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Mary
@dormousesighs.bsky.social
staff writer @themusiccomau.bsky.social | Australian Music Prize judge | views are my own & don’t reflect on my employers | Australia’s #1 mewithoutYou fan
https://linktr.ee/MaryVarvaris
Reposted by Mary
TikTok is killing us with these 😬
July 20, 2025 at 3:17 AM
Reposted by Mary
Inhaler On Their 'Emotional' Return To Australia: ‘We’re Onto Something, And It’s Really Exciting’
Inhaler On Their 'Emotional' Return To Australia: ‘We’re Onto Something, And It’s Really Exciting’
Inhaler are enjoying the kind of career trajectory any young band would only dream of. The Irish rock band formed in Dublin in 2012 with vocalist and guitarist Elijah (Eli) Hewson, guitarist and keyboardist Josh Bartholomew Jenkinson, drummer Ryan McMahon, and bassist Robert Keating. After originating at college and working out who they are as a band (plus gigging), Inhaler dropped their debut single, I Want You, in 2017. Embedded Content Following another string of singles, the rockers opened for Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds in 2019 ahead of dropping their debut, self-titled EP during their 2019-2020 shows. Winning the 2021 Music Moves Europe Talent Award and being shortlisted for the MTV Push UK & Ireland competition, Inhaler started moving towards releasing their debut album, It Won’t Always Be Like This, which they released in July 2021. The band’s three albums – It Won’t Always Be Like This, Cuts & Bruises (February 2023), and Open Wide (February 2025) have debuted at #1 in their native Ireland, plus #1 in the UK with their first album, and #2 with their follow-up releases. Plus, It Won’t Always Be Like This was the quickest-selling debut album on vinyl from any band this century. Embedded Content The band have also amassed a devoted following in Australia, which led to Inhaler touring Down Under for the first time in August 2024—and selling out all the shows. Reviewing the band’s first-ever show in Brisbane, The Music’s Liv Dunford commented on the sold-out gig: “With an energetic and groovy show, it’s little wonder why Inhaler command devotion in Australia.” Inhaler begin their second Australian tour in Perth tonight, kicking things off with a show at the Astor Theatre before heading to Brisbane’s The Tivoli (5 June), Sydney’s Enmore Theatre (6 June), and Melbourne’s Forum (9 and 10 June). They’ll be joined by DICE in Perth and BIIG TIME at all other shows. The Music catches up with Eli Hewson—son of Bono—and Ryan McMahon ahead of their return to Australia. Reflecting on the madness of their debut shows Down Under, which occurred not even a year ago, the pair admit they couldn’t have expected the rapturous response they received, being a band from the other side of the globe. “I know Melbourne was especially rowdy, but they all were, you know, it was a very intense experience for us, actually, because we had never been that far away from home,” McMahon tells. The jet lag was also a struggle to fight. “The jet lag is absurd, so we didn’t really know what to expect going into the first gig.” McMahon continues, “To go that far away and hear people singing back the words to your songs, and singing back bass lines, guitar solos, hooks, all of that… it was kind of emotional for us, to be honest. We were just like, ‘What are you guys doing here?’ Showing up at the first venue in Sydney and seeing people waiting outside was quite mad. “We were like, ‘How has this happened?’ We didn’t expect to be going back so soon, and we’re going back next week, which is wild.” Embedded Content Inhaler are more prepared for facing the jet lag this time around, sharing that they’ve “adopted a mentality” that allows them to accept that the jet lag is bad, but if that’s as bad as it gets, they can cope. Really, as long as they don’t have a repeat of what happened before they played at Melbourne’s Prince Bandroom last year, they’ll be fine. Hewson admits that ten minutes before the band and crew were set to take the stage, they were all asleep—other than McMahon. “We were in Melbourne; I’ve got this amazing picture of literally, I was the only one who didn’t fall asleep, but it was like all the band and all the crew just passed out on the floor because there were no chairs in the backstage, and then I look back at the time at which I took it, and it was literally 15 minutes before we went on stage, and everyone was just knocked out,” McMahon says. Hewson added, “Then we got up, and we just managed to hype ourselves up, and we did the show, and it was so much fun, but it was funny.” McMahon concurs: “It was really funny.” Hewson: “Blasted a bit of INXS to get us in the zone. It was great.” McMahon: “They are the band that did the pop-rock so perfectly.” Embedded Content This time around, Hewson is most excited to meet the fans and just enjoy the vibe in Australia, while McMahon is stoked about having more time Down Under on this tour. Having experienced such a warm welcome on their last Australian tour, Hewson and McMahon are feeling confident about bringing Open Wide to theatre stages. “I will say, it’s been my favourite album release, if that makes sense, to kind of discover playing live,” Hewson notes. “They [the songs] get a really good reception, as well. So, that’s something, you know, we’re onto something, and it’s really exciting. They translate really well.” With their first two albums, Inhaler wanted to make the songs sound big, like it was recorded live on stage; like you were right there with them. With Open Wide, however, they had a new intention: to make an album you could blast in your car or your living room; something slightly more relaxed and explore a different aspect of storytelling, all while retaining the overarching aspects of Inhaler songs. Their new album, even with its differences, still demands your attention. Open Wide had multiple deadlines, but the band kept pressing for time: they knew they were onto something different, something a little more expansive on a sonic level, and the additional time only served their songwriting. Embedded Content “From a songwriter’s perspective, I think it aided us in a lot of ways,” McMahon reveals. “Last year, we had about eight months of no touring, so it left us to just write so many different songs. And not only that, [the band got to] hone in, in a big way, to the song that did make it on the record, and eventually, when we went into record the album, there were no songs left unrecorded.” The thirteen songs you hear on Open Wide are the songs the band recorded in the studio, but that’s not to say Inhaler don’t have more music hiding away for later releases. McMahon teases, “There’s a whole heap of music that exists on our laptops that might never see the light of day, some of it might, you never know, but I think it did aid us massively, just having a lot of time off and putting it out a little bit later than we had originally anticipated, for sure.” While it’s a cohesive album, in terms of the vibe—Open Wide is packed with bright, danceable, pop-rock tunes—there are two songs towards the end of the album that flirt with darkness. There’s the Western-inspired fun of X-Ray, while Concrete feels like Inhaler trying their hand at a The Cure song, especially when the riff comes in. Ironically, though, X-Ray was originally the song inspired by The Cure. Embedded Content McMahon says the cold weather might have influenced the hint of The Cure, and so did the light of recording in a studio with a window. Citing the “drive” of The Cure songs, Hewson says: “I wanted to make something that was driving like that.” Then, with the keyboard hook, the guitar melody was born. “And then all of a sudden, you have a Cure song,” Hewson laughs. “But X-Ray was also like a country rip off on an acoustic guitar, and then it morphed into some sort of weird The Cure / Interpol thing... It’s like Frankenstein. When we started playing it as a band, it really found its place. But I think it was inspired by listening to a lot of country music and a lot of Bob Dylan’s stuff.” Embedded Content Mentioning country music legend Glen Campbell and up-and-coming Irish indie/country star CMAT as influences, Hewson quips, “We listen to a lot of different stuff. Honestly, it’s quite scary sometimes!” While there are still arguments about “selling out” in punk, rock, and metal circles, Inhaler haven’t been followed by the same judgments, despite teaming up with a big-shot producer on Open Wide. And, the band doesn’t believe “selling out” is a thing that exists in this day and age. For their new album, they recruited British songwriter and producer Kid Harpoon, whose songwriting and production credits include work with artists such as Harry Styles, Miley Cyrus, Florence + The Machine, and Shawn Mendes. “No matter what producer you work with, it doesn’t guarantee a number one hit across the world or worldwide domination, honestly,” Hewson says. “But that’s not why we worked with him [Harpoon]. “We worked with him because I love all the drum sounds on Harry Styles’ records and the Peter Gabriel influence, Kings Of Leon’s last album… he’s so fucking—excuse me for swearing—he's a really nice guy. He was around in the early 2000s [of] UK [indie rock], and he just understood us, and it was the perfect thing. But I wish there was a button for selling out, because, my God, I would press it!” McMahon: “Yeah, give us that big song, please.” Hewson: “We’re trying our best!” “Something about him that we really loved was that he’s so into albums,” McMahon adds. “He’s worked with these artists who have recently had these, like, massive chart-topping songs (like Miley’s Flowers and Harry’s As It Was), but he’s not the guy who’s chasing that silver bullet song. “When we were recording with him, he was as invested in each song as he was in the other, and it felt like he was putting so much care and time into helping us make the record that we wanted to make. And his taste in music is just as wide-ranging and varied as ours, you know, he would mention Glen Campbell and Deftones in the same sentence when trying to figure out what to do with a certain song, and I think that’s something that we really resonated with. “Also, he just made us laugh. You know, every single day in the studio was like an episode of South Park or something. You know, we were just laughing a lot.” Of course, it’s impossible to chat with Inhaler and not mention the incredible music coming out of Ireland. Whether it’s the expansive, unusual rock of Fontaines D.C. or the post-punk of bands like The Murder Capital and NERVES, the world-dominating hip-hop of Kneecap, or the country-inspired storytelling of CMAT, Inhaler exist in a truly thrilling time for Irish music. And it’s rubbing off on them. Embedded Content Hewson says, “It’s like our teenage wet dream, all this stuff, because when we were teenagers, people only listened to, like, Ed Sheeran or Iggy Azalea, you know? And we were like, ‘Imagine there was a scene [with] the grandeur of Seattle in the 90s?’ And then all of a sudden, there is, and there’s so much great talent coming out of Ireland. “It makes you feel really proud to be Irish, actually. I don’t know what’s happening over there, but yeah, something’s happening. We need to go back and catch a bit of that.” McMahon concurs, “And it’s not even just music, you know? It’s film, as well. Among the arts, Ireland has always been incredibly strong, but I definitely think the limelight was taken off it for a little while, and it’s nice to see that people are recognising it for how strong it is in that sector. It is just inspiring. You know, all across Ireland, in different parts, there’s great bands coming out, and it’s great to see that there’s bands coming back into people’s lives again.” Hewson: “I’m obsessed with Paul Mescal. Obsessed, I tell you.” McMahon: “Oh, he’s so handsome, dream boy.” Inhaler bring their Open Wide tour to Australia this month. You can find tickets via the Live Nation website. INHALER OPEN WIDE AUSTRALIA TOUR - JUNE 2025   TUESDAY 3 JUNE - ASTOR THEATRE, PERTH With special guests DICE THURSDAY 5 JUNE - THE TIVOLI, BRISBANE With special guests BIIG TIME FRIDAY 6 JUNE - ENMORE THEATRE, SYDNEY With special guests BIIG TIME MONDAY 9 JUNE - FORUM, MELBOURNE – SOLD OUT With special guests BIIG TIME TUESDAY 10 JUNE - FORUM, MELBOURNE – NEW SHOW ADDED With special guests BIIG TIME Embedded Content
dlvr.it
June 3, 2025 at 12:34 AM
Reposted by Mary
The Lansdowne Hotel Saves Sydney-Based Emo/Punk Club Night ‘Last Words’
The Lansdowne Hotel Saves Sydney-Based Emo/Punk Club Night ‘Last Words’
Things looked hopeless for the Sydney-based emo, punk, and metal club night, Last Words, when the venue that hosted the events, the Agincourt Hotel, sold for approximately $30 million and halted live music effective immediately (31 May). However, Last Words has been saved thanks to The Lansdowne Hotel, and the shows will go on. Last Words will recommence at its new home this Saturday, 7 June. To celebrate the launch of the event at the Lansdowne, organisers will welcome Queensland’s Warbear and local acts such as Elara and Lotus Born. Tickets for the Lansdowne launch are available via Moshtix. Embedded Content The move to the Lansdowne Hotel will see Last Words fitted with fresh upgrades, such as world-class production, late-night food options, a licensed smokers’ area, a pool table, arcade machines, and a sex toy claw machine. The alternative club night runs weekly every Saturday, and combines live music and DJ sets and offers a dedicated space for alternative music fans. The event launched in December 2024 at the Agincourt Hotel and created a safe space for a community of live music lovers to feel comfortable. DJs at Last Words nights spin the likes of Bullet For My Valentine, Paramore, Bring Me The Horizon, My Chemical Romance, Slipknot, AFI, and more while also presenting local emerging artists, guest DJs, and after-parties for touring bands playing in Sydney. Last Words founders Matt Raciti and Dan Harvey (B.A.D. Mgmt) said of today’s news, “When we started Last Words, it was just two mates throwing a party we wished existed - loud, emotional, inclusive, and a little unhinged. We never imagined it would grow into the community it is now. “To be moving into a venue as iconic as the Lansdowne is surreal, and it’s only possible because of the people who’ve screamed, moshed, DJ’d, performed, and poured themselves into this night with us. We’re endlessly grateful to every artist, every punter, and everyone who’s ever believed in what we’re building. This isn’t just a party – it’s a scene, it’s a family, and it’s only getting louder." Good Intent is the current Venue Booker for the Lansdowne Hotel. Over the past year, the team has locked in DJ sets from IDLES and Fontaines D.C., and hosted gigs for Spacey Jane, Miss Kaninna, Private Function, The Preatures, Aleksiah, and many others.
dlvr.it
June 3, 2025 at 5:19 AM
Last week, I got on my bullshit (talked a lot about Australian metal bands) for a celebration of the music I’m most passionate about!

If you enjoy the music in this feature, keep listening, go to shows & buy merch, add to playlists, tell your friends 🤘 themusic.com.au/features/aus...
OPINION: Australian Heavy Music Is Taking Over The World. If You Ever Dismissed The Genre, It's Time To Pay Attention
EDM isn’t the only Australian export making international tastemakers take note: it's time to pay attention to Australian heavy music.
themusic.com.au
May 12, 2025 at 3:36 AM
I interviewed one of my musical and personal heroes, the one and only @tommorelloofficial.bsky.social for @themusiccomau.bsky.social 🥲🤩🤘 themusic.com.au/features/tom...
Tom Morello: 'It's A Show For Fighting Fascism, For Celebrating Resistance, And Rocking Out'
Tom Morello drops hints about his Australian shows and what's to come on his forthcoming solo album:
themusic.com.au
April 11, 2025 at 9:31 AM
Reposted by Mary
you should deplatform Arcade Fire/Win Butler for a variety of reasons, but one of them is that you make dorks like this really really mad
April 8, 2025 at 9:50 PM
Feeling honoured to share my latest cover story for @themusiccomau.bsky.social with the iconic @jimmybarnes.com. He’s a man with a big personality who’s lived an epic life, and I did my best to capture that for the story of his upcoming album, ‘DEFIANT.’ 🖤
Jimmy Barnes On His 'DEFIANT' Journey: 'I Think My Best Work Is Still Yet To Come'
Jimmy Barnes On His 'DEFIANT' Journey: 'I Think My Best Work Is Still Yet To Come'
Jimmy Barnes has always been defiant—in the kindest sense of the word. He’s a fighter. He’s rolled with the punches life has thrown at him, from surviving a violent childhood to grinding away with Cold Chisel, securing hit after hit as Aussies fell in love with their hard-rocking, bluesy sound. Following the band’s implosion in 1983, Barnes went solo and clawed his way to the top—he became Australia’s Working Class Man, alright. But behind the scenes, he was dealing with addiction, a lifelong battle in which he eventually won. In the last few years, he’s had to fight new battles: Jimmy has undergone several major operations, including a life-threatening open-heart surgery. Any time he got back up, he faced another health setback. It’s all of these experiences and the recent 50th-anniversary tour with Cold Chisel that informed Jimmy’s excellent 21st album, the aptly-titled DEFIANT, out on Friday, 6 June, via Mushroom Music. “Nobody lives this long without copping some knocks, and I’ve taken my fair share, particularly lately,” Barnes explained upon announcing the album. “But none of us can control what life throws at us. We can only control how we respond, and, for better or worse, I’ve never liked to take a backward step. “It’s no secret that this has caused me some problems over the years, but I’ve finally learned how to turn my stubborn Scottish streak into something positive – something that helps me survive.  I didn’t set out to do it deliberately, but now that the album is finished, I can see there’s a recurring theme about the satisfaction you can get from fighting back. That’s why it’s called DEFIANT!” He kicked off the album campaign with a double single, New Day, and Beyond The River Bend, the former featuring Troy Cassar-Daley and Laurel Edwards in the music video. Embedded Content You might think that, given the album title and Barnes's description as a fighter, the resulting music would be hardened and angry. It’s anything but. On DEFIANT, Barnes embraces the musical inspirations that have stayed with him throughout his life, from American soul and blues artists like Wilson Pickett, Ray Charles, Otis Redding, and Little Richard to the rock and roll and country that we’ve heard across Cold Chisel and Jimmy Barnes albums. This week, Barnes releases the new single The Long Road. Driven by a country groove featuring acoustic guitars and drums, the song effortlessly blends Barnes' iconic screams with the guitar solo and showcases his inimitable singing voice. To capture the feeling he wanted in the song, he teamed up with singer-songwriter Michael Paynter. A close friend of Jimmy’s son and drummer, Jackie Barnes, Michael Paynter plays in ICEHOUSE’s band and works with Michael Delorenzis as part of MSquared Productions, co-writing and producing songs for Australian country artists like Casey Barnes, Hayley Jensen, Taylor Moss, and many more. Paynter currently portrays Jesus in the current Australian performances of Jesus Christ Superstar. Phoning in with The Music ahead of the release of The Long Road and DEFIANT, Barnes reveals, “I wanted to make it a storytelling song. “You talk about the struggle and the things you’ve done wrong and the things you’ve done right in life and then sum it all up in the chorus. I love the way the chorus takes off because, let’s face it, I was a wild young man on a mission for a long, long time until about last week [laughs]. And so, there’s a lot to release when it hits that chorus. “There’s that recurring theme of redemption, and in the whole record, there’s a recurring theme of being defiant, and I mean defiant in the nicest possible way,” Barnes tells. “For years, people have been telling me I wouldn’t be singing in six months. And I say, ‘No, I’ll sing higher and better and stronger.’ I’ve been doing that every year. But also, you know, your health, the mental issues that people go through—this is well documented from writing my books, and I struggled with a lot of depression and trauma. “Growing through all that was about: you have to pick yourself up and move forward and keep moving forward. Don’t take a backwards step. The Long Road is about that long road to perdition. You’re just going to be there, but you’re not going to stop trying to make yourself a better person. You have to make yourself better than who you were and where you’ve come from.” Embedded Content Barnes quips that he’s been “a defiant bastard” since he was a “young fella.” “I don’t like being told I can’t do something; it makes me dig my heels in more and work harder,” he admits. “It’s not just being stubborn, it’s going: ‘No, I can be better. I can do better. And I want to push myself to be better all the time.’ “I continually say that. This record coming out, I think it’s probably going to be my best record to date. And I think my best work is still yet to come. You know, I’m going to keep improving until the day I drop. That’s what I want to do. I’m defiant. I want to keep moving forward and not step in the same river twice.” He adds, “There’s also redemption involved with that, too. You know, where you make mistakes, and if you can look at your mistakes and say, ‘Okay, every mistake is an opportunity. Everything I do wrong is where I’ve learned from.’ Once again, that adds to that whole thing about moving forward with life and becoming a better person, becoming a better human being. And that’s part of what the message of this record is about, too.” Embedded Content DEFIANT is a rock record that Barnes wrote with the intention of playing the songs live, which is fitting, seeing as he’s taking the album on tour just one day after its release. The tour has been met with extraordinary demand; tickets are selling like hotcakes, and extra dates have been added in multiple cities. Barnes explains, “Quite often I make records [and] I just write songs and think, ‘Oh, this is a good song,’ but then I don’t always think, ‘How am I going to play them live?’ If they work live, I put them in. If they don’t, they’re there whenever I want to play them. But this record was actually not constructed [like that].” For DEFIANT, Barnes asked himself the simple question of whether the songs would work in a live setting, and it’s safe to say that the answer is a resounding yes. “I’m really looking forward to hitting the stage and giving these songs a bit of a run because I think once we put them in a live band setting and in front of an audience, they’re going to take on a whole new life again. “The thing is, after coming off the back of five months of Cold Chisel touring, which was awesome—it was one of the greatest tours I’ve ever been involved in, which was incredible—as much as I loved that, I’m so excited about getting back in front of my own band again,” Barnes says. Barnes describes his band as different to Cold Chisel, stating that it’s “a lot more intense in a different way.” Cold Chisel presents the blues and soul side of his artistry, while his band is “a lot more blunt force.” He chuckles, “As much as we play subtle, we like to take things and hit them harder. [It’s] such a great contrast to the Chisel shows. A lot of people have been following me for years went to the Chisel shows for the first time, and will see new things in my shows after watching Cold Chisel.” The Cold Chisel shows saw the band playing to enormous crowds, primarily in massive outdoor spaces. For the DEFIANT tour, Jimmy is heading indoors to put on a show in your local theatre. “There’s some intimacy playing in a venue with a roof on it,” he laughs, adding that his forthcoming shows will have the added intensity of happening indoors. “I like when you can see most of the audience,” he says. “You can actually connect with them visually. You can look them in the eye until three-quarters away, down the room. It’s pretty personal, and you can feel that connection with your audience. “You can see how they’re responding, whether it’s the intensity of the band or the feel of the song, or whatever it is. You can adjust things on the fly, reach out more and make the band work harder. And we all do that when we work a room.” DEFIANT opens with the rousing track, That’s What You Do For Love. A classic Jimmy Barnes number, the song features a stacked list of collaborators: guitarist Joe Bonamassa, Journey’s Jonathan Cain (who penned Working Class Man), Jason Bonham (the son of legendary Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham), his daughter Mahalia Barnes, and longtime studio collaborator Kevin “Caveman” Shirley. And for fans who have seen Barnes live in the last 18 months, they’ve already heard it. Another song featuring collaborations with Michael Paynter, Barnes says Paynter wrote the song specifically for Jimmy after digging into his books, calling back to Jimmy’s 1987 album, Freight Train Heart. Embedded Content “He wrote that song, and it was tipping its hat back to 1987, to Freight Train Heart, to the songs I wrote with Jonathan Cain, which was a really great period for me,” Barnes shares. “That song, we got to play it live for 18 months, but it really developed its own character when we recorded it. “It was funny—we recorded the song, and I did the vocals. Kevin was in Nashville, and Jonathan Cain was in the studio. [Kevin] said, ‘I want to play you this.’ And Jonathan loved it and said, ‘Let me play on it.’ To have Jonathan playing on it; it’s like going full circle and not only acknowledging the great path I set on in 1985 when I first met Jonathan Cain, but also shows how those songs have carried through to my modern repertoire.” As for Jason Bonham, the drummer has wanted to work with Barnes on multiple occasions over the years. Barnes tells, “I’ve met Jason quite a few times, and we’ve been trying to get together at work, but it’s a bit difficult because my son, Jackie, is my drummer. But Jason keeps wanting to play on stuff for me, and I’m such a huge fan of his father. It was really nice to have him contribute to the record.” On the late album track, Damned If I Do, Damned If I Don’t, Barnes is somewhere between AC/DC riffs and the country groove heard earlier on the record. He says, “I wanted to have that country swing. I think it’s reminiscent of ‘70s Rolling Stones, you know, sort of country crossover stuff. I wanted to feature the players, but give the track a lot of air, a lot of space to swing, as opposed to just sort of making it heavy for the same time.” The title track features piano not too far from what we hear on Working Class Man, while things change once again on the album closer, Sea Of Love. On that track, Barnes incorporates balladry with old-school rock and roll inspired by Wilson Pickett, and completes the mission statement for DEFIANT. Embedded Content “Over the last couple of years, I’ve been playing with that song. When I was recording and writing it, I thought that it felt like an early Wilson Pickett song,” he reveals. “I’ve been in a rock band for 50 years, but I grew up wanting to be a soul singer. I was listening to Black singers as a young man; I wanted to be like Wilson Pickett, Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Little Richard, and people like that.” Barnes’ defiance in the face of mental and physical health issues is downright inspiring. Writing books has helped him on his journey to acceptance and reclaiming positivity. A man with many creative outlets, Barnes is currently working on his first-ever fiction novel. “I’m in the process of writing a novel — writing fiction is much different to writing non-fiction,” he says. So, I'm trying to get into fiction. The last book, Highways And Byways, is actually 90% based on facts. “Writing that book was great for my songwriting because as much as I like songs to be based in reality so that I can feel the emotions of them, I don’t want to be tied to just the one outcome. I want to bring a song, and if I want to be joyous, I want to make it joyous. So, I don't want it to be depressing because that’s how the situation might have ended. I want to show light at the end of the tunnel.” Detailing how the books he’s written contrast with his work as a songwriter, Barnes says, “I’m enjoying writing at the moment. I think writing books, not only has it helped me get in touch with myself so I can write more honest and better lyrics, I think the actual writing books has made made me a better lyricist as well. “Working Class Boy was so liberating for me. There was all this trauma and pain that was killing me, and it was blocking me emotionally as a writer. I could only get in one state to perform, and writing that book liberated me. I felt free after doing it.” Embedded Content He adds, “[After writing Working Class Boy], I could write about tougher things in my life without being overwhelmed by them. I could write about it and see hope, as opposed to ‘It’s all dark.’ It freed me up, and it allowed my lyrics to become much more open-ended. It wasn’t just predetermined by the way I started the song.” And Jimmy Barnes is a testament to getting to the light at the end of the tunnel. Even on the DEFIANT album cover, which shows his face in black and white, he’s a man who’s survived plenty but hasn’t become nihilistic. “I like the cover because I wanted it to be, you know, ‘Look at me. This is what I am. This is who I am now,’” he explains. “There’s no frills. It’s just, ‘I’m here, and I’m not going anywhere. I’m standing here right in front of you.’ “That’s what I want this record to be about. I want it to be positive, but also about being able to face anything and keep moving forward, being able to face it and knock you down, stand up and keep moving again. Learn from it. Move on. That’s the recurring theme: it’s not about that classic thing of being not happy and knocked down. It’s about how many times you get back up.” DEFIANT will be released on Friday, 6 June, via Mushroom Music—pre-order/pre-save the album here. Tickets to the DEFIANT tour are on sale now via the Frontier Touring website. ​Presented by Frontier Touring, MG Live & Triple M JIMMY BARNES ​DEFIANT TOUR – AUSTRALIA – JUNE 2025 ​WITH SPECIAL GUEST TAYLOR SHERIDAN   Saturday 7 June - Adelaide Entertainment Centre Theatre | Adelaide, SA | SELLING FAST (Lic. All Ages) ​ticketek.com.au Sunday 8 June - Riverside Theatre, PCEC | Perth, WA | SELLING FAST (Lic. All Ages) ​ ​ticketek.com.au Friday 13 June - Palais Theatre | Melbourne, VIC | NEW SHOW (Lic. All Ages) ​ticketmaster.com.au Saturday 14 June - Palais Theatre | Melbourne, VIC | SOLD OUT Friday 20 June - Fortitude Music Hall | Brisbane, QLD | NEW SHOW (Lic. All Ages) ​ticketmaster.com.au Saturday 21 June - Fortitude Music Hall | Brisbane, QLD | SOLD OUT Friday 27 June - State Theatre | Sydney, NSW | SOLD OUT Saturday 28 June - Canberra Theatre | Canberra, ACT | SOLD OUT Embedded Content
dlvr.it
April 3, 2025 at 8:30 AM
Reposted by Mary
1/31

Meet project "Good Old USA" the now unsealed DoJ file on the Russian influence in the US to sway opinion on the war in Ukraine.

Something Trump has bought into hook-line and sinker.

It was held under seal, because we got the literal playbook revealing their methods
March 6, 2025 at 4:41 PM
Reposted by Mary
Within Temptation On Knotfest & Their Australian Debut: 'It’s An Honour To Share The Stage With These Bands'
Within Temptation On Knotfest & Their Australian Debut: 'It’s An Honour To Share The Stage With These Bands'
Within Temptation are preparing to visit Australia for the first time, and for fans of the Dutch symphonic metal band, it’s been a long time coming. The band was founded in 1996 by vocalist Sharon den Adel and guitarist Robert Westerholt (the pair…
dlvr.it
February 27, 2025 at 12:47 AM
Reposted by Mary
Reposted by Mary
This is where both-sides-ism gets us.
The second half of this quote deserves to be remembered in the history books
February 25, 2025 at 8:02 AM
Reposted by Mary
The second half of this quote deserves to be remembered in the history books
February 25, 2025 at 5:53 AM
I caught up with Davey Havok from AFI ahead of the band’s first Australian tour dates in eight years! Some of which they’ll open for a little band called @greendayofficial.bsky.social 🙌 themusic.com.au/features/afi...
AFI's Davey Havok: 'I Had Perhaps The Greatest Experience Performing American Idiot On Broadway'
AFI frontman Davey Havok discusses American Idiot, the Broadway musical, new music, and more ahead of the band's Australian headline tour dates and shows with Green Day.
themusic.com.au
February 25, 2025 at 7:23 AM
I interviewed Stephen Morris from New Order! A delightfully fun chat themusic.com.au/features/new...
New Order: Returning To Australia 'Feels A Bit Like Unfinished Business'
New Order's Stephen Morris reflects on their 2020 Australian tour being hampered by COVID-19, drinking with Confidence Man, and more ahead of their upcoming tour Down Under.
themusic.com.au
February 21, 2025 at 9:18 AM
ready for a beautiful night with Aurora!
February 11, 2025 at 9:39 AM
it’s bittersweet saying goodbye to one of the country’s coolest heavy bands, but at least Void Of Vision are in control of their own legacy until the end. My interview with Jack Bergin for @themusiccomau.bsky.social: themusic.com.au/features/voi...
Void Of Vision On Their Final Tour: 'It's A Nice Legacy To Leave Behind'
Void Of Vision's Jack Bergin discusses the Melbourne band's final tour, reflects on their incredible career, and all things 'What I'll Leave Behind.'
themusic.com.au
February 10, 2025 at 2:18 AM
Reposted by Mary
I promise you nobody ~needs~ to watch Insiders
February 1, 2025 at 11:20 PM
I might have to use this app more if Michael Stipe is here 🥲
January 30, 2025 at 7:13 AM
Reposted by Mary
Someone just found out how babies work.
January 18, 2025 at 9:20 PM
Reposted by Mary
Published our favorite albums of 2024 list: chorus.fm/features/art...

And my personal list: chorus.fm/blog/jason-t...
Chorus.fm’s Top 30 Albums of 2024
The Chorus.fm staff share their 30 favorite albums of 2024.
chorus.fm
January 6, 2025 at 4:08 PM
Reposted by Mary
I can pinpoint the start of my political awareness at when this ban was passed into law. Where the government and the opposition teamed up to pass something quickly that really should never have passed.

Sounds familiar.

www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
Curbs on transgender rights were proposed for Australia’s 2004 Marriage Act, cabinet papers show
John Howard’s government legislated that marriage must be ‘the union of a man and a woman’, but excluded any reference to birth gender
www.theguardian.com
December 31, 2024 at 11:04 PM
Reposted by Mary
one major improvement i've seen in the world over the course of my lifetime is the emergence of lightly-salted sweets. i just swung by a bakery to pick up a chocolate chip cookie and it had the slightest flaking of kosher salt on it. that shit went crazy. i think we're doing great in that department
December 30, 2024 at 7:39 PM