Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide, before closing out proceedings in Perth on Tuesday 29 September.

A band well-versed in making history, SHINEDOWN formed in the early 2000s and have since gone on to generate over 8.3 billion streams, while also ticking off a record-breaking 24 #1 rock hits, 15 platinum and gold singles, platinum or gold certification for all of their albums, and major media acclaim along the way. With their reputation for weaving timely and honest messages into their chart-smashing songs, SHINEDOWN are a rarity in the modern scene, resonating both with their global audience and the rock community, as well as culture at large. Set to expand yet again beyond their quintessential hits like Second Chance, Sound of Madness and MONSTERS in 2026, SHINEDOWN will release their eighth studio album, EI8HT, on May 29, with the follow up to 2022’s Planet Zero described by frontman Brent Smith as the group pushing themselves “like never before”.

One of rock’s most revered live acts, SHINEDOWN‘s relentless energy and audience connection have been a staple of their performances for decades, with their diverse back catalogue balancing moments of spectacle with breaths of emotive finesse. Whether performing with Papa Roach, Halestorm, Rob Zombie, Five Finger Death Punch and many more, wowing in arenas across the globe or captivating major festivals worldwide, SHINEDOWN know how to ignite the party for any and all stages. With over 15 years having now passed since the group have graced Australian crowds, SHINEDOWN‘s return in 2026 will undeniably showcase to audiences down under why The Rockpit declared of their 2025 Minneapolis performance: “they are the best rock band touring right now in the United States…if you are someone who loves rock shows and enjoy watching a band take over an arena, Shinedown is a must see.”

A genre-defining act whose accolades spans commercial success, over a billion global streams and a GRAMMY Award nomination, London-hailing tour de force BUSH have spent over three decades both shaping and furthering modern rock. Instantly gripping airwaves in 1994 with their debut album Sixteen Stone, BUSH went on to blaze charts, including #5 in Australia, and also introduced the world to some of the most iconic anthems of the 1990s, from Glycerine to Machinehead and Comedown; all of which became staples in pop culture, while still resonating to this very day. Nominated for Best Hard Rock Performance at the 1998 GRAMMY Awards for their power ballad Swallowed, BUSH are now in command of ten studio albums, including their most recent full-length, 2025’s I Beat Loneliness, and continue their legacy as innovators and powerhouse creators without sacrificing their core trademark sound.

On a live front, BUSH have remained stalwart fan-favourite for decades, in demand both for their electrifying stage presence as well as the ever-commanding charisma of frontman Gavin Rossdale. Having shared stages over the years with fellow greats of the scene, ranging from Stone Temple Pilots through to Alice In Chains, Nickelback and countless more, BUSH have also paid multiple visits to Australia throughout their career, most recently performing in 2022 at Under The Southern Stars, with the band’s Melbourne performance praised by What’s My Scene as being “tight, loud and energetic and familiar hits Glycerine, Everything Zen, Machine Head from their debut album 16 Stone sat comfortably beside the more recent”, while The AU Review declared the band’s Brisbane set as “arguably the best performance of the night.”

Don’t let the days go by this September and avoid the sound of madness by securing your tickets ASAP for SHINEDOWN and BUSH‘s massive Australian and New Zealand co-headline tour in 2026.

Artist pre-sale tickets on sale: Fri 6 March @ 9am local time – Thurs 12 March @ 11am local time

Early bird pre-sale tickets on sale: Tues 10 March @ 10am local time – Thurs 12 March @ 11am local time
To Gain Early Ticket Access Register Here -> https://daltours.cc/bush-shinedown

Spotify pre-sale tickets on sale: Wed 11 March @ 11am local time – Thurs 12 March 11am local time

Venue/Ticketing pre-sale tickets on sale: Wed 11 March @ 11am local time – Thurs 12 March @ 11am local time

General tickets on sale: Friday 13 March @ 11am local time
Tickets from destroyalllines.com

Destroy All Lines Presents

SHINEDOWN x BUSH
CO-HEADLINE AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND TOUR
TOUR DATES:

THURSDAY 17 SEPTEMBER – SPARK ARENA, AUCKLAND
SUNDAY 20 SEPTEMBER – RIVERSTAGE, BRISBANE
WEDNESDAY 23 SEPTEMBER – HORDERN PAVILION, SYDNEY
FRIDAY 25 SEPTEMBER – JOHN CAIN ARENA, MELBOURNE
SUNDAY 27 SEPTEMBER – AEC THEATRE, ADELAIDE
TUESDAY 29 SEPTEMBER – HPC, PERTH 

General tickets on sale: Friday 13 March @ 11am local time
Tickets from destroyalllines.com

FOLLOW BUSH:
Website
Facebook
Instagram
Spotify
YouTube
FOLLOW SHINEDOWN:
Website
Facebook
Instagram
Spotify
YouTube
March 4, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

ON THE BANKS WEEK TWO GRACE JONES, THE STREETS & SOLD-OUT DISCO CLUB South Bank Cultural Forecourt 25 FEBRUARY – 22 MARCH 2026

by the partae March 4, 2026
written by the partae

Tickets on Sale Now

QPAC and South Bank Corporation’s new riverside concert series On the Banks officially launched last week, transforming the Cultural Forecourt into a vibrant outdoor live music venue against the backdrop of the Brisbane City skyline.

Opening week delivered a run of standout performances, from MARINA’s unanimous singalongs by the river, to King Stingray bringing their unmistakable Yolŋu surf-rock energy to the Forecourt.

Hip hop icons De La Soul also left their mark with a powerful Droppin’ Science set alongside Oddisee & Good Compny and Miss Kaninna, underscoring the depth and diversity at the heart of the series.

Momentum continues to build this week, with the iconic Grace Jones (Thursday 5 March), followed by a sold-out Disco Club (Saturday 7 March). Limited tickets also remain for The Streets (Friday 6 March), supported by Double J, with strong demand expected in the lead up to the show.

Running through to 22 March 2026, the series continues with an outstanding program of international icons and homegrown heroes including Bernard Fanning with Kasey Chambers and The Paper Kites, Peach PRC, a sold-out show with Maoli, and then ends with Marlon Williams and The Yarra Benders and Ngā Mātai Pūrua, supported by Sarah Blasko.

Centrally located in the South Bank Cultural Forecourt, On the Banks caters for music lovers with bars and food trucks offering a range of delicious options. So, arrive early and settle in for a full evening of tastes and tunes by the river.

Thursday 5 March
GRACE JONES 
+ THE ILLUSTRIOUS BLACKS 

Friday 6 March
THE STREETS 
+ SHADY NASTY 
Supported by Double J

Saturday 7 March
DISCO CLUB – *SOLD OUT*

Sunday 15 March
BERNARD FANNING
 + KASEY CHAMBERS + THE PAPER KITES
+ TROY & JEM CASSAR-DALEY + GEORGIA MOONEY 

Thursday 19 March
PEACH PRC 
+ MAUDE LATOUR + SALTY 
Supported by triple j

Friday 20 March
MAOLI – *SOLD OUT*

Sunday 22 March
MARLON WILLIAMS
 WITH THE YARRA BENDERS AND NGĀ MĀTAI PŪRUA  + SARAH BLASKO

ON THE BANKS
QPAC, South Bank
25 February – 22 March 2026

TICKETS
Tickets for On the Banks are on sale from ONTHEBANKS.COM.AU or 136 246

March 4, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic InterviewsMusic News

Interview: Chloe Gill on Becoming Herself Through ‘Pushing Punishment’

by the partae March 4, 2026
written by the partae

“Pushing Punishment” feels like a turning point. When you say this is you “becoming you,” what does that actually look like day-to-day?

I think it’s about rebuilding myself over the past two or three years and rediscovering the parts of me that maybe got lost along the way. Music has always been how I process everything — whether that’s writing or just listening — but writing “Pushing Punishment” felt different. It felt like a release. Like I was reconnecting with something essential in myself.

For most of the past two years, this album has shaped my day-to-day life. The songs have been my soundtrack while I’ve been navigating change — learning to accept what I can control and what I can’t. I’ve tried to embrace growth instead of resisting it.

In many ways, I’ve always wanted to create a song like “Pushing Punishment” — in its sound, its energy, its intensity. It feels like a version of me I’ve been working toward for a long time. And I’m just really proud and happy about what it became.

There’s a real tension-and-release dynamic in the track. Did that come from the production first, or was it already sitting in the way you were feeling at the time?

What you hear is pretty much how it was written. The tension and release were already there — it all came together really quickly, in about a day. I wrote and self-produced a demo before taking it into the studio with Gareth Hudson, and when he heard it, he loved it straight away. From there, we just built on what was already there.

We rerecorded certain parts and really elevated the structure with some solid instrumentation. My favourite elements are probably the live strings and the acoustic drums — they add so much depth and movement to the track.

I’m super proud of the arrangement and the musicianship on this one. In a lot of ways, I felt more like a composer than just a songwriter, which was really exciting for me. And I feel incredibly lucky to have so many amazing musicians playing on this track and across the album — it sounds the way it does because of them.

You talk about learning to fill your own cup first. Was that a hard lesson for you, or something that came after hitting a wall?

It’s definitely been a mix of experiences and just learning to trust the process of life. I’ve hit burnout before. I’ve had setbacks with both my mental and physical health, and I’ve had to navigate two pretty debilitating diseases — Endometriosis and an autoimmune disease. Those experiences alone teach you very quickly that you only have so much capacity. I’ve explored these experiences through previous releases like my single ‘Firework Night’.

I’ve had to learn how to be resourceful for myself in difficult moments — to pause, to practise mindfulness, diaphragmatic breathing, and nervous system regulation. To actually stop and reframe with what I do have, instead of pushing through.

I’ve always believed in timing. I really do think everything happens for a reason, and that there’s something to learn from every experience — whether you see it in the moment or only in hindsight. I’ve tried to really own the changes that have come my way, and to recognise that the people who come into your life are often there to teach you something about yourself.

But I also know I don’t get very far when I give my power away or focus on other people more than I focus on myself. That’s when I end up exhausted, emotional, and stressed — and that’s just not a sustainable way to be. Filling my own cup first wasn’t a single lesson; it was something I had to learn the hard way, over time, but I am proud to have learnt so much about my life at 22, with so much more to learn.

The song sounds big — almost anthemic — but it’s rooted in something very internal. How do you balance that scale when you’re writing?

When I’m writing, I’m not really thinking about the final outcome or the expectation of how it should sound. I don’t go in with expectations about what it’s “supposed” to be. I just trust the process of entering ‘flow state’ and following whatever feels honest in the moment.

Creativity is so special to me — I genuinely love it. Writing is one of the few times I completely lose track of everything else. I am just planting this garden of flowers and vines of songs, with every word of every song being part of who I am. Each song carries pieces of who I am, whether they’re loud and expansive or quiet and internal.

The scale kind of takes care of itself. If the emotion feels big, the song grows big. If it feels intimate, it stays close. I don’t force that balance — I just let the feeling lead. And then suddenly… poof. There’s a finished song. It still feels like magic to me.

You’ve mentioned accepting your neurodivergence and personality more fully. Did that acceptance change the way you approach songwriting or performance?

Not really — I’m just me. If anything, it’s just made me prouder to be who I am. I feel really lucky that I get to share that with people, and that it resonates and lands how I hope it lands. What you see is what you get, on stage and off. I have never felt like I have had to mask or ‘perform’ a certain version of myself.

In terms of songwriting, it’s probably made me more honest. Accepting my neurodivergence has helped me understand how my mind works and how I process emotions. I think I’m better at articulating what I’m actually feeling now, instead of filtering it, being confused by it, or second-guessing it.

So the core of how I write hasn’t changed — but my relationship with myself has. And that’s made everything around my artistry feel way clearer and more grounded.

Working with Gareth Hudson, was there a moment in the studio where you felt the track really clicked into place?

He’s marvellous, so incredibly talented — we’ve worked together on so many amazing projects over the years. When I brought him the demo, I also came in with this long, excitement-filled list of goals for what the song could become. He just got it straight away.

We really do share a wavelength when it comes to communication. Sometimes it’s barely even verbal — it’s just a look or a noise made, a melody hummed, a rush to an instrument, or a small comment and we both know where it needs to go next. That’s such a special thing in a studio environment.

I think the moment it really clicked was when we started layering in the live elements — especially the drums, vocals and strings. Then everything began to breathe. You could feel the energy shift from a “great demo” to something alive. From that point on, it felt like we were just bringing the vision into focus rather than searching for it.

You reference Go Farther In Lightness and that sweeping, emotional build. Were you chasing that same kind of lift in the final chorus?

Dave’s work is unmatched. Gang of Youths — David Le’aupepe — create music that feels architectural. There’s such endurance in it. He writes with this sweeping emotional scale, exploring the human condition, faith, inner battles, mental health, love and loss, and that latent strength we all carry. It’s like a roaring call to action wrapped in vulnerability, and I am so inspired by it. Hearing their music is peak enjoyment for me.

I definitely draw inspiration from their sound and writing style. They’ve carved out something that feels like its own genre, and that’s so inspiring to me — the idea that you can build a world sonically and emotionally and fully inhabit it. So yes, I think there’s always a part of me that’s chasing that kind of lift — that feeling where the final chorus doesn’t just arrive, it erupts.

With the drums and strings toward the end, that cyclical feeling was intentional. I was also inspired by Bon Iver and the way Justin’s instrumentation moves. I wanted it to feel almost relentless — like running in circles inside your own mind — before that sense of breaking through. The arrangement tells the story just as much as the lyrics do. It’s tension, momentum, and release. The song is big, but the core of it is personal.

And with my debut album, I Have A Habit of Dreaming, just around the corner… it feels like both exposure and empowerment. There’s vulnerability in letting people hear the full body of work — these songs have been my world for the past two years. But there’s also so much pride in it. This album shaped my days, carried me through change, and helped me understand myself better.

Releasing it feels like saying, “This is me.” And that’s terrifying — but it’s also incredibly freeing, and I am excited to open doors with my music.

CHLOE GILL AUSTRALIAN TOUR DATES

TICKET LINK

Friday 17 April Stag & Hunter MAYFIELD NSW

Thursday 21 May The Wesley Anne MELBOURNE VIC

Friday 22 May The Taproom CASTLEMAINE VIC

Saturday 23 May Peninsula Hot Springs MORNINGTON PENINSULA VIC

Sunday 24 May Shiraz Republic CORNELLA VIC

Saturday 30 May Knappstein CLARE VALLEY SA

Sunday 31 May The Wheatsheaf Hotel ADELAIDE SA

Saturday 27 June Fusebox MARRICKVILLE NSW

CHLOE GILL:  Official Website | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Triple J Unearthed | TikTok

March 4, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

G Flip live at Hordern Pavilion, Sydney – 3 March 2026

by the partae March 4, 2026
written by the partae

Photography: Jake Harm Nam

March 4, 2026 0 comments
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Festival NewsMusic News

Lithe – Metro Theatre – 26/02/26

by the partae March 3, 2026
written by the partae

Photography: Jake Harm Nam

 

March 3, 2026 0 comments
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