The Festival of Small Halls Autumn Tour 2021 is set to stop in the Shoalhaven.
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The Pyree School of Arts Hall, or as it is better known Pyree Hall run by the Pyree Literary Institute, on Greenwell Point Road, will host the tour on Saturday, April 24.
Festival of Small Halls has announced that feel-good ukulele strummer and drummer Bobby Alu and two-piece indie pop-rock band This Way North will feature on this year's NSW Autumn Tour.
Presented by veteran festival producers Woodfordia Inc, the 21st edition of the much-loved not-for-profit music tour is taking on a packed tour schedule with the finest of home-grown talent visiting 20 community halls across the state.
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Refusing to be thwarted by a rapidly changing and challenging events environment, Festival of Small Halls has continued to keep small towns clapping with extra effort and support provided to communities to keep these regional tours safely running as planned.
"We were so inspired and impressed by the way community halls have been able to adopt these new conditions and not shy away from the extra hoops they have had to jump through to keep their communities safe," said producer Eleanor Rigden.
"Towards the end of 2020 when we got back on the road, hall committees and local groups really stepped up, realising it was more important than ever to support their communities to safely come together after a year of difficulty and isolation."
Hosting halls, known locally as stalwarts of community life, have been drawn from all corners of country and coastal NSW.
Halls of all shapes and sizes will throw open their doors, from the rolling green hills of the Mid North hinterlands, to the dry bush of the Central West, from goldrush country to the fertile Southern Tablelands; from the golden sands of the south east coast, to the majesty of the Snowys.
And the beautiful Shoalhaven is also part of the tour,.
The tour will take in the sprawling mass of regional NSW in a four-week marathon of excellent music, community spirit and the finest of country hospitality.
It's been three years since Leisha Jungalwalla and Cat Leahy, of This Way North, traded their bricks-and-mortar homes for life on the road, and that spirit of adventure and unbridled joy has taken up permanent residence in their music.
Taking out Best Outer Suburban Act 2018 at The Age Music Victoria Awards, This Way North are on a steady incline.
It's easy to forget they are just a two-piece band, drummer/vocalist Leahy and guitarist/vocalist Jungalwalla create explosive energy and expansive sound, that translates effortlessly from the studio to the stage.
The duo are no strangers to the road and are thrilled to be heading out.
"We are beyond excited to resume life on the road with Festival of Small Halls, touring regionally is one of our favourite things to do, the places, the people, playing shows, the road, it's our happy place," Cat said.
Amidst smooth harmonies, rhythms inspired by a strong family lineage of Polynesian performance Bobby Alu tunes have a way of sneaking into the subconscious and taking up residence.
For Bobby, touring regional NSW is just like going home.
"I couldn't think of a more perfect way to get back to touring after the longest break I've had since hitting the road over a decade ago," he said.
"I'm really excited to visit, explore and perform in these regional towns."
Though it's not all palm trees and daydreams - there's a robust energy in Alu's mastery of traditional Samoan log drums, and a vitality to his songwriting that nods to world, roots and pop intelligence.
Festival of Small Halls Autumn Tour 2021 starts on Wednesday, April 7 at the Yetman Memorial Hall before continuing on to 19 communities across regional NSW.
The tour concludes at the Coramba Community Hall on May 2.
Locally, doors open 6.30pm for 7pm start at the Pyree event on April 24. Tickets on sale at www.festivalofsmallhalls.com
The Festival of Small Halls Autumn Tour 2021 has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.
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