Sly Withers covers Coldplay, The Kid LAROI talks success, meet one of our most prominent First Nations TikTok creators
| When COVID-19 pulled the plug on live music all over the globe, the SITG team got started on a new event to take Australia’s biggest winter music festival online. |
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| As well as their own track ‘Clarkson’ the Perth rockers took on ‘The Scientist’ from the 2002 Coldplay album, A Rush of Blood to the Head. | Come up to meet you > |
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| The streaming figures and international attention as music’s Next Big Thing. The Kid LAROI definitely seems like he’s living in a dream lately. And he’s inclined to agree. | TELL ME WHY > |
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| The lockdowns have hit particularly hard for people whose livelihoods — not to mention mental wellbeing and sense of self — is tied directly to live music. | Read on > |
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| Emily Johnson AKA @howdoidelete1 is one of our most prominent First Nations TikTok creators/Adam Driver thirst trappers. | TikTok’ll make ya > |
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| The rapper-to-indie pop star route isn’t a traditionally frequented path. But then Allday has never been a traditional rapper… | This week’s Feature Album > |
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| "The cultural meaning and the cultural effort that I've put into that piece shows the weight and the 60,000 years that we've been doing this for and the 200 years plus of protesting,” says Arrernte and Luritja artist Michelle Kerrin. | More on Hack > |
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