1877 Hill & Son Grand Organ Tours ‘A Sound Taste’
Barossa Regional Gallery 3 Basedow Road, Tanunda, South Australia, AustraliaHear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
Hear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
It tells the story of Frank Doyle, an Aboriginal serviceman who has come home from World War II to find that although the wider world may have changed, attitudes back home in Brisbane are just the same. Filled with a defiant energy and ambition for a better life, Frank starts The Sunshine Club, a place where black and white can meet and, most importantly, dance. Here he dreams of a future where he can dance in step with Rose, the girl next door, the girl of his dreams.
Hear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
A chance to warm up your vocal cords with the Hill & Son!
Hear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
Hear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
Join Sera Waters for a hands on workshop in the slow act of stitching.
Hear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
As part of Stability Grace Endurance: Hand Crafted in Early Barossa exhibition currently on display at the Barossa Regional Gallery you are invited to delve into the story of Bertha Lange with local Barossa historian and enthusiast, Luke Rothe.
Bringing the organ to life with one of Australia’s best organists!
Hear the 1877 Grand Organ being played, view the inner workings, learn how this jewel of an instrument was restored.
As part of the Barossa Regional Gallery's new exhibition Stability, Grace, Endurance: Hand Crafted in Early Barossa and SA History Festival 2024, join Dr Noris Ioannou to discover the cultural histories embedded in the pottery, furniture, textiles, crafts and more from early ninteenth-century Barossa.