If you love cabaret as an art form, you must see this provocative show

May Be Interested In:Harvard head apologises as scathing reports on campus prejudice released


Played by a live band (saxophone, violin, keyboard and percussion), the original composition makes it feel like you’ve stepped into some alternate dimension of Eastern European cabaret. Nobody else in Melbourne writes music quite like this, as far as I know. If you love cabaret as an art form, you should see The Butcher, The Baker… and be inspired by how rebellious and free-souled it sounds.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhouse

MUSICAL
Cricket The Musical ★★★
Denis Carnahan, Memo Music Hall, February 8

Devotees of sport and the performing arts might have tribal wariness of each other – think of the jocks and drama nerds in almost every teen movie ever made – but in truth they’re natural bedfellows.

Denis Carnahan wrote and stars in Cricket The Musical.

Can you really imagine a world of sport without half-time entertainment? Or comic roastings? Or variety segments? And how diminished our stages would be if we didn’t have Nathan Maynard’s brilliant play about racism in footy, 37, currently showing at the MTC, or Eddie Perfect’s homegrown hit, Shane Warne the Musical.

Denis Carnahan’s Cricket the Musical isn’t in fact a musical, as Shane Warne was, though I’d wager that Carnahan’s more of a cricket tragic than Perfect. His sportive musical satire gifts audiences with cricketing erudition, wrapped in the comforts of Australian kitsch and nostalgia. It comes across as the kind of affectionate, knockabout fun – up there with Greg Champion and The Coodabeen Champions – you don’t see much any more.

No wicket’s too sticky for Carnahan, and he gets an edge on every triumph and scandal in the game.

Comic songs range from a thigh-slapping ode (sung to the tune of I’ve Been Everywhere) to the glories of the moustache throughout cricket history, through to the odious Tim Paine dick-pics episode – a small (though hardly trivial) matter, perhaps most effectively skewered by women to this point.

Loading

Legendary incidents of unsportsmanlike conduct include the notorious “underarm bowling incident” of 1981 and various match-fixing scandals, and that oft-invoked ideal, The Spirit of Cricket, even comes to the crease as nightwatchman.

Higher in the batting order are good-natured musical roastings of the storied Steve Smith and valiant Ricky Ponting; a brief history of the Ashes calculated to deflate a British sense of disdain for the colonies; and a nostalgic look at Aussie sports broadcasting, notably a humorous eulogy for the cricket coverage that the owner of this masthead, Channel Nine, served Australians for 40 years.

Carnahan has an impressive vocal range. Playful rewrites of pop and rock and country favourites are the main attraction with a few original numbers on guitar. Clever video montages, historical footage of cricketing bloopers and other amusing items of Australiana supplement Carnahan’s live comic antics.

It’s all performed with reverent irreverence, a fine sense of the ridiculous, and builds an easy rapport with the audience. I suspect it’d go down as well in a country pub as at corporate functions, or indeed the Melbourne International Comedy Festival once the current tour ends.

Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead

MUSIC
ACO: BRAHMS & BEETHOVEN ★★★★★
Melbourne Recital Centre, February 8

Fifty years of fine music making is indeed worth celebrating and the Australian Chamber Orchestra threw an excellent party to open its golden anniversary season. Not content to fete its many achievements and confirm its well-respected global status, this program looked to the future by expanding the chamber dimensions of the orchestra to involve current and former members of the ACO Emerging Artist Program.

Works were chosen to match the enlarged band. Artistic director and lead violin Richard Tognetti was the soloist in Brahms’ epic Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 77 after which came Beethoven’s evergreen Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92.

ACO artistic director Richard Tognetti has led the chamber orchestra since 1990.

ACO artistic director Richard Tognetti has led the chamber orchestra since 1990.Credit: ACO

Tognetti’s deep emotional commitment to the Brahms ensured a heart-stirring account. Quickly whipping up a dramatic maelstrom in the opening movement, he ensured the orchestra relished its biting rhythms but also carefully shaped its contrasting lyrical elements. Tognetti’s dazzling cadenza, a “synthesis” of three others, incorporated a theatrical timpani roll (courtesy of the Italian composer Ferruccio Busoni) and plenty of technical fireworks.

Featuring the sensitive work of principal oboe Tatjana Zimre, the central Adagio unfolded with tenderness and serenity before ceding to the earthy exuberance of the final “gypsy” dance.

From the grandeur of its opening hammer strokes, the Beethoven gave out a bracing sense of exhilaration, also evident in the nimble third-movement scherzo and in the cavalry charge of the finale. At times in the famous second movement, with its soaring string melodies, the dynamics were reduced to a whisper, fortunately audible in the refined acoustics of Elisabeth Murdoch Hall.

As usual, Tognetti’s enthusiasm could not allow him to stand still on the platform. Clearly out to have fun, he and the players radiated a sense of joyous collaboration, the true hallmark of any chamber orchestra. May such joy illuminate the ACO’s next 50 years.

Reviewed by Tony Way

MUSIC
Bryan Adams ★★★★
Rod Laver Arena, February 6

A giant silver inflatable fist rises from the stage and floats over the crowd – a spectacle to promote Bryan Adams’ new single Roll With The Punches. A voiceover recites the spoken word introduction featured in Kick Ass, with its prophecy about an angel who will revive rock music. “Let there be guitar” yells Adams as he explodes onto the stage with the band.

The 65-year-old Canadian’s recognisable hits have graced pubs, karaoke bars, weddings, and the airwaves for decades. Selling over 65 million records worldwide, he’s been nominated for 16 Grammy Awards, three Academy Awards and five Golden Globe Awards. He’s currently performing across Australia and New Zealand for his So Happy It Hurts tour, adding another Melbourne show this month due to demand.

Bryan Adams at Rod Laver Arena on Thursday.

Bryan Adams at Rod Laver Arena on Thursday.Credit: Rick Clifford

The air is steeped in nostalgia as we’re transported to a different era where rock music reigned supreme. Adams’ accompanying band on keys, guitar and drums complement his powerful vocals, amplifying the emotion in each song. He performs renowned singles from his 1984 album Reckless, including Heaven, Run To You and the much-anticipated Summer of ’69, and romances the stadium with ballads, including Grammy-winning track (Everything I Do) I Do It For You and Please Forgive Me.

Adams owns the stage with a solo acoustic rendition of When You’re Gone, a hit that featured Melanie C from the Spice Girls, and the crowd claps along. He dedicates It’s Only Love, a duet with Tina Turner, to the late singer, interweaving a few bars of her well-known songs Simply the Best and What’s Love Got to Do with It into the performance.

The sold-out crowd sings along as Adams occasionally pauses his vocals, allowing them to fill in the lyrics.

Lead guitarist Keith Scott, who has performed with Adams since 1976, delivers electrifying solos. Later, he mellows out with a Spanish guitar for Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman. When he and Adams perform side-by-side, their chemistry is palpable.

Loading

Before You Belong To Me, Adams asks the crowd to pull out their best dance moves, adding “when we find you, we’re going to put you up on the big screen and embarrass you in front of all your friends”. Some enthusiasts go the extra mile and remove their tops to catch the singer’s attention.

For the final tracks, he performs on a small stage at the back of the stadium. He connects with fans in the stands with an acoustic rendition of All For Love, a collaborative track created with Sting and Rod Stewart from the film The Three Musketeers.

As he leaps and belts out tunes with his signature raspy growl, Adams shows no signs of slowing down. These are the best days of his life, in the summer of ’25.

Reviewed by Vyshnavee Wijekumar

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Your World, Your News: Stay Informed | © 2025 | Daily News