Amos Morris
Amos Morris (born 1987/1988) is an Indigenous Australian country music bush balladeer[1] from Kempsey, New South Wales. He won a Golden Guitar Award in 2008 for Bush Ballad of the Year,[2] becoming the youngest ever winner of the category.[3] He has performed with John Williamson and Warren H Williams in the song "Australia is Another Word for Free" which won a Golden Guitar Award for Bush Ballad of the Year in 2009.[4]
Discography
- Memories Live On (2005) - One Stop Entertainment
- Sign of the Times (2007) - Nulla Records[5][6]
- Life Goes On (2010)[7][8]
- "By Request" (2012)
gollark: I see.
gollark: Why have a long-term member role at all, I mean.
gollark: But why?
gollark: Plus it would be possible to experiment with forms of marriage governments don't recognize.
gollark: Anyway, see, if you abolish government-recognized marriage, then individual organizations with views on marriage can (symbolically) marry groups they agree with, and not have to deal with types of marriage they don't.
References
- Allen, Kristy (22 August 2008), "Bush balladeer of a new generation", Coastal Views
- Walker, Frank (January 27, 2008), "Lee flies flag for fans with country hat-trick", Sydney Morning Herald
- "Muster bigger and better", West Coast Sentinel, September 9, 2009, archived from the original on September 16, 2009
- Buchanan, Matt (January 25, 2009), "Kasey rattles the gongs", Sydney Morning Herald
- Bullard, Dave (1 July 2009), "Sign of the Times review", Herald Sun
- Jarvis, Susan (September 2007), "Sign of the Times review", Country City Capital News, archived from the original on 2011-03-10, retrieved 2010-10-18
- "Buckley's giveaway", Daily Examiner (Grafton), 11 February 2010
- Adsett, Ron (March 2010), "Life Goes On review", Country City Capital News, archived from the original on 2011-03-07, retrieved 2010-10-18
External links
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