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In 1989, 3D World began in Sydney, and ran until 2011. The magazine focused on dance music and club culture. Its main competitor was The Brag, published by Furst Media. [6] 3D World was purchased by Street Press Media in 2009, and they expanded to Melbourne and Brisbane in 2010 [7] before closing the print edition the following year.
Perth is home to the West Australian Symphony Orchestra which performs a regular programme of orchestral music, usually from its base at the Perth Concert Hall; it also tours regional Western Australia. There are a large number of smaller professional, semi-professional and non-professional music groups and choral societies and choirs which ...
Listen Out is an annual Australian music festival held in Sydney, Perth, Melbourne and Brisbane since September 2013. In 2018, an inaugural alternative version of Listen Out, titled Listen In took place in South Australia and New Zealand.
Street performers, Quidams, walking through the crowd at the Perth International Arts Festival, South Perth Foreshore, March 2007 The festival was created in 1953 by the University of Western Australia, making it the oldest international arts festival in Australia, [1] and the oldest annual international multi-arts festival in the southern hemisphere.
This is a list of Western Australian musicians, (artists and bands) from all genres.. Because of the relative isolation of the state and the capital city of Perth from the rest of Australia, band membership has often been characterised by associations with other bands in the region.
This is a list of Australian produced music television shows.. Early days of music television pre-dated video clips, and included variety style series, miming series, and pop series, and with the advent of music videos, shows gave way to slickly prepackaged film clips with a host compère mixing live local acts (e.g. Countdown).
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TAGG – The Alternative Gig Guide or TAGG (its acronym and popular name) was a free fortnightly Australian music street press published from 1979 to 1981 in Melbourne. [1] It was published by Toorak Times, an independent newspaper started in 1972, [ 2 ] and later expanded to Sydney.