City Tidda was the name of this concert and it came with a veritable program like a classical concert, with tunes with explanations and performers with histories. This was obviously an important outing for Sophia Rose, a proudly aboriginal woman from Sydney. Tidda means sister, so City Sister, Soph who had studied at the Wollongong Con and plays trumpet and had written several of the pieces performed. Her offsiders were, interestingly, all originating from Canberra, they were a lovely, serious, effective group: several driving drum solos; frequent fluent bass solos and intriguing piano solos, and Sophia over it all with melody and solos and chatter. Other than her songs or jazz standards, we heard a string of personally influential tunes, of black diaspora and Aussie performers and influences to Sophia, Vampires and Dr G Yunupingu and Kokoroko and John Mayer and Bob Marley, so a fascinating and nicely played mix with a theme honouring Blak Australia and Black America.
Sophia Hunt (trumpet) led a quartet with Oscar Lubbock (piano), Harrison Whalan (bass) and Nate Griffin (drums) at McGregor Hall, upstairs at Smiths, with Nate's father occasionally sitting in (guitar).






































