Beat’s Guide to NaranaFest
Subscribe
X

Get the latest from Beat

Beat’s Guide to NaranaFest

emilywurramara-pressshotvertical-1.jpg

How to get there

 

Located on Torquay Road in Grovedale, there are a few options to take you on your travels. If you’re coming from Melbourne, a road trip down the freeway and Surf Coast highway is the best option. There is onsite parking available, but this is limited. Otherwise a ride on the V/Line is a pretty convenient option with Marshall Station just down the road. Visit the website to find out information on departure times (www.vline.com.au).

What’s on?

NaranaFest’s handpicked lineup features some of Australia’s brightest rising stars and will once again traverse some eclectic, genre spanning territory including rock, blues and roots, hip hop and everything else.

Narana’s Boomerang stage will host the likes of headlining hip hop artists A.B. Original (Briggs & Trials), Gawurra, Leah Flanagan, Yirrmal, Karl S. Williams, Benny Walker, Emily Wurramara, The New Savages and Deadly Duo. Everyone is encouraged to bring deckchairs and picnic rugs to relax while enjoying the sights and sounds of these talented artists.

Traditional Cultural dance performances return with crowd favourites One Connexion, as well as True Culture. Both groups are sure to get festival goers up and moving with their interactive and highly engaging performances.

There will also be a major art exhibition in the Gallery, Songlines on the big screen, arts and crafts activities for kids, food trucks, market stalls, and Café Narana will be serving up its popular festival menu with Indigenous flavours.

Beat’s Picks

Gawurra

Stanley Gawurra Gaykamangu is a Yolngu performer hailing from Arnhem Land. Singing in the Gupapuyngu language, Gawurra’s deeply resonant voice and musical sensitivity has captivated his audiences through his blend of traditional and contemporary songs. His debut album Ratja Yaliyali landed him awards for Album of the Year and New Talent of the Year at the 2016 National Indigenous Music Awards.

Leah Flanagan

Leah Flanagan is a singer/songwriter (and sometime saltwater ukulele whisperer) from Darwin, with Italian, Aboriginal and Irish heritage. As well as a solo career, she’s also toured with the Black Arm Band and performed with John Cale, Ricki-Lee Jones, Sinead O’Connor, Gurrumul and Dan Sultan. Flanagan’s smoky voice is given full flight with her intuitive backing band from the Sydney music scene.

 

Emily Wurramara

A prolific songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, playing guitar, piano and ukulele, Emily Wurramara has been writing songs since she was six. Wurramara sings in both English and Anindilyakwa, the traditional language of her home on Groote Eylandt in the Northern Territory. She has become a seasoned performer who has taken her music around the country and abroad with show and festival appearances in Sweden and France.