Why Burna Boy had women throwing G-strings at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre

Why Burna Boy had women throwing G-strings at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre

It has taken years for this charismatic Grammy-winning star to reach Queensland, but one 100-minute set of sweat, swagger and flying G-strings proved the wait was worth it.

It has taken years for this charismatic Grammy-winning star to reach Queensland, but one 100-minute set of sweat, swagger and flying G-strings proved the wait was worth it.

Nigerian superstar Burna Boy admitted “it’s been a long time coming, but we’re finally here”. Picture: @ianrreyno

You know an artist has star power when fans start throwing underwear on stage, and Burna Boy had plenty of it flying his way at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre on Monday night.

Performing shirtless for most of his debut Queensland show, the 34-year-old Nigerian superstar oozed such charisma and sex appeal that women were hurling G-strings while screaming every lyric.

The Grammy winner, real name Damini Ogulu, has sold out 80,000-seat stadiums and performed at Glastonbury, but this was his first time bringing his Afrobeats empire to Brisbane, and he made sure the city felt every beat.

From the moment he strutted on stage in glossy coated denim flares, a cowboy hat and a giant belt buckle, Burna radiated pure confidence.

He kicked off with Location, grinning ear to ear as he yelled, “What the f*** is going on Brisbane? It’s been a long time coming, but we’re finally here, so we’re going all the way up,” a cheeky nod to the visa issues that kept him from performing in Queensland back in 2022.

"Backed by a full live band complete with a horn section and African percussion, Burna turned the arena into a Lagos-style street party."

"Backed by a full live band complete with a horn section and African percussion, Burna turned the arena into a Lagos-style street party."

"Backed by a full live band complete with a horn section and African percussion, Burna turned the arena into a Lagos-style street party."

His setlist flowed through For My Hand, On the Low and Talibans II, each track met with deafening screams.

Burna sounded even better live than I expected.

His baritone was warm, rich and commanding, proving he doesn’t need a hint of auto-tune to sound flawless. And when he wasn’t singing, his dance moves were the next best — and hottest — thing.

Every move was fluid and unchoreographed, hips rolling and shoulders swaying in time with the beat. It was steamy, spontaneous and impossible to look away.

The other thing that caught me off guard was the smile, that constant, ear-to-ear grin that never left his face.

It was genuine, infectious and could have powered the entire arena. You couldn’t help but smile back.

During the second song, dancers in feathered carnival outfits burst onto the stage before switching into denim shorts and sneakers as the night heated up.

A few songs later, he tore off his shirt, revealing a tattooed, sweat-slicked torso that sent the audience into chaos.

Fans shrieked as he flung it into the moshpit, but moments later a fight broke out near the front.

Ever the showman, Burna stopped the music and peered over the crowd like a disappointed dad. “This is not what we do at a Burna Boy show,” he said, shaking his head before flashing a grin and jumping straight back into City Boys.

Halfway through the show is when the G-strings started flying.

At one point, he picked one up and twirled it over his head, laughing as the crowd roared in delight.


And it was that contrast — the smallest of human interruptions inside the biggest of pop spectacles — that somehow made the night even bigger. Because rewind to the beginning, and this show began in absolute fury.

“Brisbane, put your f*cking paws up,” Gaga said. With that command, Lady Gaga didn’t so much begin her Mayhem Ball show at Suncorp Stadium as detonate it.


From the first operatic seconds of Bloody Mary into the feral pulse of Abracadabra, the energy was immediate and overwhelming. This was the most high-octane crowd I have ever seen at Suncorp, hands in the air on command every 30 seconds like we were being willingly hypnotised. The wristband lights pulsed like a living organism. The pit became a throbbing heart.

What unfolded over the next three hours felt less like a concert and more like a polished Broadway musical colliding head-on with a Hollywood blockbuster. Gothic renaissance ruins. Spiral staircases. Castles, skulls, skeletons and sandboxes. Across an epic 32-song setlist, Gaga tore through two decades of hits and reinvention without a single lull — a rare feat for a stadium performance of this scale.


She emerged in a ten-foot-tall dress, later clawed her way out of sand beside a skeleton for Disease, before returning transformed in chrome shoulder armour and silver crutches for a reimagined Paparazzi, dragging a seemingly endless illuminated train behind her. At times there were 16 dancers on stage alongside her full band, pyrotechnics firing relentlessly as strobes pushed sensory overload to euphoric extremes.

The chaos was precision-engineered. The costumes immaculate. The story arc deliberate.


And it was that contrast — the smallest of human interruptions inside the biggest of pop spectacles — that somehow made the night even bigger. Because rewind to the beginning, and this show began in absolute fury.

“Brisbane, put your f*cking paws up,” Gaga said. With that command, Lady Gaga didn’t so much begin her Mayhem Ball show at Suncorp Stadium as detonate it.


From the first operatic seconds of Bloody Mary into the feral pulse of Abracadabra, the energy was immediate and overwhelming. This was the most high-octane crowd I have ever seen at Suncorp, hands in the air on command every 30 seconds like we were being willingly hypnotised. The wristband lights pulsed like a living organism. The pit became a throbbing heart.

What unfolded over the next three hours felt less like a concert and more like a polished Broadway musical colliding head-on with a Hollywood blockbuster. Gothic renaissance ruins. Spiral staircases. Castles, skulls, skeletons and sandboxes. Across an epic 32-song setlist, Gaga tore through two decades of hits and reinvention without a single lull — a rare feat for a stadium performance of this scale.


She emerged in a ten-foot-tall dress, later clawed her way out of sand beside a skeleton for Disease, before returning transformed in chrome shoulder armour and silver crutches for a reimagined Paparazzi, dragging a seemingly endless illuminated train behind her. At times there were 16 dancers on stage alongside her full band, pyrotechnics firing relentlessly as strobes pushed sensory overload to euphoric extremes.

The chaos was precision-engineered. The costumes immaculate. The story arc deliberate.


Nigerian superstar Burna Boy admitted “it’s been a long time coming, but we’re finally here”. Picture: @ianrreyno

Nigerian superstar Burna Boy on stage in Melbourne. Picture: @ianrreyno

Nigerian superstar Burna Boy on stage in Melbourne. Picture: @ianrreyno

I don’t think I’ve ever stood for an entire performance at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre, a seated venue, but this show kept me and everyone else on our feet for the full 100 minutes.

The energy never dipped. Burna didn’t need pyrotechnics or flashy choreography. The power was in his voice, his movement and that magnetism that made even the most reserved Brisbanites dance like it was a summer block party.

While his Australian fan base may not yet match the massive audiences he draws in Europe, Africa and the United States, Burna’s Brisbane crowd proved loyal and loud.

Every beat, every lyric and every hip roll was met with adoration, the kind of devotion that shows a following ready to grow.

By the time he reached It’s Plenty, the arena was euphoric.

Arms were in the air, people were dancing and a few even crying.

The song’s message of joy and release turned the crowd into one giant celebration.


He closed with Last Last, waving goodbye as his band and dancers carried the final chorus of “bye bye o,” a fitting finale that gave his crew their own moment in the spotlight.

For more than an hour and forty minutes, Burna Boy gave Brisbane everything he had. No breaks, no filler, just rhythm, sweat and connection.

He may have come late to Queensland, but judging by the sea of G-strings, smiles and screams, the wait was worth it.

© Georgia Clelland 2026

© Georgia Clelland 2026

© Georgia Clelland 2026