Inside the sticky, sweat-prone confines of Manning Bar, pop-punk nostalgia collides with a new generation tonight. By the time Nashville’s rising star Taylor Acorn steps onstage, the room already feels like a pressure cooker ready to blow.
The evening begins with Australian singer Azure, who warms the crowd with a set that leans into soaring vocals and polished alt-pop instincts. The early arrivals press closer to the stage as Azure’s voice fills the room, setting a tone that feels intimate but quietly anticipatory. It’s the calm before the distortion pedals kick in.





That shift arrives with Arrows In Action, who stride out with the confidence of a band comfortable in their melodic lane. The Florida trio lean into their sleek blend of indie rock and synth-charged alt-pop, drawing cheers for the hook-heavy sheen of their catalogue.






By the time Acorn appears, the Manning Bar is packed wall-to-wall. The Nashville-based singer has quickly become one of pop-punk’s most compelling new voices, channeling the emotional directness of the early-2000s scene into something sharper and more modern. Songs from her new album Poster Child land with a rush of adrenaline, the crowd shouting back every chorus like they’ve known them for years.
Acorn’s sound draws an obvious lineage from artists like Avril Lavigne and Paramore, but tonight the energy feels unmistakably her own. Guitars snarl, choruses explode, and Acorn prowls the stage with the easy charisma of someone who understands exactly how these songs are meant to live.
For a venue used to hosting everything from indie upstarts to heavy hitters, Manning Bar feels perfectly suited to this moment. Pop-punk’s new poster child has arrived in Sydney, and judging by the roar inside the room tonight, the scene is more than ready for her.























Images Deb Pelser
