Closure In Moscow at 2012 St Kilda Festival

The 2012 St Kilda Festival is on this weekend with “Festival Sunday” on 12th February.
It's Australian music, it’s summer, it’s St Kilda, it’s free and it’s your Festival… come and celebrate!
Be treated to a rich and diverse range of Australian talent, with more than 50 bands performing across the stages, plus extreme sports, dance, children’s entertainment...the list goes on and on.
Famous Vox Music Academy Students Closure In Moscow are performing on The Push stage between 4.15pm-5pm. The Push, FreeZA and the Cities of Port Phillip, Stonnington, Kingston and Bayside present an all-ages, drug, alcohol and smoke-free music stage by and for young people.
Closure In Moscow recently played at The Hordern Pavilion in Sydney & Festival Hall in Melbourne with My Chemical Romance as part of the Big Day Out 2012 Sideshows.
Melbourne band CLOSURE IN MOSCOW, the progressive rock band, who have been making a name for themselves both here and abroad, had their work set out for them opening for a such a world-renowned act but they failed to disappoint. Drawing from their debut album First Templeand their EP The Penance And The Patience, CIM stunned the crowd with their complex rhythms and lead-singer Christopher de Cinque’s impressive vocal range. The Impeccable Beast, a brand new song, gave the crowd a little insight into what their upcoming album might sound like. Judging by the reception that they received at the end of their set, it was clear that had won over some new fans.
The Vasco Era at The Espy

After the festival, headlining the night at The Esplanade Hotel on Festival Sunday along with 13 other bands, are Vox Music Academy famous students, The Vasco Era.
A recent review stated...
‘Sid delivered with his usual hopping-mad (and that’s not a metaphor) energy, while brother Ted thrashed about on his bass and Michael Fitzpatrick smashed his toms so hard that his snare went flying. Their sweaty, jarring and very noisy style of rock n roll certainly discomforted a few of the more well-dressed attendees, but a band like The Vasco Era doesn’t cater for folks like them. They’re too busy ending their set by jamming on a Jimi Hendrix riff and blowing out what’s left of the speakers. No two Vasco Era shows are the same, but they invariably end in some kind of carnage; an invaluable and ongoing contribution to Australian live music.’
If you’d like to learn to sing like Closure In Moscow or The Vasco Era, get professional singing lessons or guitar lessons at Melbourne’s Vox Music Academy at the northern suburbs Brunswick studio, south eastern suburbs Dandenong studio or eastern suburbs Bayswater studio.