It all started in a barn.
Well, it wasnât really a barn, just a house that looked like one. Ben Tillmanâs house, to be specific. Ben Tillman, who booked bands to play at a series of increasingly out-of-control house parties that would eventually turn into one of Australiaâs fastest growing music brands.
The origins of Yours & Owls--a barn party turned small cafe turned-music venue/booking agency /large-scale music festival known locally as âGong Christmasâ... is a long story with any number of divergent themes. But predominantly, itâs a story of ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝ as a blank canvas for creative experimentation, and of three childhood friends who worked to create one of the city's most important cultural institutions.
Adam Smith and Ben Tillman had grown up together by the time Balunn Thomson moved from New Zealand to ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝ at age 12. Bonding over a shared love of surfing and a steady diet of grunge punk, the three were either playing in bands, watching bands (in venues like the divey Oxford Tavern) or booking bands throughout their teenage yearsâan interest which continued as the three enrolled at UOW together. While Adam studied economics and Ben and Balunn both studied psychology, the infamous Garden Parties and band comps offered a backdrop to their own increasingly debaucherous events; one link in a longer chain that would continue to grow through the years.
Once his barn parties had gotten too big for their own good, Ben got serious about throwing arts and music events around ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝. He booked acts like Tame Impala (âten people showed up and the bass player had to be snuck in because he was under ageâ according to Adam) while trying to find unique spaces and characters to counter the timeâs dominant culture.
âBack then, the culture was all about heavy drinking at clubs,â says Balunn, âand there wasnât a single small bar.â
While many of their peers moved to Sydney in search of new opportunities, the trio opened a cafe in ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝. They called it Yours and Owls, riffing on the idea of something that belonged to everyone. âIt was never intended to be a music venueâ says Adam, who describes their original idea as a cafe and gallery that could host music in the background. But the closure of the Oxford Tavern, as well as a chance performance from a young Kirin J. Callinan, hinted that a band room may be just what the city ordered.
Listen to the full interview with Adam and Balunn.
And while most people saw Yours & Owls as another dedicated small music venue in ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝, elsewhere things were happening that pointed toward an impending change in the cityâs topography.
As the steelworksâ dominance on employment slowed and migration from Sydney picked up, ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝ began to show the markers of a new, post-industrial era. Just a few doors down from Yours & Owls, a breakfast spot Lee & Me introduced nu-Australian cafè culture to the cityâs flavour palette. Nearby, Otis Bar (now The Little Prince) paved the way for small bar culture (and licensing) to thrive. Wonderwalls, a new street art festival, began covering the town in large-scale murals from renowned street artists. All the while, Yours & Owls were providing the local sceneâs playlists.
By the time the boys were ready to launch Yours & Owls as a festival (âa 4th birthday party for 3,000 peopleâ), both the local government and themselves were stepping into the unknown. â[Council] might have been nervous but they didnât know what it would be, and it needed to be that wayâ says Adam, describing how their setup crew was âmostly mates and people in the scene who believed in the vision.â
âAfter the first festival, the council knew our documentation wasnât up to scratch, but they thought âletâs give these guys a runâ because there was nothing else like it. There was no precedent.â
Yours and Owls promotional photoshoot in 2016
So as the festival grew from 3,000 punters in its first year to 8,000 in its second, Yours & Owls felt those growing pains acutely. âThings had stepped up quite substantially, but we still had no idea what we were doingâ Adam recounts. âThe festival nearly collapsed that year; the P.A nearly exploded; everything went wrong. But we came out of it like âoh my God we need to do better and prove that it can work.â
âWe've had such a funny history and relationship with both the police and the council down here, where we kind of started off as naughty boys who were always pushing things a little bit too far, but then apologising and being really nice,â laughs Balunn. âGetting into trouble, but not so far as to get banned forever.â
But much like the city-wide renaissance of small bars, arts festivals, cafès and events, the investment from the city quickly paid off. Gradual encouragement by policy-makers didnât just drive huge economic benefits to the city, but also allowed the visionaries to craft an urban blueprint more sustainable, inclusive and safer than its predecessor. This freedom allowed Yours & Owls to run an underground sister festival âFarmer and the Owl.â During, they partnered with Hockey Dad to launch a drive-in gig and one of the only COVID-safe music festivals to take place in 2021 (âIâm glad weâll never have to do it again, but weâd rather go for it and cop a bit of criticism than do nothing at all,â Adam says)
In 2022, Yours & Owls will return to Stuart Park for the biggest iteration of the festival yet (which at the time of writing is about 90% sold out with 5 months to go). They continue to book bands for a series of venues across New South Wales, all clamouring for a small taste of the magic they bottled in a tiny cafe ten years prior. And theyâre still breaking countless local bands oton the national and international stage.
But their success is also testament to the mutual respect the organisers share with their audience, as well as the relationship between its founders, which remains strong to this day. âIâve been friends with Ben since I was two and Bal since I was 12. Itâs a long time to be friends with anyoneâ says Adam. âWhen you run a business with someone, things change for sure. Thereâs been a lot of crazy stuff; highs and lows. But in the end, itâs bought us all closer. A different sort of friendship.â
Reflections on the foundersâ time at UOW paints a quiet backdrop to the most formative years of their operation. âMy life is so tied up in ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝, Iâm always going to have fond memories hereâ says Balunn, describing a familiar smell on campus that persists 15 years later as âsomewhere between fresh plants and chips and gravy.â
âThose university years are so formative in so many ways. Itâs an entryway into adulthood and your real life, living it how you want to as an individual. The relationships you form in those times, you donât often realise how long-lasting they can be. Your uni days are going to be iconic no matter what. But if Iâd realised how important some of those friendships would be at the time, I probably would have valued them a little more then, too.â
âI came from a pretty conservative town and upbringing, and just being at Uni I was around people who were different to what I was used to,â says Adam of his first few years at Uni. âThat was the beginning of thinking there is a different way to look at the world. And I didnât necessarily get that from studying, but just reading books and talking to people at parties and the Unibar. Thatâs where you test different ways of looking at the world.â
âItâll always be a part of your life, and all throughout the last 10 years of running a business, thereâs always been some excuse to get back every few months.â