Archive for the shows Category

Well, the Melbourne Fringe was over, but we’d like to give a quick shout-out to Fringe Awards winners and friends of Shaolin Punk, Celia Pacquola (Best Comedy for Am I Strange?) and the Bella Union (Best Venue). Congratulations! We’d also like to wish all the best to other friends of Shaolin Punk, including Scott Gooding’s Eric, Karin Muiznieks’ Give My Regards to Broady, and the Hounds’ Last Bucket of Water.

Keep watching this space for news of upcoming Shaolin Punk exploits, including possible Comedy Festival plans.

Set List returned on Saturday with a set from jazz legends the Dancin’ Pandas, featuring the smooth musical stylings of Brent Strahan, Matt Mulcahy and Emma Muiznieks, directed by band leader “Marching Band” McKenzie, and starring the vocal, guitar, harmonica and keyboard talents of “Guava” Muiznieks, “Smooth Dan” Walmsley and “Moldova” McClelland. They played hits from their forty year history including the unforgettable ensemble numbers “The River” - a gospel song in which the protagonists took a cheese plate, a fishing rod, a riubber duck and a pantomime horse down to the river - and “Travellin’ Strange”, a blues number describing the joys of travelling via Segway, llama, lava flow and TARDIS.

Set List returns for one final show this Saturday afternoon, 4:30 in the Old Council Chambers, when an as yet unannounced rock band will take the stage and blow your mind. Be there!

Set List’s Melbourne Fringe season kicked off with the return to Melbourne of the folk trio Tulip, Tuberculosis & Spite. Irish-Australian Johnny Spite, tall and taciturn Michael Tuberculosis and the lovely and forward April Tulip, accompanied by the inimitable Set List band, entertained the “we don’t like football” crowd with a selection of their greatest hits including “Greenlass”, “4×4 Over the Horizon”, “My Life In Cats” and “The Ballad of Rory and Fiona”.

Of course, you and I know that Tulip, Tuberculosis & Spite never existed before the show - and never will again, seeing as they were born of the unique combination of Set List performers Ben McKenzie, Dan Walmsley and Karin Muiznieks, and the suggestions which popped out of the brains of the audience.

If you like the idea of a band who’ll write songs on the spot to suit your slightest whim, then be sure to book your tickets now for the final two nights of Set List at Fringe - jazz on October 4 and rock on October 11. See you there!

Shaolin Punk’s musical impro show Set List is now on sale through the Melbourne Fringe web site! Book your tickets now for your favourite genre - jazz, folk or rock - or come to all three. Each show is a one off, never to be repeated set list of songs in which the audience calls for the “greatest hits” of a band that never existed before the beginning of the set…

See the Set List page for more details!

Last night was the first preview season performance of Set List, and taking the stage were Emma Muiznieks, Karin Muiznieks, Dan Walmsley and Ben McKenzie. They formed urban whimsical folk quartet “Absynth”, and the set list for their one and only Melbourne performance included:

  • “Clinton”, an ode to the sleepy little New Zealand town whose chief attraction was being the only part of the country not featured in Lord of the Rings.
  • “The Brush Went South”, a tragic tale of two lovers forever separated by the misuse of a toothbrush.
  • “Reasons to Leave Your Phone On in a Show”, a list of…well, you get the idea.
  • “Snow Dome” - a terrifying glimpse of the hidden dangers within seemingly innocuous ornaments.
  • “The Best Nose in the World”, a love song for a man with beautiful nose hair.
  • “Fight the Faint Smell”, a rousing political anthem espousing the olfactory superiority of communism over capitalism.
  • “City of Evil”, a chilling expose of the supernatural horrors which lurk in the seemingly cheery home of beer, Prague.
  • “Life is Like a Rolling Pin”, an allegory for all those times when you’re feeling flat.
  • “The Band Whose Name Has Been Forgotten”, a spooky story of what happens if you allow creative tension to boil over on stage.
  • “Cheri”, a love song for a New Zealand roustabout who once dreamed of being a model
  • “Vodka, Absinthe and Pineapple Juice”, a rousing final chorus to get everyone in the mood for visiting the bar at the Butterfly Club!

Remember the preview season continues tonight, with Dan, Emma and Karin returning, this time joined by Andy McClelland as they form an entirely new jazz band. There are also performances on Saturday and Sunday.