There’s something about great music that gets under the skin, making toes twitch or fingers tap as the music winds through the air. From tapping fingers in time on the steering wheel or dancing in a field with hundreds of other revellers at a summer music festival, the physical connotations of great music are undeniable. Drawing the parallel between music and the body in his newest work is composer Gerard Brophy. A well-respected Australian composer, Gerard was inspired by what he saw as the inherent eroticism in music. Titled Sheer Nylon Dances, his new compositions will be presented by Topology in a Brisbane-first at the Brisbane Powerhouse on Sunday October 5. Sheer Nylon Dances will feature strings, a saxophone, a piano and special guests who will perform a stunning piece written especially for an oboe quintet.




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