Review: Tao of Glass (Perth Festival)
An intimate, personal and human love-song to the music of Philip Glass.
An intimate, personal and human love-song to the music of Philip Glass.
They've got rhythm, they've got music, who could ask for anything more?
Pietari Inkinen launches the Symphony Hour series – and makes his SSO debut – with a thrilling Rite.
One of today's great string quartets delivers unique accounts of Beethoven's music of the future.
A moving and memorable piece of theatre traversing a range of forms to tell stories of home, hope and belonging.
Jansen is glorious in Brahms, while León offers a rich new work and a compelling nightcap.
Despite being written and set in the 1980s, David Williamson’s rapid-fire satire remains a relevant critique of affluence and art.
A flawless recital by one of the giants of the piano.
Love is in the air in this neatly judged Valentine’s recital.
Familiar themes given new life in Final Fantasy chamber performance.
One of the UK's finest young vocal ensembles mesmerises a Perth Festival audience with sublime harmonies.
Helen Thomson is blissfully funny in this new adaptation of Fo’s classic political farce.
Benjamin Law’s playwriting debut is a tragi-comic family story full of heart and humour.