Triple J's Impossible Music Festival

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Triple J's Impossible Music Festival is a recurring event that has been broadcast on Australia's Triple J radio station over 55-hour periods in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008. Each event comprises 55 live music recordings from Triple J's music archives. The first went to air over 26–29 August 2005, to celebrate the 30 years worth of live music recorded by Triple J. The second was broadcast over 6–9 October 2006. The third was aired over 25–27 May 2007. The fourth was recently aired across 19–21 September 2008.

The lineup is selected by Triple J listeners voting for over 1000 live recordings made by Triple J. The recordings included music from festivals, concerts, smaller pub gigs, bands playing live in the studio, and some special events where listeners were able to win tickets to see the band for free in a secret location.

2005[]

One live set was played every hour between 6 pm on Friday 26th, and 1 am on Monday 29 August. The following is the order in which the broadcasts went to air; the details in the brackets denotes the location and date in which the live recording was made.

Lineup[]

Friday[]

Saturday[]

Sunday[]

  • Michael Franti and Spearhead (The Palace, Melbourne, 20 July 2001)
  • Powderfinger (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 12 October 1998)
  • Beck (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 21 August 1994)
  • The Cure (Capitol Theatre, Sydney, 1981)
  • The Dandy Warhols (Corner Hotel, Melbourne, 30 October 2000)
  • Interpol (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 11 August 2003)
  • The Killers (Enmore Theatre, Sydney, 18 December 2004)
  • Ben Folds Five (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 29 July 1998)
  • Crowded House (Transformers, Melbourne, 28 July 1991)
  • At the Drive-In (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 22 January 2001)
  • PJ Harvey (Big Day Out, Melbourne, 26 January 2001)
  • Pearl Jam (Melbourne Park, Melbourne, 5 March 1998)
  • Frenzal Rhomb (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 12 May 2003)
  • Fatboy Slim (Big Day Out Boiler Room, Sydney, January 2001)
  • Ben Harper (, Sydney, 11 April 2001)
  • You Am I (Triple J Studio 227, Sydney, 20 April 1998)
  • Midnight Oil (, Sydney, 2 May 1980)
  • System of a Down (Big Day Out, Gold Coast, January 2002)
  • Faithless (Hordern Pavilion, Sydney, 8 October 2004)
  • Nirvana (The Palace, Melbourne, 1 February 1992)
  • Placebo (Hordern Pavilion, Sydney, 19 March 2004)
  • Garbage (Davies Park, Brisbane, 5 October 1996)
  • Faith No More (Festival Hall, Melbourne, 14 August 1995)
  • Metallica (Big Day Out, Sydney, 23 January 2004)

Monday[]

Announcers[]

2006[]

The 2006 Impossible Music Festival was broadcast over the weekend of 6 October-8 October.

Lineup[]

Friday[]

Saturday[]

Sunday[]

Monday[]

Announcers[]

2007[]

The 2007 Impossible Music Festival was broadcast over the weekend of 25 May-27 May.

Lineup[]

Friday[]

Saturday[]

Sunday[]

Monday[]

Announcers[]

2008[]

The 2008 Impossible Music Festival was broadcast over the weekend of 19 September-21 September.

Lineup[]

Friday[]

Saturday[]

Sunday[]

Announcers[]

2009[]

There was no Impossible Music Festival in 2009 due to the Hottest 100 of All Time.

2010[]

Triple J asked their listeners who their favourite live acts ever are, this is the result:

  1. Muse
  2. Rage Against the Machine
  3. Daft Punk
  4. Bloc Party
  5. Art vs. Science
  6. The Cat Empire
  7. Vampire Weekend
  8. Hilltop Hoods
  9. The Presets
  10. Yeah Yeah Yeahs
  11. Foo Fighters
  12. John Butler Trio
  13. The Flaming Lips
  14. Pearl Jam
  15. The Prodigy
  16. Florence and the Machine
  17. Phoenix
  18. Grinspoon
  19. Tool
  20. Radiohead

External links[]

Retrieved from ""