
BIG COUNTRY Announce October 2025 GREATEST HITS NZ Tour
BIG COUNTRY, the Legendary Scottish Celtic Rock band, return for the first time since 2019 for The Greatest Hits Tour. Setlist includes – In A Big Country, Chance, Fields of Fire, Look Away, Wonderland plus much more!
Featuring the band's de facto theme song — In a Big Country, their debut album, THE CROSSING, combined anthemic post-punk with folk-inspired guitar sounds to become the leading representative of 80's Celtic Rock. It was a surprisingly influential mix that would inspire an entirely new wave of British rock artists who openly embraced their Celtic heritage. BIG COUNTRY achieved major international success plus two Grammy nominations and for a time rivalled fellow 'big sounding' British guitar rock acts U2 and Simple Minds.
Big guitars, big drums, big checks on their shirts, BIG COUNTRY were well named!
BIG COUNTRY October 2025 Australian Tour Dates
Friday 3rd October – WELLINTON, San Fran
Saturday 4th October – AUCKLAND, Tuning Fork
Tickets
Pre-sale: Friday 9th May, 10:00am Local –
General Public On Sale: Monday 12th May, 10:00am Local
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scoop
an hour ago
- Scoop
ELECTRIC SIX Announce March 2026 Greatest Hits New Zealand Tour
Tuesday, 5 August 2025, 1:59 pm Press Release: Nuclear Blast Photo/Supplied The Disco-Punk band at the end of the world... ELECTRIC SIX return for The Greatest Hits Tour After sold out tours in both 2023 AND 2024… NOTHING CAN STOP Electric Six!!! An ELECTRIC SIX show - outrageous, irreverent, decadent, bizarre and a lot of fun! A spectacle where rock, disco, funk, and raw absurdity collide in a neon-lit frenzy. Expect a full-throttle blitz through their Greatest Hits - Danger! High Voltage, Gay Bar, Down at McDonaldz, Dance Commander, Synthesizer, I Buy the Drugs and more! A concert, a theatrical experience, and an art exhibit all in one! Three decades in and they're still the most unpredictable party in town. No overthinking, no pretension - just a raucous romp. If you're ready to dance, shout, and get is a night that you won't forget anytime soon... 'A raucous and eclectic crowd were in the mood to party… and there wasn't a soul in the place who left without a huge smile, such is the effect of Electric Six' (The Razors Edge) ELECTRIC SIX March 2026 New Zealand Tour Dates Thursday 26th March, WELLINGTON – San Fran Friday 27th March, AUCKLAND, Tuning Fork Pre-sale: Thursday 7th August @ 10:00am local. General Public On Sale: Monday 11th August at 10:00am local From: Photo/Supplied © Scoop Media


Otago Daily Times
5 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
The spy who changed MI5 dies at 90
Dame Stella Rimington, the first female director general of Britain's MI5 security and counter-intelligence service who ushered in an era of greater transparency at the agency, has died. She was 90. Rimington, who ran the domestic security agency between 1992 and 1996, was its first head to be publicly named and later wrote a memoir Open Secret about her career at the formerly secretive organisation. She went on to write a series of espionage novels and is also widely thought to have inspired actor Dame Judy Dench's tough but playful characterisation of the fictional spymaster 'M' in several James Bond movies. "She died surrounded by her beloved family and dogs and determinedly held on to the life she loved until her last breath," a family statement quoted by local media said. Rimington was given one of the British state's highest honours when she was made a dame in 1996. She joined MI5 in 1969 and worked in roles including counter-subversion and counter-terrorism. Under her leadership MI5 took a more prominent role in Britain's fight against Irish republican militants, according to a profile on the MI5 website. "As the first avowed female head of any intelligence agency in the world, Dame Stella broke through long-standing barriers and was a visible example of the importance of diversity in leadership," current MI5 director general Ken McCallum said in a statement. She committed the agency to a more transparent approach to its work, softening its post-Cold War image. "We are, of course, obliged to keep information secret in order to be effective, this is not to say that we should necessarily be a wholly secret organisation," she said in a publicly broadcast 1994 lecture. "Secrecy is not imposed for its own sake. It is not an end in itself." Foreshadowing her later literary career, Rimington opened that same speech with a nod to the British spy novel tradition and the fascination with the security services it had inspired among the general public. "It is exciting stuff and has led to the creation of many myths - and some lurid speculation - about our work. I must admit that it is with some hesitation that I set out tonight to shed some daylight," she said. "I have a sneaking feeling that the fiction may turn out to be more fun than the reality."

NZ Herald
20 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Supermodel Kylie Bax looks back on ‘wonderful' career highlights: ‘You look the same'
The nostalgic post brought back memories for Finnish violinist Linda Lampenius, who commented: 'Wow! I bought Clinique's Happy because of you!' It also prompted warm words from makeup artist Kristofer Buckle, who told Bax: 'You were one of the very first kind people I encountered when I first started.' The snap was taken in London at the studio of Mariano Vivanco, a Peruvian-born photographer who moved to New Zealand with his family when he was 10. He is a close friend of Bax's. In 2000, Vivanco moved to London to pursue a career in fashion photography and has become a very successful editorial photographer known for his work with celebrities including Cindy Crawford, Rihanna, Lady Gaga, Naomi Campbell, Eva Herzigova, Emma Watson and Lana Del Rey. Bax also posted a selfie with Vivanco, captioned: 'Two kiwis in London ... nothing sweeter than to see you.' In April, Bax shared a picture of her November 1994 cover of British fashion magazine Frank, which she said was 'one of my favourite covers!' In March, she posted two Vogue España covers from 1997 and 1998, saying the images made her remember the creative teams behind them. 'Every detail is manicured to perfection. Lighting, makeup, clothes and of course the hair, which was a very important part of my self image back in those years. The hair, movement & of course the all-important big smile.' Born in Thames, Bax competed in beauty pageants as a teen and was crowned Miss NZ in 1992. After being scouted in a shopping mall by an agent from Clyne Model Management, Bax moved to New York aged 20 to pursue a modelling career. Over the course of her career, Bax appeared on catwalks for fashion houses including Oscar de la Renta, Chanel, Christian Dior, Valentino, Gucci, Calvin Klein, Alexander McQueen, Chloe, Ralph Lauren, Prada and Miu Miu. She also modelled on the cover of magazines such as Vogue, Elle and Harper's Bazaar. Bax became a muse for American fashion photographer Steven Meisel, and appeared as the face of Clinique perfume Happy in a campaign shot by Meisel. Bax lives on a bloodstock farm in Cambridge, switching from modelling to breeding racehorses more than a decade ago. She has three daughters. Lito, Kylie, Dione and Danae Bax at the launch of Kylie Bax's documentary. Photo / Neil Gussey Earlier this year, Kiwi fashion photographer Neil Gussey produced a documentary called Bax and Beyond that documents Bax's career and rise to fashion fame. Promoting the film, Gussey told New Zealand Woman's Weekly he thought Bax's star power is often misunderstand at home. 'She was incredibly successful. She's the one that every top designer wanted on their campaign. She was extremely good at what she did and she's the hardest worker I've seen. She never stopped.'