InReview InReview

SA QLD
Support independent journalism

Festivals

Women, Wine & Song

Festivals

Comments
Comments Print article

Women, Wine & Song was a one-off Adelaide Fringe collaboration of three independent Australian female singer-songwriters performed in the beautiful Paradiso Spiegeltent in the Garden of Unearthly Delights.

The three very different performers – Martine Locke, Kelly Menhennett and Monique Brumby – share a common ground of musical talent, original songs, strong personal lyrics, conviction and tasty guitar playing.

ARIA-winning Tasmanian singer Brumby is lively and quirky with, at times, an intimate audience connection.  Her voice is rich, raspy and versatile, with yodeling and even operatic tones, and her songs at last night’s show ranged from country to pop/rock and gypsy reggae.

Menhennett (2012 Telstra Road to Discovery national songwriting award winner) is cute and fun, with a beautiful, strong, Cher-like voice.  She provided the rhythm and subtle percussion of many of the songs.  Her bluesy, folk and, at times, jazzy songs were emotive, pretty and lush.  Special mention to new number “Small Dreams”,  with its many Adelaide references.

Locke (formerly one half of the duo The Velvet Janes) is a powerhouse singer; think Melissa Etheridge.  Her songs are strong and melodic, and the lyrics clearly come from the heart.  She commands attention with her story and emotion, with highlights being her mandolin solo in the final song and her own unique “Hallelujah”.

Even though these women are all strong individual artists, the performance worked best when they collaborated, especially in Locke’s final rousing number.

It just needed the wine.

Women, Wine & Song was a one-off Adelaide Fringe show but keep an eye out for upcoming gigs, with Menhennett playing an album pre-release show at the Jade Monkey later this month, Locke playing at Adelaide’s Music in the Lane on March 17, and Brumby touring nationally on the back of a new album.

Adelaide Fringe hub

Click here for all InDaily’s 2014 Adelaide Fringe stories and reviews.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Make a comment View comment guidelines

Support local arts journalism

Your support will help us continue the important work of InReview in publishing free professional journalism that celebrates, interrogates and amplifies arts and culture in South Australia.

Donate Here

Comments

Show comments Hide comments
Will my comment be published? Read the guidelines.

. You are free to republish the text and graphics contained in this article online and in print, on the condition that you follow our republishing guidelines.

You must attribute the author and note prominently that the article was originally published by InReview.  You must also inlude a link to InReview. Please note that images are not generally included in this creative commons licence as in most cases we are not the copyright owner. However, if the image has an InReview photographer credit or is marked as “supplied”, you are free to republish it with the appropriate credits.

We recommend you set the canonical link of this content to https://inreview.com.au/inreview/festivals/2014/03/04/women-wine-song/ to insure that your SEO is not penalised.

Copied to Clipboard

More Festivals stories

Loading next article