Before a single note was played last night, Qudos Bank Arena felt like it was slowly shifting into focus. The space filled in waves, with people finding their seats or drifting toward the floor, talking quietly as coloured lights swept across the crowd. The room’s size gave everything a sense of distance; you could feel the anticipation settling in, steady but not rushed, as the arena took shape around the stage.
The night opened with Busy P, whose set eased the room into motion. His choices moved comfortably between French touch, electro, and familiar Ed Banger textures, creating a warm, relaxed entry point for the night. He closed with an AC/DC track, a small moment of local acknowledgment that earned a cheerful reaction from the crowd.
A Tame Impala DJ set followed, shifting the mood without demanding attention. Kevin Parker blended low-key edits and soft, psychedelic rhythms, reshaping familiar melodies into something looser and more atmospheric. It was a gentle transition, colouring the room without overwhelming it.
By the time Justice appeared, the arena had settled into a rowdy readiness. Their stage design used straight lines, structured lighting, and the familiar cross to create a simple but striking visual frame. The duo maintained a calm, composed presence behind their gear, moving with the precision and understated style that has long defined their live work.
As the first sequence of lights rose behind them, the crowd reacted immediately. People on the floor moved in steady waves, while those in the seated sections leaned forward as if the show had suddenly pulled them closer. At the front, a woman mentioned she had travelled all the way from South Korea for the performance, and would also be going to the Melbourne show.
Justice’s visuals shaped much of the experience. The lighting carved out the space in shifting patterns—sometimes sharp and bright, other times soft and layered through the smoke. The arena, usually a neutral concrete shell, felt reoriented by the show’s pacing and design, each track creating its own small world inside the larger room.
By the end, Qudos Bank Arena felt subtly transformed. The crowd moved out slowly, talking in clusters, still half-lit by the afterglow of the strobes. It was a night built on atmosphere, structure, and carefully controlled energy—an approach that allowed the duo’s music and visual design to carry the space without overstating themselves.
















The tour moves to Brisbane and Melbourne next, tickets HERE.
Images Deb Pelser
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