New adults-only circus attracting the it crowd Reality TV stars, musicians and socialites are set to turn out for a new 18-plus only entertainment spectacular complete with quirky cocktails and arcade games
Art & Theatre by Anooska Tucker-Evans
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Subscriber only COCKTAILS served in mirror balls with dry ice, roving magicians setting fire to cards and sassy showgirls - welcome to Brisbane s new adults-only circus. Leisure-tainment operation Archie Brothers in Toombul, in Brisbane s north, will launch a unique, 18-plus spectacular tomorrow night boasting everything from unicyclists and jugglers to acrobats and stilt walkers, alongside their usual offering of arcade games, dodgem cars and bowling.
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Reviews / / 06 · 05 · 2021
Squid aren’t an easy band to pin down. Live, they’re a mesh of arms and legs working in semi-unison – perhaps that’s where the sub-aqueous name comes from? – a group of musicians who yearn for spaces new, and ideas hitherto unexplored. On record, too, they’ve proved continually that resting on their laurels isn’t an option. Debut album ‘Bright Green Field’ encapsulates this, eschewing their prior works – that
stellar EP, or 2020 singles ‘Sludge’ and ‘Broadcaster’ – in favour of wiping the slate clean, and starting anew.
It’s proved to be a daring, and emphatically correct decision. A wrecking ball of innovative ideas that refuses to be wrestled into a pigeonhole, ‘Bright Green Field’ is an invigorating, inspired listen, and holds its head high as one of the most complete guitar debuts 2021 will witness.
Stephen Fretwell’s songs have a magic touch.
And as the songwriter returns to the public eye, following a thirteen year hiatus, he can feel safe in the knowledge that his magnificent, haunting new studio album ‘Busy Guy’ is complete, set for a glorious summer release.
Growing up in Scunthorpe, the musician and songwriter, who is now 39, moved to Manchester in the early nineties. Living and breathing music in and around the Northern Quarter, his choice of city showed his desire to establish himself as an artist, while engaging with the tremendously influential music culture.
Featuring songs like ‘Emily’ and ‘New York’, Fretwell’s debut album ‘Magpie’ came out in 2004, followed by ‘Man On The Roof’ in 2007. As much as performing alongside bands such as Oasis, Elbow, Keane, and playing bass with The Last Shadow Puppets, his song ‘Run’ was part of BBC1’s sitcom Gavin and Stacey, where it became an instant classic.
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