Australia's National
Prison Newspaper

Welcome to About Time

About Time is the national newspaper for Australian prisons and detention facilities

Your browser window currently does not have enough height, or is zoomed in too far to view our website content correctly. Once the window reaches the minimum required height or zoom percentage, the content will display automatically.

Alternatively, you can learn more via the links below.

Donations via GiveNow

Email

Instagram

LinkedIn

Australia's National
Prison Newspaper

ISSUE NO. 18

January 2026

Donate Here

Culture

Straight Outta Risdon – Bars Behind Bars

By

Sara

Nikki Davis-Jones/The Mercury

Font Size
Font Size
Line Height
Line Height
Dyslexia Friendly
Black & White
Hide Images
Night Mode

It takes real courage to grab the mic and share your story, especially in front of fellow inmates and complete strangers. Bars Behind Bars is more than a music program at Risdon Prison; it’s a creative outlet that’s uncovering raw talent and powerful voices. From the prison gym turned makeshift studio, some incredible rappers have stepped forward, transforming their experiences into lyrics that hit hard and speak truth.

LEVEL, one of the program’s emerging talents, summed up the impact perfectly:

“It was a blowout. I didn’t think we’d ever be able to do this shit from in here ‘cos we’ve been trying to get something going for years and finally it happens. I am able to do the stuff I do on my own and actually have people listen to it. It makes me think I could actually make something of it.”

That sense of possibility is what Bars Behind Bars is all about. It’s not just about spitting rhymes. It’s about reclaiming identity, building confidence, and learning a craft that demands discipline and creativity.

The Spark: FH2T and a PlayStation

The program’s origin story is as raw and inventive as the music itself. It started with FH2T, an incarcerated artist who began making complex instrumentals on his PlayStation. When he shared his tracks with Creative Learning Officer Sara, the impact was immediate:

“FH2T’s beats and bars were phenomenal—so real, so dark and dank yet still so beautiful to listen to. I couldn’t get them out of my head, and I thought, this guy’s onto something. We need proper artists on this who have the right equipment and can really make this work all that it could be.”

That moment sparked a collaboration that would change the creative landscape inside Risdon Prison.

Building a studio behind bars

Enter local artists Hermit Kovacic and ROOboy, who answered the call. Together, they transformed the prison gym into a makeshift recording studio. Over several sessions, four tracks were recorded, each one a testament to resilience and artistry.

One standout track, Switching My Life, featuring FH2T and fellow artist KAPALA features as part of the soundtrack for a film of artists work for the recent Artists with Conviction exhibition, a film which is currently being ‘toured’ across all facilities.

Trust and transformation

In prison, circumstances can change quickly, and that meant different voices and artists stepping in each time recording happened. Sara reflects on what she witnessed:

“It was amazing to see the guys drop their guard in front of Hermit and ROOboy almost immediately. There was so much trust and honesty in that room.”

That trust created an atmosphere where vulnerability and creativity could coexist – a rare and powerful thing behind bars.

The craft of rap

Rap is often misunderstood as raw aggression, but inside the studio, it’s poetry with a pulse. LEVEL explains his writing process:

“I think of a cool thing to say like a simile or a metaphor and then I’ll add a bar to it with something that sounds cool. It is writing poetry but just to a beat. It’s more a craft where there’s patterns.”

Those patterns matter. They teach structure, timing, and flow – skills that translate far beyond music. LEVEL’s own bars show the mix of wit and wordplay that makes rap so compelling:

“Sober rap then I pop the top when I rock the booth. Rhymes in the crib and I’ve got it locked like I’m Dr Seuss.”

Why it matters

Programs like Bars Behind Bars do more than entertain they rehabilitate. They offer a sense of agency, create community and foster resilience.

For FH2T, LEVEL, and others, this isn’t just a hobby. It’s hope. It’s the belief that their voices matter, that their stories can resonate beyond prison walls. And when that happens, transformation begins, not just for the artist, but for everyone who listens.

It takes real courage to grab the mic and share your story, especially in front of fellow inmates and complete strangers. Bars Behind Bars is more than a music program at Risdon Prison; it’s a creative outlet that’s uncovering raw talent and powerful voices. From the prison gym turned makeshift studio, some incredible rappers have stepped forward, transforming their experiences into lyrics that hit hard and speak truth.

LEVEL, one of the program’s emerging talents, summed up the impact perfectly:

“It was a blowout. I didn’t think we’d ever be able to do this shit from in here ‘cos we’ve been trying to get something going for years and finally it happens. I am able to do the stuff I do on my own and actually have people listen to it. It makes me think I could actually make something of it.”

That sense of possibility is what Bars Behind Bars is all about. It’s not just about spitting rhymes. It’s about reclaiming identity, building confidence, and learning a craft that demands discipline and creativity.

The Spark: FH2T and a PlayStation

The program’s origin story is as raw and inventive as the music itself. It started with FH2T, an incarcerated artist who began making complex instrumentals on his PlayStation. When he shared his tracks with Creative Learning Officer Sara, the impact was immediate:

“FH2T’s beats and bars were phenomenal—so real, so dark and dank yet still so beautiful to listen to. I couldn’t get them out of my head, and I thought, this guy’s onto something. We need proper artists on this who have the right equipment and can really make this work all that it could be.”

That moment sparked a collaboration that would change the creative landscape inside Risdon Prison.

Building a studio behind bars

Enter local artists Hermit Kovacic and ROOboy, who answered the call. Together, they transformed the prison gym into a makeshift recording studio. Over several sessions, four tracks were recorded, each one a testament to resilience and artistry.

One standout track, Switching My Life, featuring FH2T and fellow artist KAPALA features as part of the soundtrack for a film of artists work for the recent Artists with Conviction exhibition, a film which is currently being ‘toured’ across all facilities.

Trust and transformation

In prison, circumstances can change quickly, and that meant different voices and artists stepping in each time recording happened. Sara reflects on what she witnessed:

“It was amazing to see the guys drop their guard in front of Hermit and ROOboy almost immediately. There was so much trust and honesty in that room.”

That trust created an atmosphere where vulnerability and creativity could coexist – a rare and powerful thing behind bars.

The craft of rap

Rap is often misunderstood as raw aggression, but inside the studio, it’s poetry with a pulse. LEVEL explains his writing process:

“I think of a cool thing to say like a simile or a metaphor and then I’ll add a bar to it with something that sounds cool. It is writing poetry but just to a beat. It’s more a craft where there’s patterns.”

Those patterns matter. They teach structure, timing, and flow – skills that translate far beyond music. LEVEL’s own bars show the mix of wit and wordplay that makes rap so compelling:

“Sober rap then I pop the top when I rock the booth. Rhymes in the crib and I’ve got it locked like I’m Dr Seuss.”

Why it matters

Programs like Bars Behind Bars do more than entertain they rehabilitate. They offer a sense of agency, create community and foster resilience.

For FH2T, LEVEL, and others, this isn’t just a hobby. It’s hope. It’s the belief that their voices matter, that their stories can resonate beyond prison walls. And when that happens, transformation begins, not just for the artist, but for everyone who listens.

Sports Round Up

Sports Round Up

Sports Round Up

By Goal Mouth
By Goal Mouth

An overview of recent sporting events, including AFLW, motor racing, soccer and cricket.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 18

3 MIN READ

Australia’s First Picture Book About Parents in Prison

Australia’s First Picture Book About Parents in Prison

Australia’s First Picture Book About Parents in Prison

By Jacqueline Dinan
By Jacqueline Dinan

A new children’s book addresses the incarceration of parents. It’s titled My Dad’s Gone Away and was written by Andrew Krakouer and Jacqueline Dinan.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 15

2 MIN READ

Games in Prison: An Interview with Bull Press

Games in Prison: An Interview with Bull Press

Games in Prison: An Interview with Bull Press

By Edith McLellan
By Edith McLellan

We’re Bull Press. We make games – conversational tabletop games – for a prison environment. Most of us have spent time in prison, and we’re based in the USA.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 16

3 MIN READ

Batman: Year One

Batman: Year One

Batman: Year One

By Grace J.
By Grace J.

First published in 1987, Batman: Year One follows Bruce Wayne returning to Gotham after 12 years away.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 4

4 MIN READ

Leave a Comment

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
0 Comments
Author Name
Comment Time

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique. Duis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere. uis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere.

Sports Round Up

By Goal Mouth

An overview of recent sporting events, including AFLW, motor racing, soccer and cricket.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 18

3 MIN READ

Your Armchair Guide to Summer Sport

By Goal Mouth

An overview of recent sporting events, including horse racing, motor racing, AFLW and cricket.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 17

3 MIN READ

Visions Through the Eyes of a Palestinian Prisoner

By Damien Linnane

Knowing what an incredibly powerful story he had – not to mention unique artworks – after the interview I asked Mohannad if he would be interested in having art exhibited in Australia.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 17

1 MIN READ

Sports Round Up!

By Goal Mouth

A collection of sports news from the past month, including Brisbane possibly being our new sporting capital, Aussie women finding lots of wins in Cricket and loutish crowd behaviour marring the Ryder Cup.

Culture

ISSUE NO. 16

5 MIN READ

Get the full paper in print each month.

6-Month Subscription:

Physical copy of About Time delivered to your home or organisation each month for six months. Paid upfront.

Subscribe for $70

12-Month Subscription:

Physical copy of About Time delivered to your home or organisation each month for twelve months. Paid upfront.

Subscribe for $125

Newsletter

Be the first to learn about our monthly stories, plus new initiatives and live events

You've successfully registered!
Something went wrong when we tried to register your details. Please try again.

Support Australia's First National Prison Newspaper

A place for news and education, expression and hope

Help keep the momentum going. All donations will be vital in providing an essential resource for people in prison and their loved ones.

All donations of $2 or more are tax deductible. If you would like to pay directly into our bank account to avoid the processing fee, please contact donate@abouttime.org.au. ABN 67 667 331 106.

It's
About Time.

A place for news and education, expression and hope.

Help us get About Time off the ground. All donations are tax deductible and will be vital in providing an essential resource for people in prison and their loved ones.

Donate Here

Newsletter

Be the first to learn about our monthly stories, plus new initiatives and live events

You've successfully registered!
Something went wrong when we tried to register your details. Please try again.