From red mankinis, grandpas in G-strings and budgie smugglers, to mullet wigs, nuns cradling lapdogs and blow-up cow costumes – a sea of wild, wacky and colourful costumed showered Outback NSW for the Mundi Undi Fun Run at the Broken Hill Mundi Mundi Bash music festival.
Staged to raise funds for the Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) and forming part of Outback NSW’s biggest ever live music event, the one-kilometre charity fund run saw 649 festivalgoers sweep across the iconic Mundi Mundi Plains – offering up a striking and hilarious sight whilst raising almost $10,000 in the process.
The Mundi Undi Run is just one of many colour activities taking place on Day 2 of the Mundi Mundi Bash. The all-ages, dog-friendly festival is currently hosting around 8,000 travellers and Oz rock music lovers, who have converged for three-days in the remote red desert to party, camp and revel in true blue culture and Outback Australiana.
Not just a massive second day for the festival’s two-legged punters, the Mundi Mundi Bash also hosted a Doggie Fashions on the Plains competition to crown the outback’s most fashionable fur babies.
The Bash’s dashing dogs strutted their stuff in the fiercest of frocks – dressing to impress in desert runway looks that would upstage supermodels on the world’s premiere fashion runways.
To open the festival, Midnight Oil and Missy Higgins – two cross-generational legends of Australian music – joined forces on stage last night for a once-in-a-lifetime performance.
Taking the stage on the spectacular Mundi Mundi Plains where Midnight Oil filmed their legendary Beds Are Burning and Diesel And Dust film clips, The Oils performed electrifying renditions of Australian anthems from their revered five-decade career including Power And The Passion, Redneck Wonderland and US Forces.
The Oils’ Mundi Mundi Bash performance marked one of the last chances for Australian fans to see the legendary rock outfit on home soil before their retirement – and the only chance to see them on the red dirt of the Australian outback.
To make the night even more memorable, the band invited several special guests to perform with them on stage including Missy Higgins and her band members Alana Stone, Sarah Belkner and Zoe Hauptmann; Leroy Johnson and the Waterbag Band; and Broken Hill band Tha Boiz, who accompanied the Oils with didgeridoo on The Dead Heart.
Just over half-way through their set, Missy Higgins joined Midnight Oil for a rendition of the band’s iconic One Country. Higgins performed the part of beloved late band member Bones, who passed away in November 2020.
Higgins then stayed on stage to perform backup vocals for the band on several of their tracks.
Earlier on in the evening, Higgins performed solo – enjoining fans in a singalong of her most beloved hits including Scar, The Special Two, Steer and more. In a special moment, Higgins was joined on stage by the Wilcannia Public School choir, who backed her in a performance of Big Kids, under the direction of ARIA award-winning Music Teacher of The Year, Sarah Donnelly.
The school choir became an uplifting viral sensation during the 2020 COVID lockdown with their rendition of Paul Kelly’s From Little Things Big Things Grow. They travelled more than two hours through the Outback from their home in Wilcannia to join Higgins on stage at the remote desert festival.
The Mundi Mundi Bash continued tonight with performances by Jon Stevens, the Rolling Stones Review Starring Adalita, Tex Perkins & Tim Rogers, The Black Sorrows, Sarah McLeod, Eurogliders, Mick Thomas and Melanie Dyer.
The festival will closed with headline performances from Jimmy Barnes and Kasey Chambers.
For more information on the Mundi Mundi Bash, visit www.mundimundibash.com.au
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