Denzel Curry is heading back to Australia, and Sydney is getting the most memorable stop of the trip. The Miami-raised rapper has been announced as the headline performer for Slam Dance, a full-day event blending basketball, live music, fashion and creative culture, scheduled for Sunday, May 17.
Curry will perform inside the Cell Block Theatre, a striking venue located within the National Art School in the inner-city neighborhood of Darlinghurst. The historic site is being transformed for the occasion, with outdoor basketball courts, performance spaces and art installations all coming together to create something that feels genuinely singular for the city.
What Slam Dance is and why it matters
Slam Dance is more than a concert. The free event is built around the Hahn 3×3 Slam Series championship final, which brings together the top social basketball teams from across the country to compete for the title. For attendees, it means a full day that moves between the courts and the stage without ever losing momentum.
Supporting acts joining Curry on the bill include Mistah Cee, Benny and The Sets, Bodega Collective, Nadz and Moni. The event is sponsored by Australian beer brand Hahn, and the creative vision behind it centers on honoring the full culture that surrounds basketball rather than treating the sport as a standalone attraction. The National Art School, with its layered history and reputation as a home for artistic expression, provides the kind of backdrop that makes the whole thing feel intentional rather than assembled.
Tickets are free but limited, available through a waitlist on the Slam Dance website.
Curry’s history with Australian audiences
Curry has a track record in Australia that goes well beyond a standard tour stop. During a 2019 visit, he recorded a segment for triple j’s beloved “Like a Version” series, delivering a performance of Rage Against The Machine’s Bulls on Parade that quickly took on a life of its own. The recording spread rapidly online and landed in the top five of triple j’s annual Hottest 100 countdown for that year. It is now considered one of the standout entries in the entire “Like a Version” catalog, a benchmark that artists rarely reach.
That moment cemented a genuine connection between Curry and Australian music fans, one that has clearly not faded.
A busy Australian run and a career in full momentum
Sydney is not the only stop on this trip. Curry is also scheduled to perform at the Groovin the Moo festival in Lismore, New South Wales on May 9, giving Australian fans two distinct opportunities to catch him live within the same month.
The timing aligns with an especially productive stretch for Curry. He has five career entries on the Billboard 200 and spent a significant portion of last year on his Mischievous South 2025 world tour, supporting his album King of the Mischievous South, Vol. 2. Earlier this year he contributed to a new track alongside Key Nyata and 1900Rugrat, continuing a pattern of collaboration that has kept him visible and creatively active between major releases.
For Sydney, Slam Dance represents something the city has not quite seen before, a sports and music event with real cultural ambition behind it. With Curry at the top of the bill, it has the headliner to match that ambition.

