More dates

Tom Snowdon

This event has passed Get tickets

Event description

Tom Snowdon releases his first solo original work with two-track Flood at the Heart.

“Empty Start” is about the need for renewal, about needing to leave things behind in order to make room for new places, new friends, new inspiration. It throbs with an ominous intensity that breaks in the chorus with an ever rising melody.

“Protection” stumbles along in an unfamiliar time signature, seeking solid ground, seeking clarity. Instrumentally it echoes the landscape of Snowdon’s home of Mparntwe/Alice Springs - rugged and powerful, but gentle and delicate too.

Snowdon first created music with his group Lowlakes, which took him touring all around the world, but ultimately disbanded after releasing one album in 2014. He then joined forces with Tom Iansek (Big Scary/#1 Dads) - guesting for #1 Dads on standout tracks “Return To”, and FKA Twigs’ “Two Weeks” for Like A Version. This creative partnership led to the forming of No Mono, a duo of Snowdon and Iansek, and they released Islands Part I and II in 2018/19. But when No Mono also came to an end, Snowdon was left flapping in the wind. It took some time before he could regroup. He put energy into other passions - his law degree led him to work on the Northern Territory’s Treaty Commission. He composed for contemporary dance and public works. He guest vocal’d on tracks from Willaris. K and upsidedownhead. Slowly he recalibrated himself as a solo artist.

The first concrete step in that direction was his 2019 covers EP Channel, which saw Snowdon take massively familiar songs from the likes of Men At Work, Kylie MInogue and Britney Spears, and distill them to their emotional core, successfully inviting the listener to reengage with the songs they would know so well. Channel was inspired by Snowdon’s childhood love of Yorta Yorta artist Jimmy Little’s Messenger album.

And now Flood at the Heart is his first original, solo work. Like Lowlakes, like No Mono, Snowdon’s otherworldly vocals pair with dramatic production, blending the digital and analog worlds. The mood is heavy. Snowdon warps and stretches his vocal, using it as an instrument to explore the unseen emotional world within all of us. 


Powered by

Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix donates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity




Refund policy

No refunds