
It’s been seven years since virtual punks Gorillaz brought their live show to Australia, and we’re getting impatient. He's yet to make his way back to us, but after just breaking a three-year hiatus from playing live, we're holding out hope that he'll grace us with his presence again soon. Ocean broke all our hearts when he exited his 2013 debut Aussie tour, including his headline set at Splendour, and that was after he pulled out of a planned 2012 Aussie tour. Hopefully they can hump-de-bump their way to our shores some time soon. The Chilis haven't announced any Aussie dates since releasing their 2016 LP The Getaway, and they haven't played a show on Aus turf since the 2013 Big Day Out, which, seeings as how one of their recent music videos was all about an Aussie's adventures in LA, feels a bit rude.


Queen B's world tour plan's for her Lemonade may have been derailed by the whole getting-pregnant-with-twins-thing, but we're confident that we'll eventually see her return down under for the first time since 2013. Let's hope it's not the day that never comes. But they ~have~ confirmed a "WorldWired" tour, while Soundwave boss AJ Maddah has predicted that the band will be coming to Australia in 2017. It's unlike Metallica to skip Australia on any album cycle, which is why we're getting impatient that we haven't seen any Aussie dates materialise for their most recent LP Hardwired. Gallery: 14 Huge Tours Australia Is Still Waiting Forġ4 Huge Australian Tours We're Still Waiting For (2017) Sadly, the clip isn’t embeddable so you’ll have to have a gander at it here. We think it’s important to have public discourse about the promise and perils of these emerging and incredibly influential technologies and it’s great to work with Muse to instigate those conversations.”

While Branger Briz add: “AI is so often deployed in a very invisible way, so it was exciting to collaborate on a project with the band that brings it to the fore. The process will be repeated every day – check back tomorrow to see the updated video.” “The clips are then pieced together using timed information from the original song to create a lyric video where each lyric is voiced by a different person. “Using the latest in machine learning capabilities the AI tool has been tasked with scraping hundreds of hours of footage searching for occurrences of words from the ‘Dig Down’ lyrics and produces a library of video clips,” Matt Bellamy & co say in a statement (via NME). The video will apparently “regenerate” every day for a month.
