Thursday, 4 June 2026

Matt Berninger @ Sydney Opera House, Vividly and ambiguously.

Sydney during the Vivid Festival can offer a lot of sensory overloads. You emerge from the City Circle underground line to find Circular Quay a shock of dayglo lights, with even the Harbour Bridge in on the spectacle, and the Opera House’s usually pristine sails flashing from indigenous imagery to psychedelic melting even as you walk toward it.

As part of Vivid’s 2026 music programme, the “solo” Matt Berninger - although he’s actually part of a subtle and intimate trio rather than fronting the sweeping racket of his day job with The National.

Mr B. is still the ineffably cool guy sometimes on the verge of a nervous breakdown; but he’s perhaps lighter, more wry – even his customary suit seems looser. But the songs still often have him nursing that bruised heart.

He walks on with little fanfare, flanked by keyboardist Julia Laws (aka Ronboy, as often billed on National albums) and longtime musical and songwriting collaborator, Sean O’Brien - who mostly sticks to a couple of acoustic guitars run through a range of pedals, with occasional outbreaks of lap-steel for an almost-country added weep.


 
The chat starts even before the music. Berninger arrives with the venue’s complementary large bouquet of flowers in hand – “I just didn’t want to leave them backstage, so I brought them with me…,” before musing how this was the first time he’s been allowed inside this building, “…although we’ve had The National out in the yard a couple of times”.


Most of the set centres around his two formal solo albums: the pandemic-affected ‘Serpentine Prison’ and more recent ‘Get Sunk’, which really did allow him a different voice, although after opening with the uncomfortably awkward feelings of ‘No Love’, and going via Prison’s longing ‘Distant Axis’, ‘Inland Ocean’ declaration of “Everything ends before I want it to…” becomes an increasingly clenched plea for something – although maybe he’s not even sure just what. Ronboy’s harmonies or counterpoint vocals making many songs into the relationship thought processes often occurring in the songs. But the space this format provides allows the singer to wander off around the bare spaces of the stage or simply stop and watch the music from his bandmates unfurl.  

The between-song rambles – which are later revealed as diversion mostly to allow O’Brien to retune – take many tangents: “I have two bottles here with me,” he notes. “One is full of water. And the other isn’t.” While ‘Breaking Into Acting’ has him revealing some career disappointments. “I did audition for a movie, to play an ageing alcoholic history professor – and I didn’t get the part. Can you believe it?” Frankly, no.

Just about every song is introduced by mention their co-writers. Often O’Brien or Laws, various of The Walkmen who were much involved with his first record, and then there’s maybe slightly bigger cheers for when The National’s Aaron Dessner rates a credit.

Some National touchstones turn up later in the recital. ‘About Today’, the longing ‘I Need My Girl’, and a ‘Terrible Love’ that sees the singer doing one of his famous seat-jumping strolls for hugs and singalong duets up into the audience. There was no TISM-style trashing of the Opera House upholstery, this was much too polite an audience and artist for that.

Sunk’s “Of” sings finish the set proper. ‘Times Of Difficulty’ (“Yeah, the ‘90s – we don’t want to go back those days…”) while ‘Bonnet Of Pins’ has him launching into a lecture on American religious folk-art – short-circuited by O’Brien getting his guitar set up quicker than expected. Berninger expresses relief. 

Encores are naturally demanded: ‘Nowhere Special’ perhaps a contradiction in terms here, and a final run at The National’s ‘Light Years’ sees them leave the stage to a genuine standing ovation.