Mercury (Hobart)

Taste ruling forces buskers off the street

- ALEXANDRA HUMPHRIES

STREET performers have been bounced from this year’s Taste of Tasmania entertainm­ent program — because people found them annoying.

The performers say Hobart City Council’s decision to replace roving buskers with curated music-focused entertainm­ent events signals the end of an era.

But Lord Mayor Sue Hickey said the council had received feedback that the roving entertainm­ent in past years had been irritating, and decided to move away from buskers as part of the overhaul of the event.

“We still believe in buskers, we still like to support them through Salamanca, and we have a . . . policy that we still try to encourage young busking talent,” Alderman Hickey said.

Taste of Tasmania festival director Brooke Webb said this year’s program was new and fresh.

“If we presented the same program every year, would people keep coming back? This is what refreshing it is all about. We have to keep changing,” Ms Webb said.

Sword swallower and con- tortionist Samora Squid and magician Bodane Hatten have performed at Taste festivals and say the decision is disappoint­ing.

Mr Hatten said Taste had a reputation that enticed performers from all over the world to attend, but also provided young performers with an opportunit­y to learn the craft.

”People vie to get here to do it because they’ve heard [of the Taste],” he said.

“For street performers from the next generation what [this decision] is saying is, ‘if you want to do street shows then you better pick up a guitar.’

“There’s nowhere else, really, that street performers can perform in Hobart at that scale, except for the Taste.”

Mr Squid said he contacted the council earlier this year to express his interest in working at the Taste, but heard nothing.

“It doesn’t seem to make any sense to take out one of the main attraction­s of your event,” he said.

There will be 119 musical acts this year, comprised almost entirely of local artists, following the council’s partnershi­p with Music Tasmania. New director’s recipe for success: mercury.com.au

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia