murraybramwell.com

January 01, 1989

Kelly Country

Filed under: Archive,Music

1989

Paul Kelly and the Messengers
Thebarton Theatre

Reviewed by Murray Bramwell

Paul Kelly has to be one of our most eclectic songwriters. The influences crowd in from all directions. Irish folk, American country, Dylan, Guthrie, Costello, even bands like UK Squeeze- they all seem to be in there somewhere. Not that there is anything derivative about Kelly, it’s just that he has such good attennae for all the sounds that sound good.

He has been making great pop music …

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November 01, 1988

Medium Cool

Filed under: Archive,Music

Mick Jagger

Thebarton Oval

With the Stones on the brink of their silver jubilee it would be hardly surprising if some of the faithful at the Mick Jagger concert at Thebarton Ovalwere grandparents. It was rock of ages for all ages as Jagger and the showband served up a concert -of vintage, even antique, Stones, and late Mick from his recent-ish Primitive Cool album.

Heralded by a thunderous bassdrum roll, ‘the band came on stage looking like bikies, bandits, Las …

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June 01, 1988

Relative Success

Filed under: Archive,Music

Clannad
Festival Theatre

As their name suggests, Clannad is a family affair. Paul, Ciaran and Maire, the Brennan siblings, combined with their twin uncles Noel and Padraig Duggan in 1970 to form one of Ireland’s foremost folk outfits.

A lot has happened to Clannad since they first started winning the battle of the bodhrans back in Gweedore, Donegal. Maire’s husky vibrato lead vocals, harmonised with the choral voices of her near and dear, have made the Clannad sound distinctively, sepulchrally …

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Miles Ahead

Filed under: Archive,Music

Miles Davis
Thebarton Theatre

Miles Davis is unique. His forty year career in jazz has been spent at the most avant part of the vanguard. As a teenage prodigy he was, after Dizzy Gillespie, the most distinctive trumpeter in New York, or Paris, or anywhere. At the age of sixty-one he still presides over a band which is bursting with invention.

Inexplicably, on his first Australian tour, Davis attracted a less than full house for his one Thebarton concert. But …

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Orchestral Manoeuvres

Filed under: Archive,Interviews,Music

Murray Bramwell talks with Chief Conductor Nicholas Braithwaite and General Manager Michael Elwood about the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, its past, present and, most importantly, its future.

It is the second night of the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra’s Masters Series for May. Austrian pianist Walter Klien is playing a solo section from Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27 in B flat major with fluid elegance while Concertmaster Ladislaw Jasek and his associate Alan Smith beam with comradely encouragement. It is one moment of …

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January 01, 1988

This Year’s Model

Filed under: Archive,Music

Elvis Costello and the Confederates
Thebarton Theatre

In his warm-up set Nick Lowe, King of the rockpile, warned that Elvis Costello’s concert in Adelaide would be no ordinary gig. After months on the road from Atlanta, Georgia through Europe, Japan and Australia, Adelaide was the band’s last stop before heading, variously, home.

Lowe obliged with a modest draught of his bubbly pop – Cruel to be Kind, Without Love and, befitting an erstwhile son-in-law of Johnny Cash, he …

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December 01, 1987

Celt Following

Filed under: Archive,Music

Celt Following
The Chieftains
Festival Theatre

Even when they’re just tuning their instruments the Chieftains sound better than most bands. Their mellifluous harmonies have been generating journalistic blarney for more than twenty four years, in which time the group has produced some fifteen albums including some very successful music for films.

In their time the Chieftains have rubbed tin whistles with just about everyone- Eric Clapton, Van Morrison and Mike Oldfield for instance. They even played the curtain-raiser for the …

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June 01, 1987

Getting Close to Royalty

Filed under: Archive,Music

The Pretenders
Thebarton Theatre

In many ways Chrissie Hynde is soul companion to songwriters Ellie Greenwich and Carole King, who between them produced most of the definitive popular music released in the early sixties by Liberty Records and Phil Spector’s own Philles label. Like Leslie Gore, Sandie Shaw and Dionne Warwick, Chrissie Hynde’s music is Aching Pop – soulful, histrionic and bitterly aware of the chains of love.

The last time the Pretenders toured in early 1982 they gave one …

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April 01, 1987

Simply Red

Filed under: Archive,Music

Simply Red
Billy Bragg
Le Rox

Billy Bragg is the busker who turned busker. He used to wander the streets performing with a fifty quid electric guitar and a 60 watt amp on his back. Now he tours the world and performs at Le Rox with a fifty quid guitar and his 60 watt amp on the ground. There is much to be pleased about with Billy Bragg. At a time when record production takes an expensive month of Sundays …

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March 01, 1987

Swanky

Filed under: Archive,Music

The Eurythmics
Memorial Drive

Last time the Eurythmics were in Australia they were Tourists. The
Tourists, it must be said, were never much chop. One of their singles scraped into the Top Ten but no one would have thought that Gorbals rocker, Dave Stewart, and the singer in the Mary Quant tat, Annie Lennox, would do more than sink without trace when the band dispersed in 1980.

Instead, with five hit albums in a row, the Eurythmics are here again …

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