• Winter Menu at Northbridge Brewing Company

    Northbridge Brewing Company (NBC) is Perth’s latest brewery, bar and restaurant located in the heart of the city at Northbridge Piazza. NBC is all about providing a relaxed atmosphere in a unique custom built venue, where exceptional food and beer is the focus.

    NBC has just launched a new winter menu which puts its own twist on a number of classic dishes, including Steak & Roast Shallot Pie, ½ Roast Duck Red Curry, Gumbo, Crispy Skinned Barramundi, Lamb Cutlets, Spaghetti with Lamb Meatballs, and Blackened Chicken just to name a few. The Caesar Salad is amazing, with 200gm crumbed Mahogany Creek chicken breast, poached egg, crisp prosciutto, croutons and Caesar dressing? Hungry yet?

    Come for the fabulous weeknight specials for only $17! Monday – 400gm Rack of Ribs, Tuesday – Fresh Barramundi, Wednesday – 350gm T-Bone Steak, and Thursday – Giant Veal Schnitzel. Generous servings, which go down a treat with NBC’s own beer, hand crafted on site.

    Northbridge Brewing Company
    Phone: 6151 6481 
    http://www.northbridgebrewingco.com.au 
    Facebook: Northbridge Brewing Company by Beerland 

    NBC Voice Specials Ad PRINT

  • Youth gets PJS back on the beat

    MISSING out on Barnett government funding last year was the spur to action for incoming Perth Jazz Society president Gemma Farrell.

    “[The Department of Culture and the Arts] said we had to reinvent ourselves, and we listened,” she says.

    The society focussed on mentoring fresh, young jazz artists to create a new wave of talent with its own community and audience ­— just as  it did when it kicked off in 1973.

    Coupled with a membership drive and fresh marketing, numbers shot up from 30 to 130, and they’re still rising.

    Moving to regular Tuesday night sessions at the Rosemount Hotel’s Four5nine bar was the icing on the cake: “We were averaging 18 people, now we’re getting 30 to 40,” Ms Farrell says.

    • Gemma Farrell (with sax) and fellow jazz young guns Kate Pass and Francisco Munoz. Photo supplied
    • Gemma Farrell (with sax) and fellow jazz young guns Kate Pass and Francisco Munoz. Photo
    supplied

    WA Academy of Performing Arts students and the WA Youth Jazz Orchestra are amongst the growing band of regulars: “It’s become a bit of a ‘hang’ as they say.”

    The old Hyde Park Hotel was home for decades, but when the pub was taken over by Woolworths five years ago the PJS was turfed out to wander the jazz wilderness.

    The society tried a few inner-city venues on Sunday night, but members griped about having to pay for parking.

    “People wanted a more accessible venue,” Ms Farrell says.

    They also wanted more original music and overseas acts.

    Perth muso Kate Pass’s Kohesia Ensemble filled both roles in a recent performance, fusing jazz, Persian and Middle Eastern music.

    “We are trying music influenced from other countries,” Ms Farrell says.

    Next Tuesday (May 24) The Persuasion will unleash a selection of original fusion jazz due to be released later in the year.

    In encouraging original music the PJS has moved to foster closer relationships with WAAPA, WAYJO and the Ellington Jazz Club.

    There’s also PJS’ Young Lions sessions on the last Wednesday of the month at the Canton Bar, Perth.

    “We’re very keen on encouraging young artists and making as many opportunities for them as possible,” Ms Farrell says.

    Get along to the Four5nine bar any Tuesday, from 10pm, to hear for yourself the ever -changing face of Perth jazz.

    For the upcoming program go to http://www.perthjazz.com 

    by JENNY D’ANGER

    933 Terrace Hotel 10x3

  • Great music’s his forte

    THE WA Academy of Performing Arts at ECU has picked up its very own “fortepianist”. For real.

    The word fortepianist may sound like the punchline to an Andrew Dice Clay joke, but it’s actually a distinguished profession involving performing on a fortepiano, the early piano of the 18th and early 19th century.

    Geoffrey Lancaster AM, one of the world’s leading early keyboardists, is joining ECU as part of its plan to recruit 20 new professors to increase its research clout (Professor Lancaster is the third so far).

    At WAAPA he’ll lead traditional research and performance-based studies into piano design and restoration, getting students involved with historical performance practice.

    • Johann Andreas Stein’s fortepiano in the Berlin musical instrument museum. Photo by Gérard Janot. 
    • Johann Andreas Stein’s fortepiano in the Berlin musical instrument museum. Photo by Gérard Janot.

    One of his first projects is conducting Henry Purcell’s 17th century opera Dido and Aeneas with 60 WAAPA performers. It’s a work that wouldn’t be this complete without Prof Lancaster’s studious toil: he restored the piece to its original dimensions by reconstructing a prologue lost back in the 1700s.

    Prof Lancaster was the first Australian to win a major international keyboard competition, is an ARIA best classical album winner, and studied fortepiano at the Royal Conservatory in the Hague along with a boatload of other high appointments worldwide. To our knowledge he’s never performed with Genesis.

    • Professor Geoffrey Lancaster is an old school fortepianist. Photo supplied by ECU. 
    • Professor Geoffrey Lancaster is an old school fortepianist. Photo supplied by ECU.

    Even with all his cultured credentials he’s well pleased to be in humble old Mt Lawley: “The WAAPA faculty includes many acclaimed arts professionals and master teachers, and it is my privilege to work with them to offer a remarkable resource for aspiring young performers.”

    He’s in distinguished company in the professorial research fellow plan, joining international oceanography expert Pere Masqué and radicalisation expert Anne Aly.

    by DAVID BELL

    933 Italo Aust 15x3

  • ASTROLOGY May 21 – May 28, 2016

    ARIES (Mar 21 – Apr 20)
    It’s all been getting a bit serious. The fresh born Gemini Sun is challenging you to let go of the habit of battle. It’s inviting you to stay sincere but ditch the ‘all or everything’ mindset that tends to dry up all the joy within your psyche. Open your heart. Others will immediately come in.

    TAURUS (Apr 21 – May 20)
    The Sun has moved out of Taurus, but Venus and Mercury are still with you. There’s a little less of a drive to prove yourself. There are still all sorts of adventures going on to educate you in the fine art of self-love. Your curiosity continues to have you looking under and behind things.

    GEMINI (May 21 – June 21)
    The Sun has just entered Gemini. This is your time of the year. Make good of this solar return time. Re-focus. Re-jig. Above all – renew and revitalise. The Sun is a call to shine, a call to dare to be yourself, to remember that you are perfectly wonderful just the way you are. Be expansive.

    CANCER (June 22 – Jul 22)
    The Moon begins her week in Scorpio. You aren’t averse to wading into the healing emotional depths that are home to Scorpio. Getting your foundations down might just involve some honest talking – and some authentic processing. Life is knocking on your door. Go a whole lot deeper.

    LEO (July 23 – Aug 22)
    The Sun has moved into Gemini. This adds oxygen to your fire. It has felt like life has been trying to put your flames out for the last month. It has certainly been tempering your excesses but never inhibiting your essence. Dust your curiosity off. Look at things as if for the very first time.

    VIRGO (Aug 23 – Sept 22)
    The Sun’s movement into Gemini adds a dose of playfulness to all your frenetic doing. The Sun has been shining and you have been making hay. Work isn’t truly fulfilling until it becomes play. There’s no real rule that it has to be dour. As you lighten up, so your relationships prosper.

    LIBRA (Sept 23 – Oct 23)
    The movement of the Sun into Gemini causes you to prick up your ears. Life has some gifts of possibility to offer. Though there may still be a little plodding to do, you can sense a whiff of hope on the horizon. It’s the kind of hope that arises when acceptance flowers. Move slowly.

    SCORPIO (Oct 24 – Nov 21)
    The Moon begins her week in Scorpio. This puts a smile on your face. You are clear what your work is and you are onto it. It’s no longer a matter of what you are going to do. It’s now all about doing it, honing it and hunting for mastery. Essentially, it’s time to get on with life – totally.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 – Dec 21)
    It’s going to take a shift in insight to release this logjam. Fortunately, there are creative possibilities coming your way from Mercury in Taurus. It’s your gut that you are going to have to listen to. Instinct will lead you more truly than any intricately woven cognitive schemes ever could.

    CAPRICORN (Dec 22 – Jan 19)
    Deep and meaningful need not be dire and distressing. Existential anguish is an illusion too. There is a layer of light underneath the shadows that sometimes tend to lean in on you. Everything you are looking for is right before your eyes. Ground yourself in present time. The secret is open.

    AQUARIUS (Jan 20 – Feb 18)
    The Sun’s shift into Aquarius puts a strong breeze under your wings. If you have felt becalmed, as you may well have of late, this will feel like a blessing that is heaven sent. Clean out your attic, your basement, your cupboards and your pantry. You are up for renewal and regeneration

    PISCES (Feb 19 – Mar 20)
    Your currents of being are really strong. You may look either choppy or nebulous on the surface. Underneath all that, you are a force to be reckoned with. Your sense of direction has been set and you are moving towards it, whether others spot what you are up to or not. Don’t deviate.

    933 Serene Lim 10x2

  • A brush with disaster narrowly averted

    GREEN BANS imposed by unions saved a number of WA heritage properties in the past, but humble painters can be thanked for preserving the integrity of this Sixth Avenue, Inglewood home.

    The vendor was agonising over whether to paint the

    gorgeous, aged jarrah door frames and windows, picture rails and skirting to fit with the modern fad of having everything white: “But two [different] painters refused to paint the timber.”

    933HOME 1

    So while the walls of the art deco home got a fresh coat of paint, the jarrah still shines, as do the beautiful leadlight windows and doors much of it frames.

    The formal lounge is a case in point, with french doors and windows, a beautiful art deco ceiling and gas powered faux-wood fire making it a visual treat.

    The main bedroom also has banks of leadlight windows, ceiling roses and a pretty federation-style ensuite.

    933HOME 2

    A massive extension seamlessly melds the original 1929 home with the 21st century with plenty of deco touches in the sweeping open-plan.

    A black granite island bench the size of Carnac Island takes centre stage in the stylish black and white kitchen, which boasts a walk-in-pantry and huge appliance cupboard.

    Bifold doors close the huge lounge area off from the kitchen/dining space, which means while the kids watch TV the adults can entertain dinner guests: “You can see what they’re doing but not hear them,” the vendors says.

    933HOME 3

    With a couple of sets of french doors to a covered alfresco area, this is a great party house, she adds.

    For kids and guests alike the water feature over the pool is a hit: “It’s like having your own waterfall in your back garden, the kids love to be under it.”

    Pool

    When it’s too cool for the pool, there’s a swathe of grass to kick a ball, while the grown ups are protected from wintery breezes by cafe blinds on the alfresco decking.

    Inglewood Primary and Mt Lawley High Schools are nearby as is Edith Cowan University, and there’s no shortage of shops and eateries to choose from.

    by JENNY D’ANGER

    190 Sixth Avenue, Inglewood
    offers in mid $1 millions
    Natalie Hoye
    0405 812 273
    Carlos Lehn
    0478 927 017
    Acton Mt Lawley
    9272 2488

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  • Acton Mt Lawley tops REIWA poll

    ACTON Mt Lawley was recently recognised as the number one real estate agency in its bailiwick by the Real Estate Institute of WA and RR Data Core Logic Statistics.

    “Other agencies claim to be number one, but we can back it up,” agent Natalie Hoye says.

    933HOME2

    REIWA tracks properties sold over the financial year across the state: “We are the only one in the Mt Lawley and Beaufort Street area to get in the top 100,” Ms Hoye says.

    She puts the rating down to team work. “We actually work very closely as a team, we’re not competitive‚Ķthere’s no patch protecting.”

    DHM Plumbing 5x2

  • Luxury Travel Specialists

    World Travel Professionals located in East Perth are a National Company and have been creating wonderful holiday experiences for the past 20 years.  WTP are here to offer advice on destinations and the best way to get there.  They will only ever offer you a maximum of 5 flight options, because they treat your holiday like it is their own.  They will ensure you get the best price, best connections for the best holiday experience.

    Being Virtuoso Members allows us to offer additional services.  Benefits to our clients include free upgrades, free transfers and much more at no extra cost, another way of enhancing the client’s experience.

    Call Teresa today on 9221 2133
    World Travel Professionals
    100 Royal Street, East Perth
    Phone: 9221 2133

    933 World Travel 11x3

     

  • Trips trap Scaffidi

    FROM January 2008 to October 2015, Perth Lord Mayor Lisa Scaffidi found the time to take 65 overseas and 47 interstate trips: that’s 112 in seven years, an average of 15 a year.

    Along the way, according to a damning new report by the WA local government department, she allegedly broke the law 45 times.

    Ironically, the lord mayor’s many trips were often billed as promoting the capital city and building its brand. But type “Scaffidi Perth” into Google and the search page is littered with tales of scandal.

    Despite the department’s allegations, which follow a six-month probe and which are now being referred to the powerful state administrative tribunal for yet another investigation, Ms Scaffidi is refusing to stand aside.

    At a media conference to respond to the department’s findings, Ms Scaffidi told journalists “I’ve been heartbroken by what I’ve had to stand by and watch,” and said, “it is my view that at all times I was acting within the guidelines and procedures of the City of Perth.”

    01. 932NEWS

    The WA crime and corruption commission last year made similarly damning findings about her travels and alleged failures to declare gifts, including from companies with business before the council.

    WA Labor leader Mark McGowan says it’s time for Ms Scaffidi to go, as does neighbouring Vincent mayor John Carey, but premier Colin Barnett says it’s not up to him to make that call.

    Ms Scaffidi gave the department several reasons why she shouldn’t face disciplinary action, including:

    • non-disclosure was inadvertent and due to “manifestly inadequate systems”;

    • all travel (except Press Council trips) was undertaken in her official capacity as lord mayor “and solely for the advancement of the city”;

    • she’s dedicated to her role and contributes to the changing economic, social and cultural landscape of Perth;

    • she’s already suffered reputational, emotional and financial damage caused by the department’s inquiry and the CCC report;

    • plenty of others are doing it, including “other members and city staff”;

    • she’s made repeated public apologies.

    The department’s report says most “bear no relevance” to the public interest test that decides whether to pursue disciplinary action.

    “Enough is enough, this is now farcical,” says John Carey from neighbouring Vincent.

    “We have had a CCC report which found that she engaged in serious misconduct, we have a department of local government review that makes 45 alleged breaches of the local government act, and now we have the SAT hearing.

    “Why is it that there appears to be one standard for the lord mayor and another standard for every other resident?

    “If anyone else in their work was found to have done serious misconduct would they not be suspended during an investigation, or more likely let go?

    “This is about the integrity of the office of lord mayor: she must resign, she must resign now.”

    Ms Scaffidi’s description of her council as a leader of accountability also has Mr Carey fuming, given she’d recently opposed his reform attempts.

    “To make the claim that she’s a leader of transparency and accountability is extraordinary,” he says.

    Mr Carey’s been trying to push all councils to accept measures such as online gift and travel registers, and a public register that shows when elected members meet developers.

    Ms Scaffidi had said, “an efficient mayor’s diary would also provide the same result without duplication” but Mr Carey notes a mayor’s diary is not publicly available.

    Perth city councillor Reece Harley, who stood against Ms Scaffidi at last October’s lord mayoral election, wants her to carefully consider her future.

    “While I respect that SAT processes must be followed, this could take years to resolve,” he says.

    “It is my personal view that Lisa Scaffidi should put the reputation of the City of Perth and the office of the lord mayor ahead of all other personal considerations.

    “My publicly stated view following the release of the CCC report was that if I were in Lisa’s position, I would have stood down, and that remains my view.”

    by DAVID BELL

    TOF10X3.pdf

  • Better late than never

    HERE’S a wee happy update: more than two years ago we told you about Maylands pensioners wilting in the heat because the Eighth Avenue bus stop didn’t have a shelter.

    Leslie Wojcik, then 72, said it sometimes got so hot she had to hide in the nearby phone booth rather than sit at the stop, which is largely used by the elderly.

    • Two years ago and today: Maylands’ elderly bus passengers now have a sheltered bus stop. 
    • Two years ago
    • Today: Maylands’ elderly bus passengers now have a sheltered bus stop.
    • Today: Maylands’ elderly bus passengers now have a sheltered bus stop.

    She petitioned council and says then-mayor Sylvan Albert told her he’d get a shelter put in.

    But when it came round to budget time he voted against spending the cash.

    Well, they’ve been through two more summers and some rainy winters, mayor Albert has been voted off the council and Ms Wojcik and friends finally have somewhere to shelter.

    In February new Maylands ward councillor Catherine Ehrhardt moved to get it installed, saying: “while this may seem like a small thing to some, this is a bus stop that is primarily used by the elderly and it was just unacceptable that there was no provision for shade from the full sun or shelter from the rain.”

    by DAVID BELL

    932 Louis Antiques 10x2

  • Untangled

    THIS adorable white-faced heron nearly died after getting tangled in fishing line.

    Bayswater city council workers were down at Baigup Wetlands on May 5, working on a remediation trial when they came across the tangled bird with sinkers around its wing.

    The workers carefully untangled the bird and took it to a vet for care and recovery.

    03. 932NEWS

    Mayor Barry McKenna says it’s a reminder to remove all line and tackle when fishing at the foreshore (there are bins — use them).

    The ancient Baigup Wetlands, a hunting and gathering area in pre-colonial days, have taken a battering over the years, with acid sulphates in the soil, dying paperbark trees, introduced weeds dominating, and foxes snacking on native wildlife.

    The workers were there to treat “iron-rich scalds” and cut down salinity and acidity.

    by DAVID BELL

    Planet Ark 9x4