Craft Music presents
THE WHITLAMS - Gone Coastal 2025 - Dee Why RSL
with Special Guests
Dee Why RSL Club (Dee Why, NSW)
Sunday, 5 January 2025 7:00 pm
Join The Whitlams as they take to the stages of picturesque beachside towns, with the soundtrack to summer they played up and down the coast in the mid 90s. Starting in the Gold Coast on New Year’s Day and winding down through Dee Why and Torquay, the legendarily high-spirited live band will be in top form after a sold out national capitals tour in October and November 2024.
The Whitlams four piece will recreate the rollicking energy of its seven studio albums, with a focus on “Love This City” from 1999, which featured the hit singles “Blow Up the Pokies” and “Thank You (for loving me at my worst)”.
The Whitlams are Tim Freedman on piano and vocals, Jak Housden on guitar, Terepai Richmond on drums, and newest member, Ian Peres, on Hammond organ and electric bass.
The Whitlams was a touring phenomenon long before their breakout 1997 hit "Eternal Nightcap". They had forged a reputation as a brilliant live act on countless jaunts up and down the East Coast from 1993 to 1996, and last year decided to reinstitute the tradition each January. Join them for “Gone Coastal no. 2”.
2022
"The songs splash colours across a portrait of a lonesome, inner-city suburbia that few others can match for original detail and authenticity.... The Whitlams have never sounded even mildly like anybody else." The Newcastle Herald
The Whitlams four piece will recreate the rollicking energy of its seven studio albums, with a focus on “Love This City” from 1999, which featured the hit singles “Blow Up the Pokies” and “Thank You (for loving me at my worst)”.
The Whitlams are Tim Freedman on piano and vocals, Jak Housden on guitar, Terepai Richmond on drums, and newest member, Ian Peres, on Hammond organ and electric bass.
The Whitlams was a touring phenomenon long before their breakout 1997 hit "Eternal Nightcap". They had forged a reputation as a brilliant live act on countless jaunts up and down the East Coast from 1993 to 1996, and last year decided to reinstitute the tradition each January. Join them for “Gone Coastal no. 2”.
2022
"The songs splash colours across a portrait of a lonesome, inner-city suburbia that few others can match for original detail and authenticity.... The Whitlams have never sounded even mildly like anybody else." The Newcastle Herald