
2025 Top Tens: Big Daddy K Kevin Cherry of 2RRR's Sydney Sounds program
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- By Big Daddy K
- Hits: 433

TEN MEMORABLE MUSIC EVENTS OF 2025 IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER
(1) WOLLONGONG AND NEWCASTLE
Sydney's satellite cities have long held the mantle of creative incubators, with their alluring property prices, sun-kissed beaches, and a vibrant local populace ready to both entertain and be entertained. While the Sydney music scene has seen better days, it’s refreshing to witness bands from Wollongong and Newcastle stepping into the limelight, particularly in the realms of post-punk and alternative genres,
These regional cities are breathing new life into the music landscape, fostering a plethora of new acts supported by improved venues and facilities, creating an electric atmosphere for more creative music.
Sacred Cowboys ride high on a new Manifesto
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- By Edwin Garland
- Hits: 508
In The Manifesto - Sacred Cowboys (Torn &Frayed/Beast Records)
It’s cause for a celebration whenever Sacred Cowboys release a new album. Principal member Garry Gray holds his freak flag high in a fight against mediocrity in music, and he’s now reunited with a fellow founding member in Mark Ferrie.
I have long argued that the Celibate Rifles captured the frantic and wild, surf-meets-Detroit Sydney Sound with their own laconic touch. Sacred Cowboys are a shining light of what the best of the Melbourne Sound. They play rootsy bar room blues, swampy while embracing post punk's excursions and maintaining a sense of punk's urgency.
Mick Harvey's Bleakean Year (among other things)
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 308
Mick Harvey. Andrew Trute photo @andrew_trute_aus
Recently the call went out that Bleak Squad - that startling, noir-esque band comprising Marty Brown (Art of Fighting), Mick Harvey, Adalita Srsen (Magic Dirt) and Mick Turner (Dirty Three) - were touring Australia again.
Having recently relistened to Bleak Squad and finding that I enjoyed them - a process I commend to you - I decided it might be a good idea to ask Mick Harvey a few questions.
The interview ranges a bit wider than just Bleak Squad. As you will see, Mick was very patient with my questions and irreverence, and I must thank him for finding time to complete these questions when I know he was extremely busy.
Guitar Wolf's Jet is heading right back to Oz
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 402

After insane Australian tours in 2023 and early 2025, Tokyo's Guitar Wolf returns to Australia in March along with a new album, “MOREJET!”
Starting in erstern Australia, the run takes in the Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast and Brisbane, Sydney and Wollongong, and Bendigo, Castlemaine, Melbourne, and Balnarring. Supports include Alien Nosejob, Split System and Itchy & the Nits with more to be announced,
“MORE JET!” is Guitar Wolf's first new album in seven years and will be released locally on Sorcerer Records . It's preceded by the first single "9pm Pornomag Planet", which is available now from the band's Bandcamp page.
One Monstar of a return
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- By The Barman
- Hits: 432
Grrrr! – Girl Monstar (Vicious Kitten)
The groove is the thing on “Grrrr!!” - and so it should be on an album with a name approximating one of the many Best Of collections by the Stones. Drummer Susan Shaw (nee Sue Wold, of The Wraylettes, The Wet Ones, The Exotics and Plastic Section) and Janene Abbott lay down smooth ‘n’ slinky rhythms, and the rest follows.
So to the review but first, the backstory: Girl Monstar existed in Australia a very different time. Home base Melbourne was artier than its rawer cousin Sydney but bands like Girl Monstar were spanning both. The Big Day Out festival juggernaut emerged at the tail end of their run and pushed the underground onto a different level.
It's a Long Way Back: Mach Pelican reunites with a new single
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- By Matt Ryan
- Hits: 433

After a 20- year wait, Melbourne’s Japanese-Australian band Mach Pelican are finally releasing new music. The first is a seven-inch, “A Secret Session “, that features two songs, “Remember It“ and “Summer Sun”. They’re both fun, Ramones-y punk rock. They’re also very Mach Pelican and the kind of music that I find hard to believe anyone could dislike.
Mach Pelican have an amazing backstory: Three kids from Japan meet in Perth, start a band based on their shared love of the Ramones, go on to become one of the most beloved band bands of the 1990s and early 2000s in their adopted country and tour overseas, leaving three albums and a stack of singles in their wake before a logn lay-off.
Singer-guitarist Keisuke Nakamura spoke with me from his Melbourne home via the Zoom machine.
Old man shouts at cloud
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 808
You recall the Monty Python sketch about the poor sod who goes on telly to promote his book and discovers to his horror that the TV presenter is only interested in his lame nickname, “Arthur ‘Two Sheds’ Jackson”?
Books are damned difficult to start, maintain and complete; any author should be proud of their achievement in completing a book, never mind getting the sod published. However, Jackson's long hours and hard work are worth precisely zilch in the eyes of the TV presenter and his bosses: all they care about is the ratings scored by making far more of Jackson's pathetic nick-name than it deserves.
2025 Top Tens: Bass-player-around-town, Steve Lorkin from Sydney
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- By Steve Lorkin
- Hits: 1066

Time served with Minuteman, Spectres Revenge, Cool Charmers, Sheek The Shayk, Dave Tice’s Buffalo Revisited, and others. Manager of The Psychedelic Unknown.
2025 HIT PARADE (not in any order)
1. Neptune Power Federation: Live anywhere.
My fave Oz band ATM. New album coming in 2026, I believe,
2. Sex Pistols Featuring Frank Carter at Hordern Pavilion, Sydney
On paper this could have been a disaster, however, Cook, Jones and Matlock with young bloke Frank Carter on vocals were a true celebration of one of music’s most influential albums. The purists stayed at home during the night of the gig crying in their lemonade but the true fans were out in force. Great gig!
3. Ray Ahn’s Birthday
All-round good fellow, way out graphic artist and master basser celebrated his birthday with a cavalcade of luminaries gracing the stage at the tiny MoshPit Bar in Sydney. Jolly good fun.
On Aderlaide Writers Weak (sic)
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- By Robert Brokenmouth
- Hits: 355
Have you ever been to Writers Week in Adelaide?
If it ever gets up again in the same fashion, don't. Just ... don't go. It's outdoors, the weather is usually frankly disgustingly hot and you're surrounded by wealthy wilting widows, wealthy wilting divorced men, wilting writers, wilting bookfloggers and far too many wanna-be-famous drunks and drabs to count.
Worse, the place is infested with poets, whining children's authors, politicians earnestly 'mixing with the people', all of whom are either wilting, drunk, or both.
No, I know. I'm a writer and yet, I don't have a lot of time for writers.
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