Perry Keyes, the voice of inner-Sydney’s south returns to the stage with a live cinematic presentation of his sixth LP. Black & White Town chronicles the grit and glory of public housing life in Redfern and Waterloo, with Keyes’ songs set to the backdrop of the evocative images of Sydney filmmaker and photographer Johnny Barker.
Sydney musical institution and best-kept local secret, the Starfish Club, is bringing its dynamic jazz groove to ACO On The Pier. Across two shows, Jonathan Zwartz, Hamish Stuart and the incredible Starfish ensemble will be joined by special guests, including acclaimed vocalist Dannielle De Andrea (aka Gaha) and rising star Ruby Jackson with Laneous and Barney McAll.
More than 70 years after its composition John Cage’s magnum opus, Sonatas and Interludes, is reimagined as a three-dimensional world at Carriageworks. For The Cage Project, Australian percussionist, composer and sound artist Matthias Schack-Arnott creates an immersive installation of concert and visual art as a large mobile of floating percussion instruments rotates above a massive kinetic sculpture by acclaimed French pianist Cédric Tiberghien.
The Emma Pask Big Band reprise Park’s celebrated Latin jazz album Cosita Divina on its 10th anniversary. The local jazz legend and her vibrant 12-piece Latin jazz orchestra evoke a journey through the lush sounds of Brazilian, Cuban and Spanish song, showcasing why she’s a favourite of Latin star Ricky Martin and audiences worldwide.
FUTURE FREQUENCIES
Discover tomorrow’s next big thing with the Future Frequencies line-up. New and upcoming talent from across Australia and around the globe descend on Sydney for a series of must-see gigs and performances.
Drawing weighty comparisons to the likes of Marvin Gaye and David Ruffin, Daptone Records recruit Jalen Ngonda is bringing golden-era soul to a new generation. Fresh from the release of his 2023 debut album, Come Around and Love Me, Ngonda is ready to make festival audiences swoon over two nights at City Recital Hall.
New York-raised vocalist Yaya Bey is one of R&B’s most original new stars, with a sound and swagger that’s entirely her own, blending boundary-pushing neo-soul with funk. Onstage, Bey is a force of nature, with setlists speaking to self-love, loss and resilience. After a run of critically lauded releases, the R&B shapeshifter will make her hotly anticipated Australian debut.
Raised in East London’s Isle of Dogs, Hak Baker cemented his iconoclastic status with 2023’s Worlds End FM. Earning a cadre of fans including The Streets, Fontaines D.C. and Pete Doherty, Baker’s street-level storytelling and genre-scuffing “G-folk” sound will collide with the Sydney Festival stage.
Alternately tough and tender, Melbourne’s Cash Savage and The Last Drinks have developed a reputation as one of the country’s most ferocious live acts. Following the success of their brutally honest fifth studio album, So This Is Love, the outfit will bring their bruising post-punk rock to town.
In her first visit to Sydney, the rising star of the European jazz scene, Ukrainian-born, Berlin-based singer and musician Ganna Gryniva – aka GANNA – shares her stunning fusion of modern jazz, electro beats and traditional Ukrainian folk alongside gifted guitarist Tal Arditi.
Led by producer and saxophonist Pete Cunningham, Bristol collective Ishmael Ensemble explore the sounds of spiritual jazz, psychedelic dub and experimental electronica to create a sonic terrain entirely their own. Their latest album, Rituals, is almost psychedelic in its blend of colours, textures, facets and moods.
Singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Jófríður Ákadóttir, aka JFDR, has evolved into one of Iceland’s most prodigious artists, with Björk having cited her as an inspiration. Music-lovers will enjoy the artist’s restrained gentleness and sublime experimental electro-folk in an intimate one-off concert.
With a genre-defying and charismatic take on jazz, R&B and electro-funk, Canadian-Filipina artist Mary Ancheta Quartet has brought high-voltage stage presence to Montreal Jazz Festival, Vancouver International Jazz Festival and other high profile showcases across Canada. Inspired by the likes of Squarepusher, The Meters and Prince, the quartet extends an irresistible invitation to groove.
Combining the freewheeling talents of saxophonist and clarinettist Bastien Weeger and beatboxer and bass clarinettist Julien Stella, the French duo NoSax NoClar is shaking up the European jazz scene with performances at festivals like Jazzahead! in Germany. Their sound represents contemporary jazz at its most agile and inventive, bringing in influences from folklore to Balkan, Celtic and Berber music to produce lively, hard-hitting tracks where timbre, rhythm and melody are one.
ARIA-nominated, internationally acclaimed vocalist and dancer Parvyn, known as the lead of cult psychedelic band The Bombay Royale, lights up the festival. With her hypnotic fusion of pop, electronica and traditional Indian sounds, her live shows brilliantly synthesise the many strands of her career.
Breaking out with earworm singles on tastemaking French label Kitsuné, Australia’s own synth-pop queen Chela evolved again with 2023’s electrifying queer anthems “Cool 2B Queer” and “Hard 4 You”. Expect charisma to burn and some seriously enviable dance moves.
Presented by Astral People, the series Ode to Inspiration joins the dots between the trailblazers who opened doors and tomorrow’s new radicals walking through them. Sydney’s Setwun & The Soulstranauts pay homage to Roy Ayers, a prophet of funk, soul and jazz. While Melbourne singer, songwriter and selector Allysha Joy reinterprets the songbook of Roberta Flack alongside material from her new album, The Making of Silk.
Returning to the Australian National Maritime Museum for its ninth year and featuring a world-class program of musicians, dancers, entrepreneurs and interactive experiences, New Beginnings Festival is a celebration of Sydney’s refugee, migrant, multicultural and multi- generational communities.
RESONANCE
This year’s classical program at ACO On The Pier sees four of Australia’s most celebrated music ensembles and solo artists respond to the theme “birth, destiny and what we leave behind” – inspired by Sydney Festival Visual Artist in Residence Telly Tuita and his Tongan ancestors.
From beautiful simplicity to pandemonium beyond recognition, Omega Ensemble presents a program of contemporary masterworks, featuring Missy Mazzoli’s GRAMMY®-nominated double bass concerto Dark with Excessive Bright with guest bassist Jaan Pallandi and groundbreaking music from American composer Samuel Adams.
Mezzo-soprano and vocalist Lotte Betts-Dean presents a highly charged, virtuosic and wide-reaching program, fusing contemporary music for voice and electronics with four centuries of international art song. Lotte will be joined on stage by her laptop, surround-sound speakers and longstanding collaborator, pianist Joseph Havlat, to perform an unusual and thrilling tapestry of vocal music, including rare gems by composers and songwriters across the musical and historical spectrum from Barbara Strozzi, Erin Gee and Giacinto Scelsi to Nick Drake, Caroline Polachekto and Béla Bartók.
The music of Bach – perfect and universal – is the connecting thread in a compelling program from Bach Akademie Australia. Looking to the heavens for inspiration in Bach: Birth and Destiny, voices and instruments dance and resound in music from the high Renaissance to today, from Europe to the Pacific – with the Morning Star as a guiding light.
Returning with an all-new quartet, ACO Up Close: Legacies following the musical traditions of Bach and Haydn into the current century. Running through the program are moving stories of music left unfinished and challenges handed to future generations.
CIRCUS, FAMILY AND COMMUNITY PROGRAMMING
Throughout the festival season, the general public is invited to share a message of hope for the future, with their written actions woven into this unique installation on Tallawoladah Lawn outside the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia in Circular Quay. From art and architecture collective Cave Urban along with Sydney Festival, What We Leave Behind is an opportunity to share and connect without leaving a trace. |