What year did garbage play Big Day Out?

What year did garbage play Big Day Out?

Loads of Big Day Out artists made it into triple j’s Hottest of 2001, including tourists New Order, Garbage, Basement Jaxx, System of a Down, Alien Ant Farm and The White Stripes and local acts Regurgitator, Gerling, Something For Kate, John Butler Trio, Spiderbait, Superheist, Eskimo Joe and Machine Gun Fellatio.

When was the last Big Day Out in Perth?

They succeeded in securing Nirvana to play the Sydney leg at the Hordern Pavilion. The Big Day Out debuted on the 1992 Australia Day public holiday in Sydney and eventually expanded to Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth the following year….Venues.

City Venue 2014 Crowd
Adelaide Wayville Showgrounds 30,000+

When was the first Big Day Out in Perth?

The Big Day Out debuted on the 1992 Australia Day public holiday in Sydney and eventually expanded to Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth the following year….

Big Day Out
Years active 1992–1997, 1999–2014
Founded by Ken West and Vivian Lees
Website Official website

When did Nirvana play Perth?

LIVE NIRVANA Concert Chronology 1992

Date Location
Jan 15, 1992 Crocodile Cafe Seattle, WA, United States
Jan 24, 1992 Phoenecian Club Sydney, Australia
Jan 25, 1992 Hordern Pavilion Sydney, Australia
Jan 26, 1992 Fishy’s Carpark, Fisherman’s Wharf Gold Coast, Australia

How much were Big Day Out tickets?

For $40 a ticket, you got to see 21 acts, headlined by Violent Femmes, though history records it was Nirvana who blew everyone away. It wasn’t the first major music festival in Australia, but for much of its 22 years, Big Day Out was the most important. Here, some of our writers recall their biggest days out.

What was Kurt Cobain’s best performance?

Remembering Kurt Cobain: 5 Iconic Nirvana Performances – From ‘Teen Spirit’ to ‘Unplugged’ (Video)

  • “Love Buzz” from Saint Andrew’s Hall, Detroit, 1991.
  • “Smells Like Teen Spirit” from Reading Festival, 1992.
  • “Lithium” from the MTV Video Music Awards, 1992.
  • “The Man Who Sold the World” from “MTV Unplugged,” 1993.