Shaun's been writing with The Music since 2015 and in that time has written on everything from high art to hip hop, from spectacular jazz in grand arenas to burgeoning bands in back rooms at pubs. He's mapped the rise of such acts as Winston Surfshirt and Noname, reviewed musicals, theatre shows and a tonne of music including the reunions of Wu-Tang Clan and TLC.
His one claim to fame is a short-lived time as singer in a band that Julia Jacklin opened for before she was famous. He's interviewed the Tibetan Prime Minister and a radio comedian he can't remember the name of. Outside of reviewing for The Music, he is a full-time English teacher, part-time poet and avid music and literature aficionado/desperado.
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Ganavya wove an atmosphere of transcendence in Sydney, inviting the audience into a world where poetry and music became one.
Jordan Rakei's Sydney Opera House debut was a culmination of everything he has worked toward: a masterclass in musicianship, storytelling and soul.
Maribou State delivered a performance that was as cerebral as it was visceral, as technically masterful as it was emotionally stirring.
Denzel Curry left the stage with minds blown and many youngsters exhausted from hours in the pit.
The evening's virtuosity matched the glorious groove, while the novelty of watching an 84-year-old wield a keytar was the cherry on top of a magic night.
Emanating an effortless cool, Robert Glasper commanded the mic while peppering the keys.
While physically, Owusu was so close you could almost touch him, sonically, he was in another galaxy.
This is the sort of show you can believe the hype over.
This wasn’t a regular concert but an Australian premier homage to the late great mercurial MC, DOOM.
Yves Tumor brings a much-hyped show boasting a stylish, punky exterior that colours their music with an otherness, an otherworldliness, a scene-streaked flair.