THE ULTIMATE CHRISTMAS PARTY BAND
Relive the greatest decade of music with non-stop hits, iconic looks, and electrifying energy that will have you dancing all night long.
End the year with a bang. The best 80s hits for your festive celebration.
Boombox 80s is not just a cover band â they are the ultimate 80s music experience that will transport you back to the era of neon lights, big hair, and iconic music.
They perform each song with incredible accuracy, recreating the same synths and sounds as heard on the original records, making it impossible not to dance along.
Their electric guitar riffs for the big hair rock songs will have you headbanging, and their vocalists will blow you away with energy that's bigger than a Live Aid concert at Wembley.
Boombox 80s performances are more than just music â they are a visual feast for the eyes with synchronized lighting and video that create the perfect 80s-infused show.



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Boombox 80s is the ultimate choice for high-energy, crowd-pleasing corporate entertainment. With a show packed full of iconic 80s hits, vibrant visuals, and non-stop fun, we bring teams together on the dance floor and create unforgettable memories for staff and clients alike.
Whether it's an end-of-year celebration, awards night, or a product launch â Boombox 80s guarantees a night of retro-fuelled excitement your guests will talk about long after the lights go down.
End-of-year celebrations, awards nights, product launches, and team events. We turn your corporate function into an unforgettable party.
Birthdays, anniversaries, reunions â whatever the occasion, we bring the 80s to your party with maximum energy and non-stop hits.
From nightclubs to concert halls, stadiums to festivals â we've performed across the globe and know how to own any stage.
Headlining Carnival Cruise 80s Themed Cruises out of Australia â we're no strangers to bringing the party to the high seas.
We've curated the ultimate collection of 80s bangers â every track a certified floor-filler.
CPU-Productions
âī¸ corey@coreypryor.com đ +61 425 610 354Based in Brisbane, Australia â available for events nationally and internationally.
We'll respond within 24 hours â can't wait to rock your event! đ¸
The Untold Origin Story
Los Angeles, 1987. The year Top Gun made aviator sunglasses compulsory, shoulder pads were a legitimate architectural choice, and the Sunset Strip smelled permanently of hairspray, leather, and ambition. This was Boombox's natural habitat â and they were thriving in it.
The band â then simply known as BOOMBOX â had just wrapped up another incendiary gig at The Roxy on Sunset Strip. The kind of show where the bartender ran out of Jack Daniel's by 9pm, the hairspray fumes were technically flammable, and three people in the front row spontaneously started wearing shoulder pads.
The Axe was celebrating by drinking something amber-coloured out of a glass. Ricky M was doing his post-show ritual of looking impossibly cool while doing absolutely nothing. Amy was explaining to a bouncer exactly why she SHOULD be allowed back in the building. And Ratty was in the corner reverse-engineering a synthesizer he'd found in the bin behind the venue.
None of them had any idea that their night â and indeed, their entire timeline â was about to take a sharp left turn somewhere around 88 miles per hour.
It was Ricky M who spotted it first â parked in a dark alley off Sunset, humming faintly, glowing around the edges, with what appeared to be a number plate that read OUTATIME.
"It's just a DeLorean," said The Axe.
"A really cool DeLorean," said Amy.
"THE FLUX CAPACITOR IS ENGAGING," said Ratty, who had already climbed inside.
What happened next is still debated. Ricky M claims he tried to stop Ratty. The Axe claims he tried to stop Ricky M. Amy claims she was already in the car because it had good seats and she'd been on her feet all night. Ratty claims he was simply "testing the buttons" in the way that a person who has been awake since 1984 tests buttons â enthusiastically and without reading any instructions.
There was a sound like a thunderclap wrapped inside a guitar solo. The street filled with fire trails. A passing dog looked mildly concerned. And then â with a flash of blinding white light â Boombox was gone.
The DeLorean materialised somewhere in the middle of what had once been a perfectly good decade. The year was 2021. The streets were quiet. Suspiciously quiet. The kind of quiet that makes a rock band deeply uncomfortable.
They found a bar â because of course they did â and ordered four drinks. The bartender looked at their outfits with an expression usually reserved for people who've just arrived from another dimension. Which, to be fair, was accurate.
They turned on the radio. Silence. Well â not silence exactly. There was music of a kind. But something was deeply, catastrophically wrong.
The hits of 2021 floated out of the speakers. Carefully processed vocals. Minimal instrumentation. Lyrics about things the band couldn't entirely follow. Songs that seemed to have been made by extremely talented people who had, for some reason, collectively agreed to stop rocking.
"There's not even a key change," whispered Amy, clutching her drink for emotional support.
Ricky M stared at the ceiling for a long moment. Then he turned to the band with the expression of a man who has just understood exactly why the universe sent them here.
It started, as Ricky M's best ideas always do, with a whiskey and a statement delivered with absolute unearned confidence.
"We stay," he said.
Everyone looked at him.
"These people," he continued, gesturing broadly at the general concept of the 21st century, "have forgotten what music feels like in your chest. They've forgotten what it means to hear a guitar solo that makes you want to drive too fast with the windows down. They've forgotten the saxophone. The saxophone, people."
Amy nodded slowly. "They do look like they need help."
"We're not going back," Ricky M declared. "We're staying. And we're going to give this decade exactly what it needs." He paused for dramatic effect, which he was professionally excellent at. "We're going to give them the 80s."
Ratty, who had been quietly reverse-engineering the bar's jukebox, looked up. "I'm in. Also I've reprogrammed this jukebox to only play Bon Jovi. You're welcome, future people."
The rebranding happened on a napkin, in a bar, at 1am. Which is, historically, where all the best decisions are made.
The logic was simple: people in this new era needed context. They needed a signal. A lighthouse in the fog of algorithmically generated playlists and artists who were apparently just their first names followed by a number.
BOOMBOX 80s. Two words. Six syllables. One promise: that somewhere in this confusing, guitar-deficient future, there was still a band who knew how to make a room full of strangers feel like they were seventeen again, wind in their hair, one fist in the air, screaming the words to a song they hadn't heard in twenty years but somehow still knew every single word of.
They booked their first gig three weeks later. The crowd â initially confused by the combined hair volume â lost their minds entirely by the second song.
By the end of the night, four people had spontaneously started wearing shoulder pads. Just like the old days.
The Axe still shreds. Every solo lands like it's 1987 and the world is paying attention, because when The Axe plays, it is.
Amy still commands every room she walks into. The mic is an extension of her. The stage is her living room. The crowd is just lucky to be visiting.
Ricky M still has the best ideas at 1am. His style remains criminally good. His energy has never once dropped below "full arena rock." Not once. Not even at sound check.
And Ratty â beautiful, magnificent, possibly-still-awake-since-1984 Ratty â keeps the synthesizers blazing, the keytar screaming, and his hand hovering over the flux capacitor. Just in case the world ever needs them somewhere else.