Part homage, part parody, ‘Set List’ revels in the nuances, characters and stories of one genre of music - with every note and lyric improvised from audience suggestions. Starring Karin Muiznieks, Dan Walmsley and Ben McKenzie.
Once a month, the finest tunes from the 1930s - 1960s in a sociable atmosphere. Hand-picked by a team of expert DJs, the platters that matter: rhythm & blues, Vegas grind, surf, rockabilly, gypsy swing, doo-wop and soul.
Felicity Ward (Ronnie Johns Half Hour, Spicks & Specks) was ugly as a child. She thinks you should get to know more about her through stand-up, characters, videos, songs and electrocution-style trivia games.
Tuesday 30th September heralds the inception of a show which will become as much a part of football culture as the MCG, the Brownlow medal and Sam Newman’s big mouth.
Make some noise, Melbourne! Hot on the heels of a wildly successful North American tour, Die Roten Punkte are back in town and ready to cut loose to celebrate the local launch of their long-awaited sophomore album, Super Musikant.
Cantankerous sea shanties, carnival tunes, junkyard melodies, haunting waltzes and opium-den dreams... these ramshackle felons sail in through the Dickensian fog to hoist their show and debut album firmly in the salty Fringe air.
Their sound has been called "a raging mix of Parliament meets Talking Heads with a good dose of Daft Punk thrown in for taste", and their live show is something to be experienced, always transporting you to a place just beyond where you thought you were.
The acclaimed musical that brings Broadway to the Melways! Celebrate everything that makes this city tick, from the superiority of AFL, to the race that stops a nation. It's the glamour of 42nd Street with all the charm of a picnic by the Yarra.
Carla Conlin, Diana Scalzi and the Cardia band invite you to a show all about the pleasures and predicaments of our infatuation with chocolate! You'll hear songs you'll know and love, as well as some new delights for you to sample.
Last year Nelly Thomas squeezed out a human … and she feels like she hasn’t got anything right since. Nelly thought no-one could make her feel more guilt than her mother. Then she became one.