The three part harmonies and unexpected twists to the songs will delight music fans as much as The Kransky Sisters delight comedy fans.
It's a long way from Esk in Queensland, population just over 1,000, to Sydney's Seymour Centre. And for Esk's spinister Kransky Sisters it must also feel like a trip to the future. The Kranskys, when they're not touring their oddball cabaret show, live in a gothic parody world of 1940s small town Australia. Balancing their remembrances of their very odd upbringing with musical re-workings of modern pop classics, the trio are a sharp observation of an Australia that can still be found if you look hard enough. While the songs are designed for laughs, which they easily provide - hearing AC/DC being played on the toilet brush is a rare experience - the three performers have worked these arrangements out to give even the most raucous of them a Salvation Army Band feel. And the three part harmonies and unexpected twists to the songs will delight music fans as much as The Kransky Sisters delight comedy fans.