All photos by Matthew Reilly.
All in Live Nation
All photos by Matthew Reilly.
Juice WRLD’s stopped over in Perth last night on his first leg of his Death Race for Love Australian tour. Walking into Metros we had no expectations - and boy were we blown away.
Embarking on his “Cure to Loneliness” tour, Jai Wolf stopped over in sunny Perth, turning up the heat on our hottest recorded day in November.
After a four-year hiatus from solo creation, Thundamentals’ Tuka graced us with his Selling Me Out tour.
The queen of unparalleled vocals, poignant performance, creative vision, empowering socio-political expression and of art pop music. The one and only, Montaigne.
Tanaya Harper has regrouped herself into a full, four-piece band after a few years of going solo and has a new single to show for it. We were there to see her reemerge in the midst of the thriving Perth music scene.
Finally, Australia’s darling of hip hop graces Perth with her presence at Freo Social.
On Friday, October 18th, and the stars have aligned for the band to shine: A more cohesive line-up curated by Ghost Care drummer Luke Del Fante himself, an enthusiastic audience who are there just to see them, and, of course, one of the best live music venues in Perth: The Bird.
An evening with Tyne-James Organ is one where tunnelling agony coincides with only the tenderest of love. A beautifully excruciating performance that opens up old wounds.
Overall, the tour was well worth its wait and it was fantastic to experience such a strongly female-powered rock gig.
Mojos was heaving on Monday night as people flocked to close their long weekend with the majestic KAIIT, and local support acts Your Girl Pho and Grievous Bodily Calm.
Highly charged up and home to essentially half of Perth’s youth for the day, Listen Out 2019 served as the welcome grounds for all things dance, hip hop and RnB.
Holy Holy’s My Own Pool of Light tour was always going to be a stellar experience, but little did we know that our hearts were to be stolen by their supporting act Almond Soy.
After a 3-year absence from Australian shores, The 1975 marked their return with a show to remember at HBF Stadium.
Beyond her incredible musical aptitude and unparalleled voice control, Stella’s dichotomy between being sweet and angelic – whilst at the same time being open about sexuality and expressing a strong voice regarding important socio-political matters – makes her a wonderfully unique artist.
Dzvuke had delivered a set that never wavered in energy, musicianship and good vibes – doubly impressive considering his relative newness to the live performance circuit. It’s doubtless only the start of a bright future, and many more shows and songs to come.
Over the weekend, Isolated Nation got the grand opportunity to send our junior photographer Reo-Blu Caré, who was mentored alongside our talented photographer Brendan Cecich!
They say time flies when you’re having fun, and The Jungle Giants’ Fremantle show seemed to be over just a second after they started. Going off what the guy said behind me as soon as it ended: “Well that was bloody brilliant!”
“The poems discussed every subject imaginable. Relationships, identity, nature, politics and activism, trauma and recovery were frequent topics. The poems about ugly babies, sex positions, honey, and watching Mary Poppins while high were unexpected but so rewarding…”
The Perth poetry community recently held the 2019 State Poetry Slam Final at the Rosemount Hotel. I was there to watch 8 of WA’s best poets compete against one another, with nothing but words as their weapons.