Jimmy Barnes Flesh and Blood Tour Postponed Until September
Jimmy Barnes ‘Flesh and Blood’ tour will now start in September due to the uncertainty surrounding different states and their current Covid restrictions.
“I would rather be on stage than nearly anywhere else in the world but I would never want to endanger any of our Australian music fans. So due to COVID, I have had to reschedule my shows. I didn’t want to postpone and postpone, week after week so we’ve moved the shows back by a month or so. I hope we get on top of this by then and we can all celebrate live music together again” Jimmy Barnes
From medicating backstage to meditating: Barnesy’s trip down memory lane
We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
Dismiss
Normal text size
Advertisement
“I’m not slowing down,” says Jimmy Barnes matter of factly in the preface to his award-winning memoir,
Working Class Man.
In those same pages – recounting a remarkable journey that began with earlier memoir
Working Class Boy – you can almost hear the indefatigable rock’n’roller chuckling out loud at the suggestion his life story has been “an adventure to say the least” before adding that along the way he found “the love of my life and we had a beautiful family” that helped save him from a troubled, turbulent past.
From medication to meditation: Barnesy says the best is yet to come smh.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from smh.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Print article Anchorage residents formed a long line to vote at the Loussac Library on Tuesday afternoon, the last day to vote in the city election. On the ballot: mayor, four of seven Anchorage School Board seats, a recall vote on one Assembly member and several bond propositions. The line circled the library’s lobby, extended into the Assembly chambers and stretched out the library’s doors and along the sidewalk, spilling into the parking lot by 4 p.m. Poll workers said that they were surprised by the number of people opting to vote in-person instead of by mail. “It’s been a little hectic,” said Peggy Robinson, co-chair for the vote center at the Loussac Library. “We did not expect this.”