Ian Moss - Enmore Theatre



Line-up

Enmore Theatre

118-132 Enmore Rd, Newtown, Sydney, Australia

 Directions

Enmore Theatre is a live music and performance venue located in Sydney, Australia. It lies on the historic 118-132 Enmore Road in the heart of Newtown in the Inner West of Sydney. Built in 1908, the theatre was initially a music hall and movie theatre. However, it has since been refurbished to hold larger concerts and events. Today, the Enmore Theatre hosts performances from local, international and national acts. It offers its visitors a unique live entertainment experience, combining a historic venue with modern amenities and a welcoming atmosphere. The theatre has a capacity of 1,844 people and is renowned for its impressive acoustics, making for a truly unforgettable experience.

Event details

Respected as one of Australia’s iconic musicians, Ian Moss delivers an unforgettable sound – not only as a telling soloist on guitar but especially with his silken voice, ringing with clarity and resonating with pure soul. While primarily recognised as an axeman of tenacity and sweet melodic sensibility, Ian’s distinctive vocal is the essential signature of his soulful, bluesy muse – as it has been since his first tentative foray into music during the early 1970s. Born and raised in Alice Springs, Ian started playing guitar in local teenage bands but moved to Adelaide after failing one of his high school years, planning to repeat in the big city. Fate intervened when he answered an advertisement for a guitarist in a shop window in 1973, joining the band that was to become a legend in Australia and that made such an undeniable impact that they are now etched in the Australian music psyche forever. That band was Cold Chisel. Moss has released five incredible and dynamic studio albums – The #1 and multi-platinum, Matchbook, Worlds Away, Petrolhead, Let’s all Get Together and Soul on West 53rd. 2018 will bring a new chapter in Ian’s career as he releases the new self-titled studio album, his sixth, and heads to the road for what will be his biggest national tour in decades. In 2007 he told the Sydney Morning Herald, “I haven’t made my definitive album yet.” Ten years later with his the self-titled Ian Moss, he might have just done that.