Celebrating Indigenous Australian Music. The Famous Spiegeltent. Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Adelaide Festival Centre June 14. 2021.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Marked with traditional white
pigment and wearing a red loin cloth, Kaurna man Isaac Hannan welcomed the
audience in the Spiegeltent to country and offered a moving rendition on the
didgeridoo. There is a nobility to his presence and the playing that resonates
through more than 40,000 years of First Nation existence on the land and with
the land. It is a moving prelude to the Adelaide Cabaret Festivals salute to
the indigenous culture of the past and the emerging talents of the present and
the future. Hosted by comedian Steph Tisdell, this exciting event, inspired by ABC Music’s Deadly Hearts
Albums featured young and emerging indigenous artists and headliner, six time
Aria Award winner, Dan Sultan.
In her introduction Tisdell
promised a standard of performance that would show the deadly power of
blackfellas and “blow your minds” It was no empty promise. Her observation that
the talent that would appear could take their place on any stage – white fella
or black fella or any fella – was right on the mark. Triple J Unearthed High
Indigenous Initiative winner, seventeen year old Aohdan opened the show with a
mix of original songs and covers by his inspirations Josh Black and Alexander
Biggs and a song, Fortune Cookie that
he stole from his Dad. Already releasing his singles and working on an album.
Aohdan is a name to remember. His songs about his teenage life already show a
musical maturity that had the audience breaking into instant applause after his
Fleetwood Mac number at the close of his bracket.
Steph announced Kee’ahn’s song Better Things as the anthem of Covid, a
song tht left Tisdell in tears. With a
voice that soars like an angel’s , Kee’ahn draws us into a world of sadness, of
the death of her grandmother or the bust-up with a lover but offers a future of
hope as she searches for a way to navigate her world. Here is another name to remember. Kee’ahn
sings from the soul with the spirit of a shining talent.
Only the impressive Tia Gostelow
from Brisbane was able to get to the festival with her band, Jordan on guitar,
Izzy on bass and Sebastian on drums. The Melbourne lockdown left bands stranded
and solo artists were left to perform with only a guitar as accompaniment.
After being blown through the roof by Tia’s enthusiast band members, I was thankful
that I could enjoy the pure sound of the artists in the Spiegeltent. If the
band had been on the Festival Theatre stage as initially advertised in the
festival brochure, their sound would have been better balanced. I wondered too
whether they had had time to do a sound check. It was not until Tia’s Get To It that the lads on the mixing
desk actually got it and the gig settled into a
well mixed sound. Also a Triple J Indigenous Innovation Award winner,
Tia sings the songs of her experience. She too is an emerging artist who is
already making her mark and has a bright future ahead of her.
The three young artists are
already well on the way to taking their place on the national stage. Their
talent is prodigious. Their love of music and inspiration, but they are still
on the cusp of progressing their art.
There is work to be done of giving the lyrics their rightful place and
making sure that they are heard. The
music stiirs the heart, but it is the lyrics that arouse the mind. Aodhan, Kee’ahn
and Tia are the exciting new generation of Australian musicians, song-writers
and singers. Their heritage is indigenous but their talent is universal born of
all artists and created for all people. They are the voices of reconciliation
and the hope of generations to come.
The last hour of a four hour
concert was handed over to the charismatic award winning Dan Sultan. Seated
before the mike, and with a borrowed guitar and various borrowed equipment,
because of Covid lockdown and hotspots, Sultan without his band, stranded in Melbourne “making
sourdough.” Held the audience in the palm of his hand with his country and
western songs of survival (Tarred and
Feathered) and political cruelty (Boat)
. With his engaging chatter and
anecdotes, his earnest and heart felt songs and his brilliant playing on a
borrowed guitar; Sultan earned his title as headliner and the love of an
audience who delighted in his gift to music.
All in all, Deadly Hearts Celebrating Australian Indigenous music was a slick
production, smoothly hosted by Tisdell and demonstrating an array of talent
that is performed by artists with an indigenous heritage but making music that
is uplifting and entertaining for all.