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About this concert
Philadelphia Grand Jury have gotten the party started at hundreds of chaotic and beautiful shows across 4 continents, in more cities than anyone can count - from Patti Smith’s basement to the back of a flat-bed truck, under the stars of the South African desert, on rooftops and all the way to the main stage of Splendour in the Grass. With 2020 being officially named the worst year on record, all the plans to release a string of singles and tour around the country and abroad have been postponed once, twice and now shrunk down to a one-off hometown show. With a new album due out in early 2021, this is your chance to hear some of the fresh new songs the Philly Jays have been working on throughout lockdown. And also, a great opportunity to party. Because if the world is gonna end, it might as well end with a party. TICKETING INFO- Do not attend if you are feeling unwell- All audience members will be required to sanitise & check-in upon entry to Waywards.- Shows will be seated (1.5m apart) and limited to 50 per sitting to allow for social distancing.- All seats & tables will be wiped down & sanitised between show sessions/sittings. - Guests must be seated at all times of the show unless moving from one section of the venue to another -  i.e toilet, smoking area etc. There is to be no standing and mingling among guests especially between different groups and alcohol can only be consumed by seated customers. - Drinks can only be ordered through ME&U table service, no need to head to the bar! All tables will have their own ME&U beacon where guests can scan a QR code to view the drinks menu, order & pay as drinks are brought to them.- Artist to perform two separate sittings, 6:30pm & 9:30pm- Due to venue seating layout, tickets are only able to be purchased in groups of 4- Patrons are to promptly leave once the shows have finished to ensure staff are able to sanitise and wipe down all surfaces before the next show. The venue will be taking a number of precautionary measures to ensure patron safety, including:- Hand sanitiser dispensers on entry and at tables- Signage and social distancing markers throughout the venue- Regular sanitising of the venue and full clean between sittings
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Philadelphia Grand Jury Biography

Philadelphia Grand Jury formed under a house in Sydney, Australia some time around 2009. Simon ‘Berkfinger’ Berckelman had been listening to too much Snakefinger and Talking Heads and decided to sell his car and buy enough gear to record his friends MC Bad Genius and Dan ‘W.’ Sweat. Their first minimal, loose, blues indie punk soul single ‘Going To The Casino’ fluked it’s way across the desk of jjj radio boss Richard Kingsmill and suddenly they were a real band, with real concerts and real high rotation radio play. They even quit their jobs! The next few years were a bit of a blur: they signed to Boomtown Records and their debut record ‘Hope Is For Hopers’ sold way more copies than anyone expected and helped them play hundreds of shows and festivals across Australia, USA, U.K., Europe and even South Africa. Guitars were broken, Dan Sweat left to get rich with Art Vs Science, drummers like Emergency Ivan, Calvin Welch, Dick Stick and Susie ‘Dreamboat’ Patten came and went. They were slammed on Australian and UK radio, scored syncs in too many movies and TV shows to mention and right on the cusp of releasing a second record, Bad Genius and Berkfinger had a major bustup and it was all over as quickly as it began. Well that was 2012 and everyone has been keeping busy. Berkfinger built Berlin’s Golden Retriever Studio, Bad Genius has been working with refugees and Dan Sweat has invested his money wisely, but of course it was inevitable that the guys would make up and realise the stupidity of not playing together when they (and a hell of a lot of other people) miss the band so dearly. After some fun surprise shows in 2013 and an intimate 2014 tour for the original faithful, the band flew with long time friend and very legendary engineer and producer Tim Whitten to Berlin and punched out writing and recording their new album, ’Summer Of Doom’ over 10 intense days. Tim thought they were nuts and actually said so, but made it sounds shit-hot nevertheless. He even showed Berkfinger how to use his compressors properly! The album continues the party they started in 2009 but reflects the fact that nothing ever stays the same. Most of the tracks were recorded live within 30 minutes of being written and there is no editing, no computer trickery. If Berkfinger couldn’t sing it perfectly in tune, then it stayed out of tune.
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