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The Cat Empire with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra
Sydney Symphony Presents
The legendary Australian band bring their beloved tunes and new sounds to a musically immersive orchestral experience with the Sydney Symphony.
- Thu 05 Sept, 2024, 7:00pm Thu 05 September, 2024, 7:00pm
- Fri 06 Sept, 2024, 7:00pm Fri 06 September, 2024, 7:00pm
- Sat 07 Sept, 2024, 7:00pm Sat 07 September, 2024, 7:00pm
Australian legends The Cat Empire launched into a new era in 2023, building on two decades of high energy performances and exuberant musicality with new faces, broader influences and boundless possibilities.
In this special concert at the Sydney Opera House, The Cat Empire joins forces with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in this electrifying collaboration. Together they will perform some exciting new material as well as The Cat Empire classics re-invented for the orchestral world, drawing on the vibrant worlds of Afro-Cuban, Seychellois Kreol, Brazilian and flamenco music combined with the band’s unique sense of musical style.
Featuring world-class flamenco artists Richard Tedesco, Johnny Tedesco, Chantelle Cano, and a large choir, this immersive orchestral experience shows this iconic band like you have never heard them before.
NICHOLAS BUC conductor THE CAT EMPIRE SYDNEY CHILDREN’S CHOIR ARTE KANELA flamenco RICHARD TEDESCO guitar JOHHNY TEDESCO cajón and dance CHANTELLE CANO dance ROSCOE JAMES IRWIN arranger
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The Cat Empire with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
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Thursday 22 August 2024
7:30pm at Hamer Hall
Friday 23 August 2024
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Saturday 24 August 2024
The legendary Australian band bring their beloved tunes and new sounds for a musically and immersive orchestral experience with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. In this special concert at Hamer Hall, The Cat Empire joins forces with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in this electrifying collaboration. Performing some exciting new material as well as The Cat Empire classics re-invented for the orchestral world, these performances will draw on the vibrant worlds of Afro-Cuban, Seychellois Kreol, Brazilian and flamenco music combined with the band’s unique sense of musical style. Featuring world-class flamenco artists, this immersive orchestral experience shows this iconic band like you have never heard them before.
The Cat Empire Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Vanessa Scammell conductor Roscoe James Irwin arranger
The Cat Empire
Vanessa Scammell
Arts Centre Melbourne, 100 St Kilda Road, Southbank.
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The Cat Empire With The Sydney Symphony Orchestra
5 - 7 september 2024.
In the Concert Hall
Sydney Symphony Orchestra
The legendary Australian band bring their beloved tunes and new sounds to a musically immersive orchestral experience with the Sydney Symphony.
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$8.95 booking fee applies per transaction
Prices correct at the time of publication and subject to change without notice. Exact prices will be displayed with seat selection.
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The duration of this performance is TBC.
Event duration is a guide only and may be subject to change.
Recommended for ages 12+
Children aged 15 years and under must be accompanied at all times.
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The Cat Empire with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra
In this special concert at the Sydney Opera House, The Cat Empire joins forces with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in this electrifying collaboration. Together they will perform some exciting new material as well as The Cat Empire classics re-invented for the orchestral world, drawing on the vibrant worlds of Afro-Cuban, Seychellois Kreol, Brazilian and flamenco music combined with the band’s unique sense of musical style. Featuring world-class flamenco artists Richard Tedesco, Johnny Tedesco, Chantelle Cano, and a large choir, this immersive orchestral experience shows this iconic band like you have never heard them before.
Presented by Sydney Symphony Orchestra
Nicholas Buc conductor The Cat Empire Sydney Children's Choir Arte Kanela flamenco Richard Tedesco guitar Johnny Tedesco cajón and dance Chantelle Cano dance Roscoe James Irwin arranger
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Our foyers will be open 90 minutes pre-show for Concert Hall and Joan Sutherland Theatre performances, and two hours pre-show for Western Foyer venue performances. Refreshments will be available for purchase from our theatre bars. All Sydney Opera House foyers are pram accessible, with lifts to the main and western foyers. The public lift to all foyers is accessible from the corridor near the escalators on the Lower Concourse and also in the Western Foyer via the corridor on the Ground Level (at the top of the escalators). Pram parking will be available outside the theatres in the Western Foyer.
The Sydney Opera House Car Park, operated by Wilson Parking, is open and available to use. Wilson Parking offer discounted parking if you book ahead. Please see their website for details.
Please check the Transport NSW website for the latest advice and information on travel. You can catch public transport (bus, train, ferry) to Circular Quay and enjoy a six min walk to the Opera House.
The health and wellbeing of everyone attending the Opera House is our top priority. We’re committed to making your experience safe, comfortable and enjoyable, with a number of measures in place including regular cleaning of high-touch areas, air conditioning systems that maximise ventilation, and hand sanitiser stations positioned in all paths of travel. We remind our audiences and visitors to please stay home if you feel unwell. If you need to discuss your ticketing or booking options, contact our Box Office team on 02 9250 7777.
The health and wellbeing of everyone attending the Opera House is our top priority. We have a number of safety measures in place including regular cleaning of high-touch areas, air conditioning systems that maximise ventilation, and hand sanitiser stations positioned in all paths of travel. While face masks are no longer required, we ask all our patrons and visitors to practise good hygiene. Please stay home if you feel unwell and read more about our flexible ticket options .
The Sydney Opera House no longer requires patrons to show that they are fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
Ticket purchases and collection at our Box Office is discouraged and eTicket or postal delivery methods should be used, wherever possible. However, if you are collecting your tickets from the Box Office, we recommend doing this at least 60 minutes before the event starts. If you have already received your tickets, the venue doors will be open 45 minutes pre-show for Joan Sutherland Theatre performances, and 30 minutes pre-show for Western Foyer venue performances. Please take your seats as soon as you arrive.
If you are late, we will seat you as soon as we can and, where possible, in your allocated seat. However, to reduce movement in the venue as well as minimise disruption to the performance and other patrons, ticketholders may be seated in an allocated latecomer’s seat. Please be aware that some events have lock-out periods. In these cases, latecomers will be admitted at a suitable break in the performance. On occasions, this may not be until the interval, or at all where there is no interval.
Details of our right to refuse admission can be found in our General Terms and Conditions for Tickets and Events.
In accordance with our venue security procedures, Opera House security will be scanning and checking bags under the Monumental Stairs, prior to entering the building. Bags will be scanned by an x-ray machine, and staff will wear appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE) when handling your belongings, such as gloves. Cloaking facilities will be open 60 minutes pre-show for Concert Hall and Joan Sutherland Theatre performances, and 60 minutes pre-show for Western Foyer venue performances. However it is strongly encouraged that you travel lightly to minimise contact and queuing. Any bags larger than an A4 piece of paper will need to be checked into the Cloak Room.
The authorised agency for this event is the Sydney Opera House.
Only tickets purchased by authorised agencies should be considered reliable. If you purchase tickets from a non-authorised agency such as Ticketmaster Resale, Viagogo, Ticketbis, eBay, Gumtree, Tickets Australia or any other unauthorised seller, you risk that these tickets are fake, void or have previously been cancelled. RESALE RESTRICTION APPLIES. For more details, please refer to our General Terms and Conditions for Tickets and Attendance at Events.
Please contact Box Office on 9250 7777 as soon as possible to advise if you can no longer attend.
Foyers will be open 90 minutes pre-show for Concert Hall and Joan Sutherland Theatre performances, and two hours pre-show for Western Foyer venue performances. Refreshments will be available for purchase from our theatre bars.
The venue doors will be open 45 minutes pre-show for Concert Hall and Joan Sutherland Theatre performances, and 30 minutes pre-show for Western Foyer venue performances.
Please bring a credit or debit card for any on site purchases to enable contactless payment. You’re welcome to bring your own water bottle but no other food and drinks are permitted inside our venues. Opera Bar, Opera Kitchen and Portside are also available for you to enjoy.
The health, safety and wellbeing of everyone at the Sydney Opera House is our top priority. In line with this commitment, the Opera House became a smoke-free site in January 2022. Read our Smoke-free Environment Policy .
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‘Music Has Kind of Been a Godsend’: How The Cat Empire Made Their Most Fun & Cathartic Album Yet
While making ‘where the angels fall’, felix riebl realised the band is only just scratching the surface of where it could go.
Giulia McGauran
“Music has kind of been a godsend.”
It’s a sentimentality shared by many, particularly in the wake of a global pandemic. But for The Cat Empire’s Felix Riebl, music has been both the catharsis and celebration he needed.
The band shocked fans when, in 2021, they announced their decision to disband after 20 years together, with original members Will Hull-Brown, Jamshid Khadiwhala, and Harry James Angus departing the band in December of that year. Bassist Ryan Monro had already left several months earlier.
While the music industry reeled from the effects of COVID-19, and The Cat Empire struggled with the logistics of farewelling departing members during intermittent lockdowns and restrictions, Riebl was facing personal tragedy at home: his younger brother, Max, was dying from an incurable brain cancer at the age of 30.
“For me this is a deeply spiritual album,” Riebl says of the band’s new release, Where the Angels Fall . “This album was great relief and joy, but it was also kind of survival for me, at an emotional level, I guess.”
When it came time to name the album, a lyric from the track “Thunder Rumbles” seemed the most fitting.
“Looking through at what it was going to be called, Where the Angels Fall seemed to be true to all of that: it’s got reference to spirits and it’s got reference to the devil and it’s got reference to the artwork and the space that we were in and the time,” Riebl explains. “It’s also funny because when you break down the words it’s just ‘WTAF’.”
The band has welcomed newcomers Grace Barbé on bass, Neda Rahmani on percussion, Lazaro Numa on trumpet, and percussion and former touring member Danny Farrugia on drums.
For Rahmani, the decision to join The Cat Empire was an obvious one. A long-time friend and fan of the band, it was a joy to play with them now after previously playing multiple stages beside them.
“I’ve been there for their landmark moments as a fan and a friend in the audience just seeing what their latest releases are, and I’ve had such a great appreciation for their artwork, their choices, their collaborations, their writing – so it was picking up the phone from an old friend, but also a logical move, and made creative sense to me – I didn’t need to deliberate over it for a second,” Rahmani laughs. “I guess that’s just every artist’s dream, for their friends to understand them, to see them; to see how you perform or how you relate to your community, and to feel like you could join their family.”
For Riebl, it was never about “replacing” the original band members.
“You don’t maintain or uphold the spirit of a band by just replacing members like for like and saying we’ll try to copy what they did – you can’t, it would always be second-best,” he says. “If you want to keep the spirit of a band alive, you have to bring in people who are going to play to their strengths and do what they can do.”
It was exciting, he continues, to get to the stage of recording with the new members and realise it was going to work.
“Because nerves are also really important,” he adds. “Doubts and all those sorts of things are really important, because if you didn’t have them then you wouldn’t have skin in the game. Whereas with this, it was a genuine challenge and a genuine leap of faith to try and see how this was going to happen.”
In many ways, Riebl is treating Where the Angels Fall as a type of debut: this is The Cat Empire 2.0, if you will. And, funnily enough, it has been produced by Andy Baldwin – the same engineer behind the band’s self-titled debut album in 2003.
“In some ways it was a return to the spirit of what The Cat Empire is: we want this to be like the first album – not in terms of sound, we’ve developed a lot as musicians – but in terms of intent and that overflow; that spirit and that sense of surprise that comes with a really good Cat Empire recording,” Riebl says. “And with Andy, it was really nice to bookend those two moments, those two debuts in a way. That’s how I’m thinking of it.”
The band took a different approach to recording this album, using a chaotic community music hub in the heart of Melbourne to create something with a life of its own.
“We chose to go to a community music space because we didn’t want it to feel isolated,” Riebl reveals. “We didn’t want to go to a dark studio and go, this is just our world, and this is how it is. We kind of wanted to be spilling out onto the street – that’s how the album feels to me, it feels like it overflows, it leaves the speakers and goes genuinely out into the world.”
Riebl says there was something about the space, which housed composer Peter Sculthorpe’s piano, along with century-old marching band uniforms and even a gong, which brought out a playful childishness in the band.
“We were kind of like kids going into that first music space, like let’s try on this hat, and let’s go hit that gong over there,” he happily recalls. “So, there was something foundational about the whole experience, like what was that thing that made you go back to that room full of instruments? What was that thing that piqued your interest when you were a kid? And returning to that space to tap into that childishness was a lot of fun, if nothing else.”
Having orchestras and bands rehearsing in the space – along with a myriad of percussionists and musicians brought in by Rahmani and the other band members – resulted in a mammoth 75 musicians playing on Where the Angels Fall .
Riebl says from early pre-production, he and [Ollie] McGill wanted this to be “the most Cat Empire album” they had ever made.
“So, instead of layering up three horns a few times to get a nine-horn sound, we’d get nine horn players in there to play it, so you get the personality of that,” he explains. “Instead of getting a string quartet, we got a 10-piece symphonic string section. We just went over the top with everything – that was our mode: let’s go over the top with every sound and every song and treat each song as a world unto itself. It was wild. It’s by far the most fun I’ve ever had making an album.”
Riebl speaks fondly of what he calls “danger” on an album, or the inability to figure out exactly what is going on sonically.
“You think about Dr. John’s Gris-Gris or something like that, and you go, ‘What the hell is happening in that to make that sound?’” he laughs. “I think that this album for us has a bit of that quality. Even having had months of distance from it and listening back to it, it’s like, ‘What did we do there?’ You forget.”
The mystery, he adds, is so important.
“If you want to create something that has a true sense of celebration to it, it has to navigate a lot of different spaces: it has to be dangerous – you have to be able to sing about great sadness on the same record as singing about something absolutely stupid,” Riebl says. “All of it goes together to create a sense of overflow: it’s not a glass half empty or glass half full view of the world, it’s overflow. That’s what The Cat Empire does well when it’s doing its thing.”
That juxtaposition of light and shade is highlighted on Riebl’s favourite track on the album, a song he wrote for his brother called “Be With You Again”.
“It’s such a sad song, and I had a lot of tears recording the vocal for that song – and tears of companionship, in a way; they weren’t altogether bad,” he says. “But for The Cat Empire, how do you write something that’s a lament, essentially, and still give it that sense of life celebration, or life affirmation?”
The answer, in this case, was taking almost hymn-like chords and adding a Samba Reggae rhythm to create an underlying celebration.
“For me that speaks a lot to what The Cat Empire can do, or what I can do with The Cat Empire, and that’s not to say that we should be afraid of those feelings,” Riebl adds. “Because we’ve already performed that song live, and it’s very moving, not just because it’s about me – it’s about everyone in the space who, in the face of something impossible or terrible or irreconcilable, is able to still find occasional cause to see life or be in life or to celebrate what it is to be alive.”
Riebl explains that he felt closest to his brother on stage or in the studio.
“And I really don’t mean that in an affected way, I just mean actually I feel like I can have a conversation with the dead when I’m in the movement of music,” he says. “You can be with the dead who you miss or who you love in the space of movement, for me, and that’s what the band can do. And I have become critically aware of that in the past year.”
That makes what the band does – particularly on an international level – even more special, he says.
“For the deeper celebration, which is grief, terror, joy, everything in between: it all gets thrown in together, in terms of what a human experience is,” Riebl explains. “What it is to be amongst one another, and what it is to be faced with the quiet challenge of your own life. And the band just makes cause to celebrate that or makes cause to allow for those few hours of departure, whenever we get a chance to play together.”
From grief and loss to joy and love, The Cat Empire is embracing all of it right now, and there is one thing Riebl almost cringes to hear himself say out loud.
“ Part of the reason why I’ve been so excited about what’s happened is that you don’t often get a chance to fall in love twice. I think I was about 19 when Ollie and I officially put The Cat Empire together with Ryan on bass, and it was a trio that grew and everyone I met in the early days was like, ‘Wow, this is amazing, I’ve got to be in it’ – and the chemistry happened. Now I have the opportunity to have that a second time and re-discover that genuine love for a project and through new eyes, through new people, through fresh energy and talent.”
And while making this album, Riebl realised the band is only just scratching the surface of where it could go.
“For me, having The Cat Empire come back and realise how creative a band it is, and how expansive it can be, we can pretty much choose any musical style and it can become Cat Empire. Any rabbit hole we want to go down, or any place in the world we want to get to and be influenced by we can, and that’s one of the beauties of this band: it’s not pigeonholed,” he says. “So purely from a musician’s perspective and an outlook for a career and imagining becoming genuinely happy old people on stage together – not that we’re old now, but I can see that. This album was kind of a launch pad to my falling in love with music all over again.”
Now, Riebl says, it’s just a matter of putting in the work and enjoying the ride.
“That’s all you can do, especially these days. You can’t take anything for granted, I think that’s something we’ve learned collectively. Especially in the music world, but probably in the broader sense, too,” he says. “I appreciate that feeling of making every night count – that’s important to me now. Whereas once maybe it was about an ambition to get somewhere or to create a legacy, now it’s really to enjoy the ride as much as we can and to be as true musically… and be as childish musically as we possibly can be.”
The Cat Empire’s Where the Angels Fall is out via Ditto. Watch their recent Rolling Stone AU/NZ ‘In My Room’ session here .
The Cat Empire 2023 Australian Tour
Tickets available via thecatempire.com
Friday, September 15th Enmore Theatre, Sydney, NSW
Friday, September 22nd Fortitude Music Hall, Brisbane, QLD
Saturday, September 23rd The Green Room, Byron Bay, NSW
Friday, September 29th Hindley Street Music Hall, Adelaide, SA
Thursday, October 5th (NEW SHOW) The Forum, Melbourne, VIC
Friday, October 6th (SOLD OUT) The Forum, Melbourne, VIC
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The Cat Empire Concert Setlists & Tour Dates
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- Jun 08 2024 Dath St, Teneriffe Brisbane, Australia Add time Add time Add times
- Jul 04 2024 Rock Werchter 2024 Werchter, Belgium Doors 12:00 PM – Scheduled: 1:40 PM 12:00 PM 1:40 PM
- Jul 06 2024 Festival Río Babel 2024 Madrid, Spain Add time Add time Add times
- Jul 09 2024 ALMA | Festival Jardins Pedralbes 2024 Barcelona, Spain Add time Add time Add times
- Jul 13 2024 NOS Alive 2024 Oeiras, Portugal Add time Add time Add times
- Aug 11 2024 Cigale 2024 Quebec City, QC, Canada – Find tickets Add time – Scheduled: 7:30 PM Tickets Add time Add times 7:30 PM
The Cat Empire at Good Day Sunshine Festival 2024
- How to Explain?
- Steal the Light
- Still Young
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The Cat Empire at SummerSalt Hervey Bay 2024
The cat empire at miami marketta, gold coast, australia.
- Thunder Rumbles
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- Money Coming My Way
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The Cat Empire at Twilight at Taronga 2024
- Brighter Than Gold
The Cat Empire at Riyadh International Jazz Festival 2024
The cat empire at let the good times roll 2023, the cat empire at always live 2023, the cat empire at summersalt torquay 2023 #2, the cat empire at auditorio blackberry, mexico city, mexico.
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Most played songs
- The Chariot ( 345 )
- Two Shoes ( 320 )
- How to Explain? ( 310 )
- In My Pocket ( 281 )
- Still Young ( 242 )
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[traditional] [unknown] Bryan Adams Grace Barbé The Box Tops Robert Burns Leonard Cohen Phil Collins Eagles Guns N’ Roses Paul Kelly Paul Kelly and the Messengers The Kinks John Lennon Lykke Li Henry Mancini Kylie Minogue Van Morrison Alfred Newman Nirvana The Police Louis Prima and His New Orleans Gang Ernest Ranglin Otis Redding Remi Lalo Schifrin The Smiths Soneros de Verdad The Specials The Surfaris The Top Notes Stevie Wonder
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730 people have seen The Cat Empire live.
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The Cat Empire
Latest release.
- DEC 15, 2023
- Hello (Anniversary Edition) - Single
- The Lost Song
- The Cat Empire · 2003
- Two Shoes · 2005
- Still Young
- Steal the Light · 2013
- So Many Nights · 2007
- The Chariot
- Brighter Than Gold
- Steal the Light
- Days Like These
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Genre limitations don’t trouble this intrepid Aussie ensemble.
Singles & EPs
Live albums, compilations, about the cat empire.
High-spirited Australian group The Cat Empire have been wildly exploratory since their 1999 formation, trading in a wide array of styles that all have one thing in common: groove. Raucous, joyous grooves have pervaded the band’s work since their 2003 self-titled debut, with songs like the horn-blasted, hip-hop-indebted “Hello” proving an apt introduction to what would follow. They offer up booming basslines on the title track of 2005’s head-nodding Two Shoes, and 2006’s “Cities” indulged their jazzy side. Their highest-charting single—the rousing pop song “No Longer There”—came in 2007 on So Many Nights, and 2009 brought Live on Earth, a blistering document of the band’s performing prowess with horn jam riots like “How to Explain?” The Cat Empire have never stopped exploring the boundaries of groove, dipping into reggae (2013’s “Still Young”), booming rock (2016’s “Feeling’s Gone”), and pulsing, atmospheric pop (2016’s “Qué Será Ahora”).
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Thursday 23 November 2023
The Cat Empire
Discover more in Edmonton
6107 104 Street NW Edmonton, AB, Canada 587.635.0974 midwaymusichall.com
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Doors open: 20:00
Tour name: Where The Angels Fall Tour
Aussie icons The Cat Empire are taking their brand-new line-up of musicians & studio album on the road this October and November for a 28-date tour in North America and Mexico City. The Cat Empire’s new show will celebrate movement, vibrancy, and playfulness – with a host of new material as well as the crowd-favourites. Fans can expect surprise special guests, fresh interpretations of Cat Empire classics and a massive show that epitomises the herculean nature of their new album. After spending the first part of the year touring across Europe and the UK on their massive 23-date headline tour that was close to selling out, the band are taking their new album across Australia and the US. Expect to see fresh new material off their album Where The Angels Fall including vibrant and punchy new releases ‘Thunder Rumbles’, ‘Rock ’n’ Roll’ and ‘Money Coming My Way’. With a history of multiple platinum records, awards, sold out tours and over 250 million streams – The Cat Empire have officially entered their golden era.
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Tour dates. Where The Angels Fall New album out now "Felix and I first formed The Cat Empire more than 20 years ago and a sheer zest for music was floating in the air. We had many conversations about new concepts, like the piano playing the rhythms, the percussion forming the melody, and things were fresh and exciting to say the least. ...
The Cat Empire is a genre-defying ensemble that formed in Melbourne, Australia, in 1999. Blending ska, jazz, rocksteady, and hip-hop, the six-piece produces a wildly eclectic sound and live show that has toured worldwide, from major festivals like Glastonbury to making buzzworthy appearances on the Late Show with David Letterman and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
The Cat Empire's new show will celebrate movement, vibrancy, and playfulness - with a host of new material as well as the crowd-favourites. With a history of multiple platinum records, awards, sold out tours and over 250 million streams - The Cat Empire have officially entered their golden era.
The Cat Empire tour dates and tickets 2023-2024 near you. Want to see The Cat Empire in concert? Find information on all of The Cat Empire's upcoming concerts, tour dates and ticket information for 2023-2024. The Cat Empire is not due to play near your location currently - but they are scheduled to play 9 concerts across 3 countries in 2023-2024.
The Cat Empire. Find concert tickets for The Cat Empire upcoming 2024 shows. Explore The Cat Empire tour schedules, latest setlist, videos, and more on livenation.com.
The Cat Empire is a six-piece alternative band from Melbourne, Australia. Their sound has been described as a fusion of jazz, funk, and rock with heavy Latin / Salsa influences (not to mention reggae, ska and dub). Currently, the Cat Empire consists of Ollie McGill (keyboard and backing vocals), Ryan Monro (bass and backing vocals), Felix Riebl ...
The Cat Empire Full Tour Schedule 2022 & 2023, Tour Dates & Concerts - Songkick. The Cat Empire tour dates 2023. The Cat Empire is currently touring across 8 countries and has 28 upcoming concerts. Their next tour date is at Tanks Arts Centre in Edge Hill, after that they'll be at Tanks Art Centre in Cairns.
All The Cat Empire Concerts. Find tickets from 43 dollars to The Cat Empire on Monday July 29 at 8:00 pm at Blue Ocean Music Hall in Salisbury, MA. Jul 29. Mon · 8:00pm. The Cat Empire. Blue Ocean Music Hall · Salisbury, MA. From $43.
The Cat Empire are an Australian jazz/funk band, formed in Melbourne, Victoria, in 1999. ... In June, on the group's European tour, they appeared on the Avalon Stage at the Glastonbury Festival, where the mud was so deep that Riebl and Khadiwhala performed the "gumboot shuffle".
Together they will perform some exciting new material as well as The Cat Empire classics re-invented for the orchestral world, drawing on the vibrant worlds of Afro-Cuban, Seychellois Kreol, Brazilian and flamenco music combined with the band's unique sense of musical style.
Price: US $35.00. Doors open: 20:00. Tour name: Where The Angels Fall Tour. Aussie icons The Cat Empire are taking their brand-new line-up of musicians & studio album on the road this October and November for a 28-date tour in North America and Mexico City. The Cat Empire's new show will celebrate movement, vibrancy, and playfulness - with ...
The Cat Empire Announces Where The Angels Fall Album North America Tour this October and November.. Australian icons The Cat Empire are taking their brand-new line-up of musicians & studio album on the road this October and November for a 28-date tour in North America.. The band will have support from High Fade on all US shows, fellow Australian artist Steph Stings for Canada shows, and ...
In this special concert at Hamer Hall, The Cat Empire joins forces with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in this electrifying collaboration. Performing some exciting new material as well as The Cat Empire classics re-invented for the orchestral world, these performances will draw on the vibrant worlds of Afro-Cuban, Seychellois Kreol, Brazilian ...
With a history of multiple platinum records, awards, sold out tours and over 250 million streams - The Cat Empire have officially entered their golden era. Buy The Cat Empire tickets from Ticketmaster AU. The Cat Empire 2024-25 tour dates, event details + much more.
Aussie icons The Cat Empire have had an illustrious career, spanning decades and genres. Illuminating stages across the globe, the band are a magnetic force that have captivated millions of ...
Buy The Cat Empire - Where The Angles Fall Tour tickets at the Lincoln Theatre-NC in Raleigh, NC for Oct 25, 2023 at Ticketmaster.
The Cat Empire with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. In this special concert at the Sydney Opera House, The Cat Empire joins forces with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in this electrifying collaboration. Together they will perform some exciting new material as well as The Cat Empire classics re-invented for the orchestral world, drawing on the ...
The Cat Empire's Where the Angels Fall is out via Ditto. Watch their recent Rolling Stone AU/NZ 'In My Room' session here. The Cat Empire 2023 Australian Tour. Tickets available via thecatempire.com. Friday, September 15th Enmore Theatre, Sydney, NSW. Friday, September 22nd Fortitude Music Hall, Brisbane, QLD. Saturday, September 23rd
Tour name: Where The Angels Fall Tour. Aussie icons The Cat Empire are taking their brand-new line-up of musicians & studio album on the road this October and November for a 28-date tour in North America and Mexico City. The Cat Empire's new show will celebrate movement, vibrancy, and playfulness - with a host of new material as well as the ...
The Cat Empire North American Tour 2024. Monday, Jul 29, 2024 at 8:00 p.m. EDT Blue Ocean Music Hall. 4 Oceanfront North, Salisbury, MA 01952. Get Directions. Website. We want to hear from you if you have an event to share or updates to this event. Images provided by AmericanTowns.com, Ticketmaster.
729 people have seen The Cat Empire live. Dani-boy AlecSmart Ddanar JohnnyUmlaut DtinOc s2seltaeb Zuckmeister jram mablibs WaterlooAl magallardoem kd2795 machiavel budokan JayLaast mrbuches tripfontaine westwingjl BelgianBoxer dharris shellsto mcgavin27 BruceDenson Strangermouse azairvine onthebirdroads Chipoko86 HowardF jinglejangle bsellick ...
Tour name: Where The Angels Fall Tour. Aussie icons The Cat Empire are taking their brand-new line-up of musicians & studio album on the road this October and November for a 28-date tour in North America and Mexico City. The Cat Empire's new show will celebrate movement, vibrancy, and playfulness - with a host of new material as well as the ...
Find top songs and albums by The Cat Empire including Two Shoes, The Lost Song and more. Listen to music by The Cat Empire on Apple Music. ... [Original Line-up Final Tour] 2022. The Cat Empire (Live at Ancienne Belgique, October 2013) 2017. Live at the Royal Albert Hall - The Cat Empire. 2017. The Cat Empire (Live at Stage 88) 2003. Live at ...
Doors open: 19:00. Tour name: Where The Angels Fall Tour. Aussie icons The Cat Empire are taking their brand-new line-up of musicians & studio album on the road this October and November for a 28-date tour in North America and Mexico City. The Cat Empire's new show will celebrate movement, vibrancy, and playfulness - with a host of new ...