The Greek Centre in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | Arts and entertainment
The Greek Centre
Locality: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Phone: +61 3 9662 2722
Address: 168 Lonsdale Street 3000 Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Website: http://www.greekcentre.com.au
Likes: 10545
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25.01.2022 This week we take a look back at Halkini Panthaisia, an exciting Greek Folk brass-band, playing tunes popular in Northern Greece and the Balkans, known as "Halkina". They performed at "Live at the Greek" last year. For more videos, visit our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/gocmv
24.01.2022 A special LIVE STREAMED event tonight at 9pm AEST: 2 Hours of Rebetika and Laika in support of the Greeks in Lockdown in Melbourne, direct from the Sydney Taverna "Steki" in collaboration with the Greek Community of Melbourne. Tune in at 9pm on our FB page, YouTube channel or Twitter.
24.01.2022 GCM HELPLINE The GCM would like to announce that as of Thursday 16 April the GCM will offer a free HELPLINE service from its HQ with the aim of directing commun...ity members but in particular Greek citizens accordingly during the CODIV-19 crisis. In the recent meeting with Acting Minister of Immigration Mr Alan Tudge, the GCM proposed the establishment of a helpline to help service and direct members of the community and in particular Greek citizens who dont qualify for the Australian programs. The Minister supported the establishment of such a service and encouraged the GCM to take the initiative and see it through. The service will operate from 9AM to 5PM offering a conduit for all the various programs to be accordingly promoted to the people who will be most in need. Simply call on 03 9662 2722 or via email at [email protected]. ///// , . . , . . . . . . 16 9-5. : 9662 2722 [email protected] , , . , . .
23.01.2022 https://melbournefringe.com.au//no-i-am-not-washing-your/
22.01.2022 #stayhome #staysafe Bahari The Hellenic Palate
20.01.2022 Looks like now is better than ever to place an order and get one of @philipvakos Moussaka or Pastitsio's into your freezer! (Or just eat it straight away!) Call... us direct to place an order #greekfood #workinghard #fightinghard #melbournetakeaway #savehospo #richmond3121 #moussaka #pastitsio #freezeorwarm #gringlishstyle See more
19.01.2022 #stayhome #staysafe #keepdancing
19.01.2022 Free Virtual Seminar: In search for the lost Greek infinitive in Anatolia Speaker: Dr Ioanna Sitaridou Abstract... In this talk I discuss the evolution of Pontic Greek within the broader context of Asia Minor Greek and in relation to the emergence of other Modern Greek dialects. Given the lack of sufficiently old textual evidence, which would normally provide clues as to the evolution of Pontic Greek, the conservative character of Romeyka, an endangered Greek variety still spoken in the area of Black Sea in Turkey, means that it can be used as a window on the past; thus, allowing us to create a chronology of the evolution of Proto-Pontic, to which Romeyka belongs, and identify its split from other Greek varieties as being at least 500 years earlier than previously thought, in Hellenistic times, rather than during the medieval period. Bio Dr Ioanna Sitaridou is Reader in Spanish and Historical Linguistics; Head of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Cambridge; Deputy Director for the Cambridge Centre for Greek Studies; and Fellow of Queens’ College, Cambridge. She works on historical syntax and has published extensively in Lingua, Diachronica, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory,Glossa, etc. For her work on Old Romance she has been awarded an Early Career Fellowship by CRASSH, Cambridge (2008); a research buyout by the ISWOC project at the University of Oslo (2012); and a CAPES grant at UFB in Salvador, Brazil (2020). For (re)discovering the last Greek infinitive in the Black Sea in Turkey, she was awarded the Stanley J. Seeger Visiting Research Fellowship in Hellenic Studies at Princeton (2011); a Research Fellowship at the Center for Hellenic Studies at Harvard University (2015); and a Chaire Internationale at Labex Empirical Foundations of Linguistics, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3 (2021). Sponsors: We thank the following donor: Pontian Community of Melbourne and Victoria And the following corporate sponsors: Delphi Bank, Delphi Business Group, Symposiarch, Pammessinian Brotherhood Papaflessas
19.01.2022 Memory Mapping and the Historic Greek Communities of Istanbul | Seminars 2020 Speaker: Dr Gönül Bozolu Abstract:... In this talk, ongoing work with communities whose cultural memory fall outside of official heritage practice will be presented. The historic ‘Rum’ (Greek-speaking) population of Istanbul lives with a hostile history. The current government mobilises the Conquest of Constantinople of 1453 as a proud motif of Turkish national identity, expressed in museum displays and the management of Byzantine heritage in the city. Twentieth-century persecution further alienated the community, leading many of its members to emigrate. The research involved walking, talking, filming and recording with community members to explore and map their memories, building an online resource. The purpose is threefold: to engage with heritages at risk of disappearance; to give voice to communities; and to emphasise and valorise personal, affective and individual understandings of heritage, expanding conventional paradigms and providing counterpoints to state-level heritage. Bio: Gönül Bozoglu is currently a Leverhulme Research Fellow at Newcastle University, UK, where she undertakes research across heritage, memory, and museum studies, often combining anthropological methods with digital practice and filmmaking. She is the author of the book Museums, Emotion and Memory Culture: the politics of the past in Turkey (2019), published by Routledge Research in Museum Studies. After an MPhil on Ottoman art at Mimar Sinan University in Istanbul and an MA in Museum Studies at Newcastle University, she worked in museums in the UK and on archaeological excavations in the Middle East, and then completed a Ph.D. at Humboldt University in Berlin. Sponsors: We thank the following corporate sponsors: Delphi Bank, Delphi Business Group, Symposiarch, Pammessinian Brotherhood Papaflessas
18.01.2022 GCM HELPLINE Coronavirus - Stay home and protect lives
18.01.2022 #stayhome #staysafe
17.01.2022 Elia Kazan and the Diasporic identity of a Greek American film maker | Seminars 2020 Speaker: Prof Vrasidas Karalis Synopsis:... The lecture explores the artistic and intellectual development of Elia Kazan from his early theatrical productions, his films to his final autobiographical books. It focuses especially on Kazan’s most ambitious work America, America (1964) and its fragmented structure and nostalgic re-construction of origins as an Anatolian Greek persecuted by the Ottomans to abandon his country and found refuge in the ‘mythical’ land of America. Exploring his other famous movies especially On the Waterfront (1952) the lecture addresses the question of the identity of the outsiders and the compromises that they must make in order to be accepted by their adopted countries. Within this context the lecture discusses the notorious testimony of Kazan at the Anti-American Activities Committee and the controversy that followed him throughout his life. Bio: Vrasidas KARALIS teaches Modern Greek Studies at the University of Sydney where he holds the Sir Nicholas Laurantos Chair in Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. He has published extensively on Byzantine historiography, Greek political life, Greek Cinema, European cinema, the work of Patrick White and contemporary political philosophy. He has edited volumes on modern European political philosophy, especially on Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt and Cornelius Castoriadis. His books include Recollections of Mr. Manoly Lascaris (2007), The Demons of Athens (2014), A History of Greek Cinema (2012), Realism and Post-War Greek Cinema (2017). He is currently working on the films of Elia Kazan and John Cassavetes. Sponsors: During the course of the year considerable expenses are incurred in staging the seminars. In order to mitigate these costs individuals or organisations are invited to donate against a lecture of their choice. Please email: [email protected] We thank the following corporate sponsors: Delphi Bank, Delphi Business Group, Symposiarch, Pammessinian Brotherhood Papaflessas
17.01.2022 THE GREEK COMMUNITY OF MELBOURNE'S GREECE 2021 BICENTENARY CELEBRATIONS In 2021, the Greek Community of Melbourne (GCM) will be presenting a multifaceted program of events to commemorate the 200th Anniversary of the commencement of the Greek War of Independence and celebrate the Bicentenary of the Modern Greek State. It will be part of a rich program of events being planned around the world. In the collaborative spirit of the bicentenary, the GCM is partnering with a number ...Continue reading
17.01.2022 MELBOURNE LORD MAYOR SALLY CAPP PLEDGES MARKETING BOOST FOR LONSDALE ST GREEK PRECINCT Melbourne’s Historic Lonsdale Street Greek Precinct will benefit to the t...une of $100,000 over two years should Sally Capp be re-elected as Lord Mayor in the upcoming council elections. The incumbent Lord Mayor pledged the support to the Greek and the other eight Melbourne City Precincts in a $900,000 program that will boost their marketing programs over the next two years. The new funding would be in addition to the current program that sees up to $75,000 provided per annum for each precinct for marketing, business development and administration. Our distinct and diverse precincts really make our city, Sally Capp said. We can tuck into pasta on Lygon Street or yum-cha in China Town, grab a coffee and enjoy the art in the CBD laneways, enjoy spanakopita in Lonsdale Street, dine waterfront at Docklands or riverfront at Southbank, stroll the funky shops of Kensington or check out the latest offerings around North Melbourne. I want to ensure these precincts can revitalise as we prepare to reopen. A boost of $50,000 this year and again the next year will be just the shot in the arm these areas need to get them re-started. We want more people to support local businesses which support local jobs and local providers of goods and services. With extra money for marketing, precinct associations will be able to reach out and tell their unique stories to remind Melburnians of what we’ve been missing during COVID restrictions. Councillor Kevin Louey, who is leading my councillor team ticket, is a great champion of the precinct associations. If we’re both re-elected, Kevin will work alongside the precinct associations to give them a stronger voice and the support they deserve from the City of Melbourne. As Sally says, we want Melbourne to become a city of Yes, Cr Louey said. It’s never been more important to be proactive about supporting local precincts and businesses. I’ve experienced an economic recession and know how hard it can be for businesses to get back on their feet. My priority, if re-elected, will be working closely with each of the precincts to do everything I can to support every business, every job, every local artisan. The President of the Greek Community of Melbourne, Bill Papastergiadis OAM welcomed the Lord Mayor’s announcement. Over the last few years, the Greek Community of Melbourne has worked closely with the Lord Mayor and her team. She is a regular supporter of our events and has stood with the Greek Community and the Lonsdale Street Greek Precinct acknowledging its historic importance to Melbourne’s rich cultural landscape. Whilst Lonsdale Street is not what it once was, maintaining a presence in what is a significant historical strip for Melbourne’s Greek community is important. We thank Sally and her team for her pledge which I know will be most welcomed by the Lonsdale Street Greek Precinct 90+ members as they plan their recovery out of COVID.
17.01.2022 Advice changes regularly - stay up to date with latest coronavirus health advice, restrictions and support by clicking through to the Australian Government WhatsApp. #coronavirusaustralia #COVID19
17.01.2022 Modern Greek has been taught at La Trobe University for 38 years. La Trobe is the only Victorian university that offers a Modern Greek Studies program. Unfortunately, due to COVID-19, La Trobe University has decided to discontinue this unique program. It would be a shame if La Trobe decided to disregard the wealth of knowledge that the Greek program has to offer. We, the students, are genuinely concerned that in the globalised world that we live in, La Trobe University is taking steps to diminish the role that language has to play in its students’ past, present and future. In the diaspora our language is under threat, and we, the students of the Modern Greek Program, urge you to sign this petition in solidarity to save the Greek language at La Trobe University.
16.01.2022 Important message for people on temporary visas
16.01.2022 Australia, Greece and the European Union - An economic overview | Seminars 2020 Speaker: David Robertson, Head of Economic and Market Research, of the Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Synopsis:... David Robertson, Head of Economic and Market Research, of the Bendigo and Adelaide Bank, will present a lecture entitled Australia, Greece and the European Union - an economic overview David will discuss the global macroeconomic environment, including the impact of the global pandemic in particular, as well as The Greek economy The euro currency versus the EU vision The outlook for the Australian economy in light of global influences The global impact of Covid David joined Bendigo Bank 19 years ago as Head of Financial Markets, and today is the Head of Economic and Market Research for Bendigo and Adelaide Bank. His regular economic updates are available on the bank’s LinkedIn and YouTube sites. David’s banking career commenced in 1989 as a foreign exchange dealer, and since then has worked in senior roles in Treasury and Financial Markets for Colonial State Bank, First Chicago and CBA. Beyond work David is married with three children and enjoys family life, the outdoors, golf and thoroughbred racing. The lecture is presented by Delphi Bank and the Greek Community of Melbourne.
15.01.2022 We may not be able to host you at the moment so as you lock your self away we thought you might enjoy clips from our archive. On 6 March earlier this year after blowing away huge crowds at the Antipodes Festival on the previous weekend, Nikos, Adonis + Apollonia Xylouris played one of the more memorable Live at the Greek shows. Here is a taste of that magical night. https://youtu.be/PiZAanjxOz4
13.01.2022 Greek History and Culture Seminars are (virtually) back! [See how to attend at the end of this post]
12.01.2022 Check out our new street-food inspired brand, for take-away and delivery! What do you think? #comingsoon #melinadelivery #watchthisspace
12.01.2022 We are saddened to announce that Reverened Father Minas Dimitropoulos has fallen asleep in the Lord. Father Minas served in the parishes of Mildura, St Elefteri...os in Brunswick and most of his time at the community church of the Annunciation East Melbourne. We pray God rests his soul. . 20/11/20. . . Mildura, Brunswick 38 East Melbourne.
11.01.2022 Greek Civil War Refugees in Czechoslovakia | Seminars 2020 Speaker: Dr Kateina Králová Abstract:... This talk aims to examine the memory of Greek Civil War refugees among the members of the Greek community in Czechoslovakia. First, I put individual experiences of individuals into a historical context that led to the subsequent exodus of nearly a hundred thousand Greek citizens to the Soviet bloc countries. Based on more than 50 eyewitness accounts focusing mainly on private strategies of the first generation of Greek (mostly child) refugees who arrived in Czechoslovakia in the late 1940s, I then assess how they coped with the forced emigration to and adaptation in the hosting country. To what extent did they keep their Greek identity and shape their imaginary of Greece? Why did they decide to stay in their new homeland? The local, bilateral, and international political events such as the fall of Stalinism, the split of the Greek communist party, the Prague Spring of 1968, alongside changing regimes, have transformed their memory into a plethora of conflicting fractions and loyalties. I argue, however, that the process of remembering events associated with the Greek Civil War and its consequences has been shaped not only by the ideologically imposed interpretations of the past but also the wider dialectics of displacement experiences and the selective child’s perception. Bio: Kateina Králová, currently a research fellow at the Vienna Wiesenthal Institute, is an Associate Professor of Modern History and Head of the Department of Russian and Eastern European Studies at Charles University, Prague. In her research, she has been focusing on reconciliation with the Nazi past, the Holocaust, and its aftermath. She authored the book Das Vermächtnis der Besatzung on Greek-German relations since the 1940s (Böhlau, 2016; BpB 2017) as well as numerous articles and volumes in Czech, English, German, and Greek.
11.01.2022 Elyros at home! Weve selected some of our old favourites and a couple of new ones for you to cook at home. Now available to order via the link in our bio or by calling us. Thanks to @gracepetrou for the #savehospo #savehospomelbourne @ Elyros Restaurant
10.01.2022 https://www.facebook.com/events/412224246422477
09.01.2022 NEW LOCATION #1 SPRINGVALE! We are excited to announce our next pick up, takeaway & delivery location is Springvale + surrounding suburbs! Melbournes favorite ...Greek donuts will be offering a menu of 12 flavors to choose from + frappe & milkshakes! Launch date coming very soon.
09.01.2022 The Naval Battle of Salamis: An Instructive Example of Coalition Naval Warfare | Seminars 2020 The Greek Community of Melbourne would like to thank the General Secretariat of Public Diplomacy and Greeks Abroad for facilitating this presentation Speaker: Dr Zisis Fotakis... Abstract: The naval battle of Salamis is one the largest military confrontations in antiquity having a modern demographic equivalent of well over 20 million souls. It is also the bloodiest naval battle of antiquity, recording many more human losses than most sea battles of the 20th century as a result of the speed and manoeuverability of the trireme, which depended on the physicality of its rowers, who in turn constituted an easy and obvious target for the enemy. The naval battle of Salamis did not end the Greek-Persian War. Its strategic importance resembles that of the Battle of Stalingrad. It shows that coalitions can be impressive force multipliers, despite their often convoluted decision-making processes. It is also a telling reminder of the capacity of the Hellenic nation to work miracles against the numerically superior adversaries, despite its small size and often divided polity. My presentation comments upon notable features of this memorable event. Bio: Zisis Fotakis is a graduate of Athens University (B.A. in History) and Oxford University (M.Sc. in Economic and Social History, and Ph.D. in Naval History). His monograph "Greek Naval Strategy and Policy, 1910-1919" (Routledge: London and New York, 2005) was awarded a prestigious prize by the Hellenic Academy of Arts and Sciences (Akademia Athenon), and was favorably reviewed by eminent naval historians such as Professors Lambert, Rodger, Halpern, and Glete. He was an academic visitor at Yale University and at the United States Naval War College. He has also received distinctions such as a Fulbright Research Scholarship, and a Caird Junior Research Fellowship. Sponsors: We thank the following corporate sponsors: Delphi Bank, Delphi Business Group, Symposiarch, Pammessinian Brotherhood Papaflessas
08.01.2022 The Greek Community's YouTube page is up and running with over 180 videos, including gems like this.... (In 2018 Giannis Haroulis and his band - including the indomitable Pistiolis - agreed to jam with Melbourne's muso's at the Greek Centre on a Tuesday night after the Festival. They arrived at 11PM. At 1Am - this happened...)
07.01.2022 Looking for something to read during lockdown? Melbourne essayist and author, Dmetri Kakmi's latest offering 'The Door and Other Uncanny Tales', just might be the book you are looking for. It represents the author's first full-scale exploration of his passion for the literary gothic.... The stories in this collection draw the reader into a psycho-sexual vortex in which fantasy and reality collapse to create nightmarish worlds from which there is no escape. They are powerfully charged, dream-like explorations of violence, neglect, regret and the need for love, graced with poetic elegance. Make no mistake, however, these are disturbing tales that push boundaries. The Door is a ghost story for modern timeslayered, unpredictable and complex. The story goes deep, examining our motives for creating art and exposing the fragilities of the artist in the process. I loved it. Sofie Laguna, author of The Choke ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dmetri Kakmi was born to Greek parents in Turkey. He is a writer and editor. He also writes a monthly satirical column called The Sozzled Scribbler for The Drunken Odyssey literary website. For 15 years he worked as a senior editor at Penguin Books Australia. He edited the acclaimed children’s anthology When We Were Young, and his fictionalised memoir Mother Land was shortlisted for the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards. The Door represents a return to the genre he loves best, gothic fiction. He lives in Melbourne with his partner, Leigh Hobbs. The Door and Other Uncanny Tales (NineStar Press) RRP AUD$19.95 (paperback) eBooks: US $3.99 www.NineStarPress.com
05.01.2022 Enjoy Greek food and wine and don't forget #stayhome #staysafe
05.01.2022 Weve just added our Koupes and Sheftalies to our delivery menu!!! Oh yes!! Place your order by Friday April 3rd and well deliver right to your door the fol...lowing week. Details - Koupes ($30 for 12) - Sheftalies ($20 for 10) - Marinated Chicken Souvla ($12 per kg) - Handmade Spanakopita (29cm diameter) $28 each - Handmade Tiropita (29cm diameter) $28 each - Pita Bread ($6 for a pack of 10) - Halloumi Pockets ($25 for a pack of 5) - Tzatziki ($26 for a 2kg tub) - Chips ($20 for a 5kg bag) All products are fresh frozen. Minimum order $100 - with free delivery within a 25km radius of the CBD. No pick-up available and no delivery available outside of a 25km radius of the CBD (postcode 3000). Place your order by Friday 3rd April (for delivery the following week). Orders will re-open every Sunday. Please remember to only buy what you need!! Place your orders via email at [email protected] If anyone is placing an order for an elderly family member living alone, please let us know and we can organise some cooked meals. For any parents of children with disabilities or special needs, who are struggling to find specific food items, please let us know and we will do our best to source them for you. We are beyond grateful for all your support while we try to adapt and work through this tough time photo credit HEARD MAGAZINE
04.01.2022 O Day (o-khi") is celebrated on 28 October each year. OXI Day commemorates the rejection by Greek Prime Minister Ioannis Metaxas of the ultimatum made by Italian dictatorBenito Mussolini on 28 October 1940, the Hellenic counterattack against the invading Italian forces at the mountains of Pindus during the Greco-Italian War and the Greek Resistance during the Axis occupation. This ultimatum, which was presented to Metaxas by the Italian ambassador to Greece, shortly after ...03:00 am on 28 October 1940, demanded Greece allow Axis forces to enter Greek territory and occupy certain unspecified "strategic locations" or otherwise face war. It was allegedly answered with a single word: (No!). However, his actual reply was, Then it is war! In response to Metaxas's refusal, Italian troops stationed in Albania, then an Italian protectorate, attacked the Greek border at 05:30 amthe beginning of Greece's participation in World War II. On the morning of 28 October, the Greek population took to the streets, irrespective of political affiliation, shouting ‘OXI'. From 1942, it was celebrated as OXI Day, first mostly among the members of the resistance and after the war by all the Greeks.
04.01.2022 Given the current circumstances, we've been working around the clock & have now fully switched our offering, to service our community better in this time, and m...ake sure we all stay well nourished. As we are now, for now, sadly closed for dining, you may simply place an order over the phone, and come to pickup some food, anytime between 12pm - 9pm Tues - Sunday. We are taking precautionary measures to ensure distancing and sanitisation on pickup, and have transformed our dining area to do so :) We are also able to deliver to you, pending location & time ~ so just ask us! Our takeaway and delivery menu can be viewed on our website. WE ARE NOW ALSO LIVE ON DELIVEROO & UBEREATS! We look forward to feeding you soon, & thank everyone for their support throughout this challenging time, Philip & Heleena :) #wewillfight #strongertogether #savehospo #greekfoodmelbourne #mlebournedelivery #melbournetakeaway #greekfooddelivery See more
03.01.2022 Support your local restaurants #staysafe #stayhome
03.01.2022 Our good friends and corporate partners at Delphi Bank have been posting on their socials a great series of interviews called Delphi Connect. Delphi Connect is aimed at connecting you with leading experts on property, economics, health, scientific research, the arts, and community affairs (just to name a few)! The series so far features medical researcher Prof Vasso Apostolopoulos, cardiologist Assoc Prof Arthur Nassis and our very own Bill Papastergiadis. Check out the whole series on the Delphi Bank YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/playlist
02.01.2022 Come and pick up your favorite donuts at Greek Street Food 5:30pm-9:30pm Or order via Uber Eats & Deliveroo Our Snickers Dessert Pizza available at Da Giuseppe
02.01.2022 From the Phasis to the Pillars of Heracles | Seminars 2020 Speaker: Assoc Prof Dr Lieve Donnellan Abstract:... Greek overseas "colonisation" has been studied for several centuries now. Whereas the era of big digs and spectacular discoveries seems over, the use of new methods continues to shed light on the phenomenon of rapid spreading of Greek settlement and migration in the 8th-6th centuries BCE. Chemical and microscopic analysis, for example, allows to establish the origins of pottery and thus makes it possible to establish routes of trade and exchange. Micro scale analysis of patterns of deposition of artefacts aims at reconstructing past practices and daily life. Through these methods, the narrative of ancient Greek "colonisation" continues to be rewritten. At the same time, our own societal challenges forces us to re-examine not just the Ancient Greek past, but also scholarly treatments of this past. This talk will highlight some recent research into the earliest Ancient Greek "colonisation" in the West and discuss its consequences for our understanding of the Ancient Greek world. It will touch upon the use of new methods and introduce a number of recent new questions and challenges. Bio: Lieve Donnellan graduated from Ghent University in 2012 and next, pursued research at the Universities of Chicago, Göttingen and Amsterdam. Before joining the University of Melbourne as Lecturer in Classical Greek Archaeology, she was Assistant Professor of Classical Archaeology at Aarhus University in Denmark. Her research focuses on early Greek "colonisation" and urban architecture in mainland Greece. She currently conducts fieldwork in Calabria (Magna Graecia) and Boeotia. Most recently, she edited the volume Archaeological Networks and Social Interaction (2020), a work spearheading new digital methods in the archaeological discipline. Sponsors: We thank the following corporate sponsors: Delphi Bank, Delphi Business Group, Symposiarch, Pammessinian Brotherhood Papaflessas
01.01.2022 Greek Centre, February 2018. Giannis Haroulis + Melbourne musicians - unplugged and simply jamming well into the night. Watch more like this on the Greek Community fo Melbourne's YouTube page: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCC9wZdw0_sYW6HNTDhSBWiw
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