Jon Shain – The Bunker: November 28, 2022
Jon Shain flew in from Durham, North Carolina and took the Bunker folk club museum through a terraplane musical ride of Americana.
Jon Shain flew in from Durham, North Carolina and took the Bunker folk club museum through a terraplane musical ride of Americana.
The festival season kicked off on Saturday with the inaugural Spring City from the Endeavour Live team, and finally, clear blue skies.
David Gray’s ground breaking album, White Ladder, of 2000 is still adored, still provides relaxed listening and last night still attracted an audience of appreciative concertgoers.
Womb is an ambient melodic dream pop sibling trio from Wellington, who make comfort music which often envelopes a fierce burning heart at the core.
Jenny Don’t & The Spurs rode into town and got Whammy’s Back Room rocking with their own brand of rhinestone-encrusted cow-punk.
Kaylee Bell demonstrated how entwined Country and Rock’n’Roll is with a show that was lovin’ up a storm! as the late Jerry Lee would have said.
Peter Hook & the Light are on their fourth or fifth tour of Aotearoa/New Zealand since 2010 when they formed three years after his colleagues in New Order gave him the cold shoulder.
The Killers rolled into town yesterday and played not one, but two shows, in two separate venues. Of course The 13th Floor attended both!
Terrible Sons was described last year in the NZ Herald, as “the biggest band you probably haven’t heard of”. Last night was testament to that status.
Conan Gray has the air of a Michael Jackson Pop King about him as he performed to a highly excited audience of Millennials