Floods of Fire: Our Celebration with Electric Fields & the ASO
Conceived and directed by Airan Berg
AUSTRALIA
Floods of Fire: Our Celebration with Electric Fields & the ASO detailWith Maatakitj
BENIN & AUSTRALIA
For one night only, the incredible Angélique Kidjo returns to Adelaide for a concert sharing her new album, Mother Nature, alongside songs celebrating her 40-year career as one of Africa’s best-known artists. She'll be supported on the night by brilliant Noongar song-maker Maatakitj.
Winner of five Grammy Awards and with 16 albums to her name, her unstoppable creative force has seen her recognised as one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world, named one of the top 100 most inspiring women in the world by The Guardian, appointed a global UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and awarded the prestigious 2023 Polar Music Prize.
The undisputed queen of African music.
London Telegraph
As a performer, Angélique Kidjo’s striking voice and stage presence is matched by her ability to make connections across genres. Her music cross-pollinates the West African traditions of her childhood in Benin with elements of American R&B, funk and modal jazz, alongside influences from Europe and Latin America.
Forever a voice for change, Angélique Kidjo’s Mother Nature confronts such pressing issues as racial inequity and the climate crisis, again proving her rare power to transform complex subject matter into music that is radiantly joyful.
Meaning ‘long legs like a spear’, Maatakitj is the affectionate stage name of Clint Bracknell, a Noongar musician from southern WA and Professor of Music at the University of Western Australia. Maatakitj’s technicolour high energy dance tracks “dare to envisage future songlines that tell of a yet unknown path both corporeal and metaphysical” (The Australian).
Join us for an evening of rapturous music brought to us by a charismatic performer hell-bent on leaving the world a better place for her presence.
Equal parts boisterous and soulful... Her music transcends mere danceability and instead possesses you with its rhythm.
NPR