Kimbra – Sweet Relief 

Grammy winner Kimbra is back with her first new song since 2014 and we’ve already got the visuals to go along with it. Sweet Relief is  smooth groove of an electro-pop explosion filled with texture, colour and some very Prince and Janet Jackson vibes. It makes total sense then that the video plays into this, with brightly coloured waves of silk and shaggy hair set against vibrant backdrops that move so realistically you’d almost believe you could reach through your screen to touch them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cSzBG8awAW0&feature=youtu.be

Dan Sultan – Magnetic

The new video from Dan Sultan is a thing of art. Digital printing art to be precise. It took 60 individual 3D prints and 2,700 images to put together the singing bust in the likeness of the country’s Number One Crooner as patterns and coloured lights are projected onto the statue as he sings and evolves through different states, changing texture and finish throughout. The video progresses in stop motion with the bust eventually being covered in moss, meaning that the entire thing took a casual two months to complete.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAPBzsCidow&feature=youtu.be

Devendra Banhart – Saturday Night

Having dropped his ninth full length album, Ape In Pink Marble last month, Devendra Banhart has been pretty busy of late. Now, he’s shared the video for Saturday Night – a soft and surreal clip which sees the singer/songwriter/guitarist singing in a dimly lit bar, cradling a wide-eyed baby and accompanied by an Afghan hound. Pretty close to a three minute David Lynch movie, it’s weird and wonderfully colourful.

Read our interview with Devendra Banhart

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wD1j0CiBV0U

Jack Grace – All Lost

Sydney songwriter and producer Jack Grace’s track All Lost has been doing the rounds a whole lot lately and now there’s a video to match the piano ballad. Just as the song itself sits somewhere between deliberately spaced and uptempo, the video has all the action of a fencing tournament but is slowed down with opposing angles and close ups. There’s a certain ghostly feeling that resonates throughout the track and the clip alike, making it all the more captivating viewing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1p_i5AR7yHM

Lime Cordiale – Waking Up Easy

The new video from Sydney’s Lime Cordiale is a soft, sunny clip that starts with a hangover and develops into something bigger. The song an acoustic meander about waking up to something unexpectedly familiar, the video follows the beginnings of a romance between two friends. With the polarising same-sex marriage plebiscite currently polarising the country, it is the band’s gentle comment on the importance of equality and acceptance.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc-xsaqbgYA

Midas.Gold – Work it Out

Fresh from his Listen Out debut, Brisbane rapper Midas.Gold has now released the video for his third single, the brazen Work It Out. Yet another head churning, auto-tune laced banger, the video clip hilariously flips this into an 80s themed dance audition and performance. No doubt Midas is one to watch in these next few months.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upJnnohEUxg

 

Laurel – Hurricane

Writing, performing, recording, producing and mixing her EP completely in her East London apartment, the enchanting and inspiring Laurel has now added this personal reflection in the video for her single Hurricane. Recorded by her friend as they “messed around in the places we both liked to hang out”, the result is a charming guide through the city she calls home. Not to mention the soundtrack of which is a beautifully haunting and melancholic track where Laurel’s voice soars smoothly over the echoing instrumentation below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4X2gtwkeXw

Written by Ruby-Rose Pivet-Marsh and Martin McConnell

Image: Supplied

It’s fitting that Lime Cordiale‘s new EP begins with the rich, brassy timbre of a trombone. Indeed, it’s their frequent use of this – and other such instruments – that makes their jaunty brand of pop music so appealing. The EP is titled Road to Paradise and, while brass is no longer the focal point (as it often was in their early work), it remains a fundamental aspect of the Sydney band’s style and persona. Spider Legs illustrates this perfectly, weaving trombone into nimble piano licks and crashing cymbals. It’s a sign of Lime Cordiale’s progression, in terms of both maturity and musical aptitude.

Next comes lead single Hanging Upside Down, which hinted in February that future work may edge away from the horn section. It was probably this implication that made me so indifferent about the song. After all, Lime Cordiale without brass would be like Sam Smith without Disclosure: pretty bloody boring.

Fortunately, the horns remain, albeit shrouded by the rock-influenced direction brothers Oli and Louis Leimbach (the creative forces behind the band) have chosen to take with this release. Third track Other Ties is a prime exponent of this; a crisp bass line and restrained drumming craft a slick groove beneath the characteristic earthiness of Oli’s vocals. Yes, Lime Cordiale have been diluted – but that’s only made them tastier.

Compare Road to Paradise with 2012’s Faceless Cat EP and you’ll hear a remarkable development. Much credit must be afforded to producer Jean-Paul Fung, whose ongoing work with the band has yielded remarkable results. Formerly playful and boisterous stylings have largely given way to music more taut and controlled, but Lime Cordiale are best when the stems of these musical vines are interwoven. For this reason, Not That Easy is the pick of the bunch. Dynamic and irresistible, it displays all the entertaining qualities that Lime Cordiale have to offer, while demonstrating their newfound ability to produce polished, well-paced songs with depth and charisma.

The same can be said of Good from Far, in which the influence of fellow Sydney-siders Sticky Fingers is clearly audible. The result is a reggae-tinged track that, more than anything, highlights Lime Cordiale’s improving versatility and the variety of artists from which they draw inspiration.

Released in May, Feel Alright was the second single from the EP and rounds out this solid little collection of songs in an impressive fashion. If the preceding five tracks are the Road to Paradise, then surely this is the destination. Feel Alright is positively joyous; it’s a reminder that, for all the fine-tuning and high production values (and these have undoubtedly increased the calibre of their music), there’s nothing quite like a horn section.

 

It’s video roundup time! Once again, Howl And Echoes are coming in hot with the freshest, most eyeball stimulating music videos to be dropped by the artists you love and some of the artists you don’t know you love yet, of this week. We do all the dirty work and herd them all into one convenient web-based location for you to enjoy every Friday so that you don’t have to. Have yourself a good old gander at the latest offerings from:

Beach Baby – Limousine

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWlxEURsgjY

Coming out of London earlier in 2015, this has been one of my favourite tracks all year. Bursting at the seams with wildly contagious hooks, Limousine charters territory through 80s new wave, post-punk and even some 60s surf pop thrown in for good measure. Catchier than the clap is what it eventuates to being, a blissful three minute rock and roll song.

The video features the band playing in the kind of garage this song feels like it was recorded in while two young lads prepare for a Mexican standoff over, what else but, a girl. The video really captures the drearily suburban feel the song evokes, leaf green forests juxtaposed with winding streets. There’s something inherently creepy about these kids too…

Cloves – Don’t You Wait

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_Jk_uQ4gSg

Sticking with London for now, although this time by way of Melbourne, we caught the video for Don’t You Wait by disgustingly talented, honey-throated 19-year-old Cloves. The track comes from her upcoming debut album XIII and all indications thus far are that the hype is real and it is spectacular.

The gentle and clean electric riff that opens the song with her voice is spine-tingling before a lilting piano joins in and the song really takes off. The video itself is a simple document of the song inside the studio, which is perfectly fine as it directs the focus straight to Cloves’ stunning voice, smoky as an Autumn bonfire. Don’t You Wait leaves you with the kind of warm feeling you were chasing in Winter, though the song won’t lose any of its appeal in an Australian summer.

Cloves is just one of the many absolutely amazing young women to come out of Australia and put their musical stamp on 2015, you won’t be hearing the last of her any time soon.

Yeo – Icarus

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFXX2JNnMgU

And this time staying in Melbourne, producer Yeo has unleashed a fresh video for the latest single from his upcoming album Ganbaru. The track is all kinds of funky, building up to a warped out synth chorus that will grab you by the collar and hit all the right buttons.

The video shows Melbourne after dark, cameras drenched with haze capturing the neon lights and empty car parks. A couple of dudes eat Paddle Pops in said car park while they’re given a contemporary dance routine. Visually splendid, and made me feel like a BP freezer’s worth of rainbow Paddle Pops.

Milwaukee Banks – Faded

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_VUrakBQnr8

We enjoyed the heck out of Brisbane hip hop twosome Milwaukee Banks when we caught them opening for Big K.R.I.T. earlier in the year. Their signatures are still fresh on the dotted line of their deal with Dot Dash and their debut album Deep Into The Night is finally afoot. Faded is the first single from that album.

The video is as gritty and grimy as the track itself, another after dark joint featuring outer suburbs service stations and road trips through the city double-parking Pabst Blue Ribbons. There’s a rooftop car park dance routine in the bitter urban cold. The whole thing is captivating, and leaves us eagerly awaiting their first shot at an LP.

Lime Cordiale – Not That Easy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5QQt_bYyvM

It’s really great to see a band put out a music video that aims to raise awareness of a current issue as well as doing some good towards helping that issue. That’s exactly what Sydneysiders Lime Cordiale have done with their brand new video for Not That Easy.

Focusing on the droughts currently ravaging North Queensland, the clip was filmed in places like Winton, Longreach and Townsville, the barren, dry landscapes juxtaposed with shots of regional residents enjoying some ice cold frothies at their local.

As someone from North Queensland, the band taking the time to share these people and their stories with their wider audience, most of whom reside in coastal or urban areas far flung from any notions of drought, is really heartwarming. Helps that the song is an absolute cracker too.

Lawrence Rothman – Oz Vs Eden (feat. Charli XCX)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mcVtixWKug

Creepy and unsettling as all fuck is probably the best way to describe this one. If Lawrence Rothman is a new name for you, picture the baritone of Nick Cave mixed with the alternative theatrics and aggression of Marilyn Manson with just a splash of David Bowie and you might have an idea.

The video is a fever dream set to an absolutely filthy, bonechilling track, a mix of electro, pop and darkwave. Rothman’s deep and snarling vocals blend perfectly with the ethereal voice of Charli XCX, who features. I could go through and describe everything I watched in this film clip but I think it’s better if you just experience it for yourself. It’s possibly the most visually stimulating and confronting music video I’ve seen in quite some time.

Citizen Kay – Life Gives You Lemons

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kufiqwix0tc

Having just kicked off a national tour to launch his debut album With The People, an album that followed up his AIR and ARIA award nominated mini-album Demokracy, Canberra-via-Ghana MC Citizen Kay is at the forefront of a refreshingly good and straight up ass-kicking Australian hip hop scene.

He’s just dropped a clip for Life Gives You Lemons, one of the standout tracks on With The People. The beat of the song, infused with a staccato saxophone riff and other vintage funktastic elements, will have you nodding your head along to Citizen Kay’s scuttling side-to-side flow. The video is a POV day-in-the-life piece featuring skateboarding, a trip to the supermarket (with extended shots of the lemon pile) before the subject of the video gets a little uh… nuts in the kitchen smashing said lemons using as many interesting methods as possible.

AND IT HAS A SAXOPHONE SOLO.

Just brilliant. One of the better names in contemporary Aussie hip hop.

MØ – Kamikaze

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eVD9j36Ke94

The Danish singer-songwriter’s second album, the follow-up to 2014’s rapturously received No Mythologies To Follow, is on its merry way. Kamikaze is the first domino to drop, premiering on BBC 1 last week and with an accompanying video this week. The production on the track, by none other than Diplo, is stellar, MØ’s serenely sweet pop vocals layered over it to perfection.

The video is utterly wild. Shot in Kiev in the Ukraine, MØ has a day out to remember featuring dirtbikes, dangerously choreographed highway car rides (replete with moving rooftop dancing), fisticuffs, dirt field dance routines and a whole lot of other off-the-beaten-path tourist activities to do in Kiev, we’re sure. It’s a fantastic and feel-good track and video and her sophomore album can’t come sooner.

Freddie Gibbs – Fuckin’ Up The Count

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23O2U41p6cY

With new album Shadow Of A Doubt set to land on November the 20th, Gary, Indiana native MC Freddie Gibbs has shared the video for lead single Fuckin’ Up The Count ahead of what is sure to be a stellar LP. Produced by a tag team of Boi-1Da and Frank Dukes, the beat is a laid back piano number and accompanies an expressive flow of rhyme from Gibbs.

The video itself is a snapshot of the hard knock life of an African American teenager. The mixture of family life and gang violence is harrowing, reflective of the somber lyrics and sound of the track. It’s pretty clear Gibbs is concerned with the present conditions a great deal of American youths live in, this video draws ever-needed attention to that.

Northern Beaches locals Lime Cordiale have been busy paving their own sound in recent times, and they’ve just dropped latest single Feel Alright. Reportedly influenced by Charles Bradley, Daft Punk and The Roots, it signifies a new chapter in their musical journey! Give it a listen here:

Having opened for bands including The Deltra Riggs, Ball park Music and The Griswolds, Lime Cordiale have crafted a seriously dazzling live show – and they’ll be taking to the stage again this July, for two super special shows in Sydney and Melbourne:

July 11: Metro Lair, Sydney
All Ages (Tickets here)

July 16: Shebeen, Melbourne
18+ (Tickets here)

Anyway, we wanted to get to know the band and their influences a little better, so asked them to share some of their favourite tunes with us. They did, and the results were magnificent!

Enjoy:

My favourite track to wake up to is… Walk on – Neil Young
Wake up, get in the car and start your day with this track. Not only does it have a nice message but impersonating Neil Young’s voice in the early morning will get you in a good mood for the day. 

The best track for cooking is… Dirty Work – Steely Dan
You need to be on a high in the kitchen and the organ intro get’s you there.  Chop your carrots to this beat. 

The best track for spring cleaning is…  Clean The House – Fat Freddy’s Drop
I associate this track with having to clean up our old sharehouse. We were all big FFD fans that hated cleaning until we had the music up full blast. Love the driving beat of this track.

The ultimate road trip track isMr. E’s Beautiful Blues – Eels
The first MA+ film that Louis and I owned was Road Trip. There was enough nudity to wanna watch this film every other day. At the beginning of a tour we put this song on and hype ourselves up for the long drive.

My favourite love song is… Alison – Elvis Costello
I don’t really know if this is a love song or not. But I’m sure most people think it is. The producer of our Falling Up The Stairs EP once compared us to early Elvis Costello and I pretended to know what he was talking about. After that I found this song and just fell for the crying voice and walk guitar.

The best track for sweet love makin’ is…  Light My Fire – The Doors
A weird one to make love to, I know. But it brings a different vibe and gets some sort of unusual hump rhythm going. I like a good clichéd lyric when love makin’. We’re all pretty clichéd really when it comes to this act. “C’mon baby, light my fire.”

The track that always gets the party started is… Baby I’m Yours – Breakbot
One of those songs you feel heaps guilty about loving, but not sure why.

 The best track to wind down a crowd is… Roads – Portishead
Yeah this one will probably kill the vibe at a party. But if you’re the one that’s put it on, just sink into your beanbag and go with it. Until some dickhead changes the track ¾ of the way through.

My favourite drunken karaoke track is… Lola – The Kinks
So I was obsessed with this girl called Lola who left to the other side of the world. At a drunken night out I was forced to sing this song at a pub. I didn’t know the song at the time and so the performance was pretty pretty cringy.

My favourite song to sing in the shower is… Humbrum Blues – The Growlers
It’s one of those vocals that you can only impersonate in an intimate setting. Somewhere to get real croaky and also act the lyrics.

A song that always makes me cry is… Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stones
This clip comes from the doco “20 Feet From Startdom”. You’re hearing the isolated vocal of the backup singer who wanted to blow these white boys away. Brings a tear to my eye.

I love going to sleep listening to…..  Electric Ladyland, Jimi Hendrix
Some albums you need to lie down with your eyes closed in order to really experience it in full. This is one of the greatest albums of all time and one that you can keep going back to and discover new elements with each listen.

I can’t stop dancing when I hear…. The World (Is Going Up In Flames) – Charles Bradley
It’s not ‘dancing’ as much as it is ‘miming’. I grab my nuts and try to do the Charles Bradley soul scream. You can never do it when other people are listening. Just a pathetic squeak followed by a cough.

Sydney larrikins Lime Cordiale – now a bona fide five-piece band – recently dropped their latest single, Feel Alright. After a successful national tour in February, brothers Oli and Louis Leimbach have reunited with producer Jean-Paul Fung for this, their second single of 2015.

Feel Alright exudes the kind of raw energy we’ve come to expect from Lime Cordiale. But unlike much of their previous work, which was often characterised by extravagant trombone solos, the brass takes a back seat. It’s still in there, of course – it wouldn’t be Lime Cordiale without it – but its influence is more subtle. Feel Alright is the most structured and direct tune (the most concentrated Cordiale, if you will) I’ve heard from the boys, and I can’t wait to hear more from them as the year goes on.

You can catch Lime Cordiale in Sydney and Melbourne in July on their ‘Feel Alright’ tour. Tickets are available here.

Feel-Alright-Web-Poster.114509

Photos by Mez Macleod
Follow Mez on Instagram: @mezatron3000

Shag Rock

Lyall Moloney

Lime Cordiale

One of the well-known perils of live music is starting a set with an unreleased – and therefore completely unknown – song. It takes either a brave or foolhardy artist to attempt it. The awkward nodding and shuffling that often ensues, as well as that one drunk guy convinced he knows the words, makes for a rather shaky start. The key exception to this rule, as lovable Sydney lads Lime Cordiale proved in Brisbane last Thursday night, is to feature a trombone. Nothing can ever be awkward when there’s a bloke on stage ripping into a trombone solo.

All this horn blowing was in aid of the band’s new single, Hanging Upside Down, which was the penultimate course in a smorgasbord of old favourites and appetising new material. Fronted by brothers Oli and Louis Leimbach, Lime Cordiale are hedonistic and endearingly brash, and an immensely fun live act.

Three songs in and Falling up the Stairs has Black Bear Lodge dancing with unashamed glee. I feel like a more complete person after seeing a trombone, trumpet and clarinet played in unison during Pretty Girl. In addition to such welcome acts of spontaneity, Lime Cordiale have a real knack for engaging with their audience. A uniquely musical kind of symbiotic relationship exists between them and their audience, with each gaining energy from the other. But perhaps the greatest compliment I can pay Lime Cordiale is that, for all their talent, presence and guile, they never appear aloof.

Sleeping at Your Door and the final song, Bullshit Aside, were the only other songs from previous EPs that featured on the night, with the remainder of the set comprising unreleased music. Like Hanging Upside Down, these new songs indicate a somewhat less capricious direction for the band. Whether this is for better or for worse, I’m undecided. But as long as the trombone stays, I’m happy.

1. Chet Faker

It’s fair to say Chet Faker is the man of the hour. After placing no less than four times in Triple J’s Hottest 100 on the back of his immaculate Built on Glass record, the bearded Melbournian is taking his breathtaking live show around the country. Needless to say, tickets are in very high demand, and consequently further dates have been added to the tour.

Chet Faker tour dates:

Wednesday 11 February – Royal Theatre, Canberra (All Ages)
Friday 13 February – Hordern Pavilion, Sydney (Licensed All Ages)
Saturday 14 February – Convention Centre, Brisbane (All Ages)
Sunday 22 February – Arts Centre, Fremantle* (18+)
Wednesday 25 February – Palais Theatre, Melbourne (All Ages)
Thursday 26 February – Palais Theatre, Melbourne (All Ages)
Friday 27 February – Palais Theatre, Melbourne (All Ages)
Saturday 28 February – Thebarton Theatre, Adelaide (All Ages)
Tuesday 3 March – Hordern Pavilion, Sydney (Licensed All Ages)
Thursday 5 March – Palais Theatre, Melbourne (All Ages)
Saturday 7 March – Palais Theatre, Melbourne (All Ages)

All tickets here

 

2. Gang of Youths

Sydney rockers Gang of Youths are headlining a smattering of gigs down the east coast in support of their punchy new single, Benevolence Riots. Having already visited Brisbane in January, the boys are set for hectic shows in Sydney and Melbourne later this month.

Gang of Youths tour dates:

SATURDAY 14TH FEBRUARY
MELBOURNE | THE WORKERS CLUB | http://theworkersclub.oztix.com.au/?Event=48941

SATURDAY 21ST FEBRUARY
SYDNEY | GOODGOD SMALL CLUB | http://www.moshtix.com.au/v2/event/gang-of-youths-benevolence-riots-tour/74791

 

3. Angus & Julia Stone

2014 saw Angus & Julia Stone release their third album – their first truly collaborative effort – with producer Rick Rubin. The self-titled LP was very positively received, with lead single Heart Beats Slow cracking the Hottest 100 at #62. After kicking things off in Perth on Wednesday, the siblings have embarked on an extensive national tour throughout February. Supported by Cloud Control and Little May, this is set to be a fantastic run of shows.

Angus & Julia Stone tour dates:

Saturday, 7th February 2015SOLD OUT
Entertainment Centre, Darwin*
Tickets: Live Nation

Tuesday, 10th February 2015
Convention Centre, Cairns*
Tickets: Live Nation

Wednesday, 11th February 2015
Entertainment Centre, Townsville*
Tickets: Live Nation

Friday, 13th February 2015
Riverstage, Brisbane
Tickets: Live Nation

Saturday, 14th February 2015NEW SHOW
Lake Kawana Community Centre, Sunshine Coast
Tickets: Live Nation

Sunday, 15th February 2015NEW SHOW
C.Ex, Coffs Harbour
Tickets: Live Nation

Wednesday, 18th February 2015NEW SHOW
Anita’s Theatre, Wollongong
Tickets: Live Nation

Friday, 20th February 2015
Sydney Opera House Forecourt, Sydney
Tickets: Live Nation

Saturday, 21st February 2015NEW SHOW
Panthers, Newcastle
Tickets: Live Nation

Tuesday, 24th February 2015
Aec Theatre, Adelaide
Tickets: Live Nation

Thursday, 26th February 2015
Costa Hall, Geelong*
Tickets: Live Nation

Friday, 27th February 2015
Margaret Court Arena, Melbourne
Tickets: Live Nation

Saturday, 28th February 2015
Odeon Theatre, Hobart*
Tickets: Live Nation

 

4. Lime Cordiale

If you like the sound of brass-infused indie pop, then Lime Cordiale are the band for you. At the core of the Sydney outfit are brothers Ollie and Louis Leimbach, whom I had the pleasure of interviewing at BIGSOUND last year. This time around they’re touring in support of their new single, Hanging Upside Down. Their live shows are full of energy and, having recently toured with The Delta Riggs, they’re sure to have a well-practised set ready to go.

Lime Cordiale tour dates:

FEB 20 FRI – HANGING UPSIDE DOWN TOUR – Northcote Social Club

FEB 26 THU – HANGING UPSIDE DOWN TOUR – Black Bear Lodge

FEB 28 SAT – HANGING UPSIDE DOWN TOUR – Newtown Social Club

All tickets here

 

5. Client Liaison

If you have to see only one Australian act perform live this year – for the love of God – let it be Client Liaison. The Melbourne duo, purveyors of turn-of-the-’90s Australiana and Lords of the Dance, put on a magnificent, life-affirming show. Fronted by the hair, hips and shoulder pads of Monte Morgan, Client Liaison are the epitome of hedonism, and leave nothing in the locker. The Pretty Lovers tour kicks off in March.

Mar 04 Pretty Lovers Tour w/ Retiree, Wrooks – Black Bear Lodge – Brisbane
Mar 05 Pretty Lovers Tour w/ Retiree, Wrooks – Black Bear Lodge – Brisbane
Mar 06 Pretty Lovers Tour – Jimmy’s Den – Perth
Mar 07 Pretty Lovers Tour – Pirie & Co. Social Club – Adelaide
Mar 14 Pretty Lovers Tour w/ Retiree, Wrooks – Oxford Art Factory – Sydney
Mar 18 Pretty Lovers Tour w/ Retiree, Wrooks –  170 Russell – Melbourne
Mar 20 Pretty Lovers Tour w/ Retiree, Wrooks – 170 Russell – Melbourne (Sold Out)

 

6. Sticky Fingers

Sticky Fingers are perhaps the most popular band in Australia right now. So popular, in fact, that their imminent tour famously sold out before it was even announced. In order to cater for this overwhelming demand, new dates have been added to the tour schedule, so there’s hope for you yet if you want to catch the Sydney boys in action.

Sticky Fingers tour dates:

13 March 170 Russell (Formerley BILLBOARD) | Melbourne,VIC AUSTRALIA

15 March 170 Russell (Formerley BILLBOARD) | Melbourne,VIC, AUSTRALIA

21 March Enmore Theatre | Sydney, NSW, AUSTRALIA

26 March The HI-FI | Brisbane, QLD, AUSTRALIA

27 March The HI-FI | Brisbane, QLD, AUSTRALIA

28 March Great Northern Hotel | Byron Bay, NSW, AUSTRALIA

All tickets here