Rundle Street nightclub Sugar reborn for summer
The iconic East End venue will rise from the ashes on December 1 and reopen under a group which also owns Cry Baby, Shotgun Willie’s and more.
MoreThe iconic East End venue will rise from the ashes on December 1 and reopen under a group which also owns Cry Baby, Shotgun Willie’s and more.
MoreLocal internet music station Groundfloor Radio has launched an online petition arguing live music venues and nightclubs are still “inoperable” due to COVID restrictions and the State Government has prioritised sports over the city's late-night economy.
MoreWhile a path out of the November lockdown has been announced, the impacts have already been felt by Adelaide's live music venues, which have still yet to recover from the March shutdown.
More“We've had a bit of time to renovate and I think we've done really well. I just want to open and show people now,” Sugar co-owner Driller Jet Armstrong says.
MoreSaturday, 7 March 2020
MoreFor the last eight years, Driller Jet Armstrong's independent record label, Dessert Island Discs, has captured the sound and legacy of Sugar on wax.
MoreJust the facts (and some hints as to whether or not your Bloody Mary is going to cost more).
MoreIn the Rundle Street alleyway formerly known as Sato Roji and Dark Matter, Sugar has teamed up with McLaren Vale darlings Pizzateca to create Sugateca - a Naples-inspired pop-up restaurant and late-night Italo disco party.
MoreNicolás Jaar, Bliss Signal, and DJ Lag, the self-proclaimed king of Gqom - a genre of club music sprouting out of Durban, South Africa - have joined the stacked 2018 Unsound Adelaide lineup.
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