Music of Australia
The music of Australia has an extensive history made of music societies. Indigenous Australian music is a part of the unique heritage of a 40,000 to 60,000-year history which produced the iconic didgeridoo. Contemporary fusions of indigenous and Western styles (exemplified in the works of No Fixed Address, Yothu Yindi, Christine Anu and Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu) mark distinctly Australian contributions to world music. During its early western history, Australia was a collection of British colonies, and Australian folk music and bush ballads such as "Waltzing Matilda" were heavily influenced by Anglo-Celtic traditions, while classical forms were derived from those of Europe. Contemporary Australian music ranges across a broad spectrum with trends often concurrent with those of the US, the UK, and similar nations – notably in the Australian rock and Australian country music genres. Tastes have diversified along with post-World War II multicultural immigration to Australia.
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Indigenous music
Indigenous Australian music refers to the music of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders. Music forms an integral part of the social, cultural and ceremonial observances of these peoples, and has been so for over 60,000 years.[1] Traditional indigenous music is best characterised by the didgeridoo, the best-known instrument, which is considered by some to be the world's oldest.[2] Archaeological studies of rock art in the Northern Territory suggest people of the Kakadu region were playing the instrument 15,000 years ago.[3]
Contemporary indigenous Australian music has covered numerous styles, including rock and roll, country,[4] hip hop, and reggae. Jimmy Little is regarded as the first Aboriginal performer to achieve mainstream success, with his debut 1964 song "The Royal Telephone" highly popular and successful.[5] In 2005, Little was presented with an honorary doctorate in music by the University of Sydney.[6] Despite the popularity of some of his work, Little failed to launch indigenous music in the country—from the 1970s onwards, groups such as Coloured Stone, Warumpi Band, and No Fixed Address would help improve the image of the genre.[5] It would be Yothu Yindi that would bring indigenous music to the mainstream, with their 1991 song "Treaty", from the album Tribal Voice, becoming a hit.[7] would go on to reach No. 11 on the ARIA Singles Chart.[8] The band's performances were based on the traditional Yolngu dance, and embodied a sharing of culture.[5] The success of Yothu Yindi—winners of eight ARIA Awards[9]—was followed in by Kev Carmody, Tiddas, Christine Anu, and numerous other indigenous Australian musicians.[5]
Indigenous Australian music is unique, as it dates back more than 60,000 years to the prehistory of Australia and continues the ancient songlines through contemporary artists as diverse as: David Dahwurr Hudson, Jimmy Little, Warumpi Band, Yothu Yindi, Tiddas, Wild Water, Christine Anu, Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, Saltwater Band, Nabarlek, Nokturnl, the Pigram Brothers, Coloured Stone, Blekbala Mujik, Kev Carmody, Archie Roach and Ruby Hunter.
Folk music
For much of its history, Australia's bush music belonged to an oral and folkloric tradition, and was only later published in print in volumes such as Banjo Paterson's Old Bush Songs, in the 1890s. The distinctive themes and origins of Australia's "bush music" or "bush band music" can be traced to the songs sung by the convicts who were sent to Australia during the early period of the British colonisation, beginning in 1788. Early Australian ballads sing of the harsh ways of life of the epoch and of such people and events as bushrangers, swagmen, drovers, stockmen and shearers. Convict and bushranger verses often railed against government tyranny. Classic bush songs on such themes include: "The Wild Colonial Boy", "Click Go the Shears", "The Drover's Dream", "The Queensland Drover", "The Dying Stockman" and "Moreton Bay".[10]
Later themes which endure to the present include the experiences of war, of droughts and flooding rains, of Aboriginality and of the railways and trucking routes which link Australia's vast distances. Isolation and loneliness of life in the Australian bush have been another theme. "Waltzing Matilda", often regarded as Australia's unofficial national anthem, is a quintessential Australian folk song, influenced by Celtic folk ballads. Country and folk artists such as Tex Morton, Slim Dusty, Rolf Harris, The Bushwackers, John Williamson, and John Schumann of the band Redgum have continued to record and popularise the old bush ballads of Australia through the 20th and into the 21st century – and contemporary artists including Sara Storer and Lee Kernaghan draw heavily on this heritage.
Australia has a unique tradition of folk music, with origins in both the indigenous music traditions of the original Australian inhabitants, as well as the introduced folk music (including sea shanties) of 18th and 19th century Europe. Celtic, English, German and Scandinavian folk traditions predominated in this first wave of European immigrant music. The Australian tradition is, in this sense, related to the traditions of other countries with similar ethnic, historical and political origins, such as New Zealand, Canada, and the United States. The Australian indigenous tradition brought to this mix of novel elements, including new instruments, some of which are now internationally familiar, such as the didgeridoo of Northern Australia. A number of British singers have spent periods in Australia and have included Australian material in their repertoires, e.g. A. L. Lloyd, Martin Wyndham-Read and Eric Bogle.
Folk revival
Notable Australian exponents of the folk revival movement included both European immigrants such as Eric Bogle, noted for his sad lament to the battle of Gallipoli "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda", and indigenous Australians like Archie Roach and Paul Kelly. Kelly's lyrics capture the vastness of the culture and landscape of Australia by chronicling life about him for over 30 years. David Fricke from Rolling Stone calls Kelly "one of the finest songwriters I have ever heard, Australian or otherwise." In the 1970s, Australian Folk Rock brought both familiar and less familiar traditional songs, as well as new compositions, to live venues and the airwaves. Notable artists include The Bushwackers Band and Redgum. Redgum are known for their 1983 anti-war protest song "I Was Only Nineteen", which peaked at No. 1 on the National singles charts. The 1990s brought Australian indigenous folk rock to the world, led by bands including Yothu Yindi. Australia's long and continuous folk tradition continues strongly to this day, with elements of folk music still present in many contemporary artists including those generally thought of as Rock, Heavy Metal and Alternative Music.
Popular music
Early pop music
Australian composers who published popular musical works (e.g. Ragtime, light ephemera) in the early twentieth century include Vince Courtney, Herbert De Pinna, Jack Lumsdaine, Joe Slater, Reginald Stoneham and Herbert Cosgrove, among others. Demand for local works declined with recording and broadcast.
Country music
Australia has a long tradition of country music, which has developed a style quite distinct from its US counterpart. The early roots of Australian country are related to traditional folk music traditions of Ireland, England, Scotland and many diverse nations. "Botany Bay" from the late 19th century is one example. "Waltzing Matilda", often regarded by foreigners as Australia's unofficial national anthem, is a quintessential Australian country song, influenced more by Celtic folk ballads than by American Country and Western music. This strain of Australian country music, with lyrics focusing on strictly Australian subjects, is generally known as "bush music" or "bush band music." The most successful Australian bush band is Melbourne's The Bushwackers, active since the early 1970s, other well-known country singers include Reg Lindsay, bush balladeer singer Buddy Williams, and entertainers Johnny Ashcroft and Chad Morgan.
Another, more Americanized form of Australian country music was pioneered in the 1930s by such recording artists as Tex Morton, and later popularized by Slim Dusty, best remembered for his 1957 song "A Pub With No Beer", and Smoky Dawson. Dusty married singer-songwriter Joy McKean in 1951 and went on to become Australia's biggest selling domestic music artist with more than 7 million record sales.[11] British-born country singer and yodeller, Frank Ifield, was one of the first Australian post-war performers to gain widespread international recognition. After returning to the UK in 1959 Ifield was successful in the early 1960s, becoming the first performer to have three consecutive number-one hits on the UK charts: "I Remember You", "Lovesick Blues" (both 1962) and "The Wayward Wind" (1963).[12] "I Remember You" was also a Top 5 hit in the US.[13]
Australian country artists including Olivia Newton-John, Sherrie Austin, and Keith Urban have achieved considerable success in the USA. In recent years local contemporary country music, featuring much crossover with popular music, had popularity in Australia; notable musicians of this genre include David Hudson, John Williamson, Gina Jeffreys, Lee Kernaghan, Troy Cassar-Daley, Sara Storer, Felicity Urquhart and Kasey Chambers. Others influenced by the genre include Nick Cave, Paul Kelly, The John Butler Trio, Jagged Stone and The Waifs. Popular Australian country songs include Click Go the Shears (Traditional), Lights on the Hill (1973), I Honestly Love You (1974), True Blue (1981), and Not Pretty Enough (2002).
Children's music
Children's music in Australia developed gradually over the latter half of the 20th century. The most recognised performers in that period were those associated with the long-running Australian Broadcasting Corporation series Play School, including veteran actor-musician Don Spencer and actor and singer Noni Hazlehurst. Children's music remained a relatively small segment of the Australian music industry until the emergence of groundbreaking children's group the Wiggles in the late 1990s. The multi-award-winning four-piece group rapidly gained international popularity in the early 2000s and by the end of the decade they had become one of the most popular children's groups in the world. The Wiggles now boasts a huge fanbase in many regions including Australasia, Britain, Asia, and the Americas.
In 2008 the Wiggles were named Business Review Weekly's top-earning Australian entertainers for the fourth year in a row having earned A$45 million in 2007.[14] They have been called "the world's biggest preschool band" and "your child's first rock band".[15] The group has achieved worldwide success with their children's albums, videos, television series, and concert appearances. They have earned seventeen gold, twelve platinum, three double-platinum, and ten multi-platinum awards for sales of over 17 million DVDs and four million CDs.[16]
By 2002, the Wiggles had become the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's (ABC) most successful pre-school television program. They have performed for over 1.5 million children in the US between 2005 and 2008.[17] They have won APRA song writing awards for Best Children's Song three times and earned ADSDA's award for Highest Selling Children's Album four times.[16] They have been nominated for ARIA's Best Children's Album award nineteen times, and won the award twelve times.[18] In 2003, they received ARIA's Outstanding Achievement Award for their success in the U.S.[16]
R&B and soul music
R&B soul music had a significant impact on Australian's music, although it is notable that many seminal recordings in this genre by American acts of the late 20th century were not played on Australian radio. Anecdotal evidence suggest that racism was a key factor—in his book on the history of Australian radio, author and broadcaster Wayne Mac recounts that when a local Melbourne DJ of the 1960s played the new Ike and Tina Turner single "River Deep Mountain High" it was immediately pulled from the playlist by the station's program manager for being "too noisy and too black".[19] As a result, many local soul/R&B hits of this period were cover versions recorded by Australian acts. Despite radio's relucatance to play American soul/R&B originals, these styles were avidly adopted by local performers and covers of soul/R&B standards were staples in the setlists of many acts including Max Merritt and the Meteors, Doug Parkinson, Jeff St John, The Groop, The Groove, The Twilights, Renee Geyer and many others.
Renée Geyer is an Australian singer who came to prominence in the mid-1970s, has long been regarded as one of the finest exponents of jazz, soul and R&B idioms.[20][21] She had commercial success as a solo artist in Australia, with "It's a Man's Man's World "Rock historian, Ian McFarlane described her as having a "rich, soulful, passionate and husky vocal delivery".[20] Geyer's iconic status in the Australian music industry was recognised when she was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame on 14 July 2005.
Parallel with Geyer's success, American born vocalist Marcia Hines emerged as one of Australia's most successful solo singers. She first came to prominence in the early 1970s with critically acclaimed roles in the local stage productions of Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar (in which she was the first African-American to play the role of Mary Magdalene) before launching a solo career. By the late 1970s she was one of Australia's top singing stars, winning several Queen of Pop awards and hosting her own national TV variety series.
Following their initial dissolution in 1982 Cold Chisel lead vocalist Jimmy Barnes embarked on a successful solo career that has continued from the 1980s to the present. Many of Barnes' albums have featured versions of songs from these genres and his chart-topping album Soul Deep (1991) consisted entirely of covers of classic 1960s soul/R&B covers. Australian soul singer/songwriters like Daniel Merriweather, has after several successful collaborations with artists such as Mark Ronson, released his official debut album, Love & War, in June 2009. It entered the UK Albums Chart at number two. After launching his career as the winner of an early series of Australian Idol, soul singer/songwriter Guy Sebastian has also made an impact on this genre in Australia winning awards at the Urban Music Awards Australia and New Zealand for Best Male Artist and Best R&B Album. Sebastian's recent release "Like it Like That", was the highest selling Australian artist single in 2009 and charted at No. 1 for two consecutive weeks[22][23]
In 2004, Australian Idol finalist Paulini's debut single "Angel Eyes" and album One Determined Heart both reached number one on the ARIA charts and were certified platinum.[24] Paulini earned ARIA No. 1 Chart Awards for both the single and album.[25] Her second album Superwoman included the singles "Rough Day" and "So Over You", and earned Paulini two nominations at the 2007 Urban Music Awards for 'Best R&B Album' and 'Best Female Artist'.[26]
2006 Australian Idol runner-up Jessica Mauboy made her musical solo debut in 2008 with the single "Running Back", which featured American rapper Flo Rida, and peaked at number three on the ARIA Singles Chart, eventually being certified double platinum.[27] Her debut album Been Waiting earned her seven nominations at the 2009 ARIA Music Awards, winning the award of 'Highest Selling Single' for "Running Back".[28] Mauboy has continued to enjoy success with singles such as "Burn", "Saturday Night" featuring Ludacris and "Inescapable". R&B and pop singer Cody Simpson has achieved international acclaim and has been compared to the likes of Justin Bieber and Miley Cyrus. Simpson's music has charted all over the world.
Soul singer Gabriella Cilmi possessing a voice and singing style similar to Amy Winehouse has managed to achieve a degree of international success since 2007 with singles like "Sweet About Me". Other singers in the R&B/soul genre include Jade MacRae, Israel Cruz, Stan Walker and Ricki-Lee Coulter, who experimented with R&B for her first two albums, Ricki-Lee (2005) and Brand New Day (2007). Lowrider is one of Australia's few indie pop soul bands, forming in 2003. Lowrider released their self-titled debut album Lowrider (Illusive Sounds) in 2006 and Diamond Amongst the Thieves (Illusive Sounds) in 2008. In July 2010 Lowrider released Round the World and was nominated for an Australian Music Industry ARIA Music Awards for Best Urban Album. One of the more recent additions to contribute to the R&B and soul sound is Melbourne based Cam Noble who has played a major part in production for the now more modernised genre.
Reggae
Reggae had success on the radio charts in Australia in the early 1980s when Toots and the Maytals, the first artist to use the term "reggae" in song, went to number one with their song "Beautiful Woman".[29][30] Early reggae groups from Australia included JJ Roberts, No Fixed Address, The Igniters, Larry Maluma and Untabu featuring Ron Jemmott.[31]
Rock and pop
Australia has produced a wide variety of rock and popular music, from the internationally successful groups AC/DC, INXS, Nick Cave, Savage Garden, the Seekers, or pop divas Delta Goodrem, Kylie Minogue to the popular local content of John Farnham, Jimmy Barnes or Paul Kelly. Indigenous Australian music and Australian jazz have also had crossover influence on this genre.[32] Early Australian rock and roll stars included Col Joye and Johnny O'Keefe. O'Keefe formed a band in 1956; his hit Wild One made him the first Australian rock'n'roller to reach the national charts.[33] While US and British content dominated airwaves and record sales into the 1960s, local successes began to emerge – notably The Easybeats and the folk-pop group The Seekers had significant local success and some international recognition, while AC/DC had their first hits in Australia before going on to international success.
Pub rock was popular in the 1980s, and the era was typified by AC/DC, Divinyls, Mental As Anything, Midnight Oil, The Choirboys, The Angels, Noiseworks, Air Supply, Cold Chisel and Icehouse. INXS and Men at Work also achieved fame worldwide, and the song "Down Under" became an unofficial anthem for Australia. Australian hip hop began in the early 1980s, primarily influenced by overseas works, but by the 1990s a distinctive local style had emerged, with groups such as the Hilltop Hoods achieving international acclaim for their work. The 1990s saw an increase in the popularity of indie rock in Australia. AC/DC and INXS continued to achieve commercial success in the United States, whilst a multitude of local bands, including Jebediah, Magic Dirt, Diana Anaid (#1 on the Australian Indie Charts and #26 on the USA Billboard Chart), Spiderbait, The Superjesus, Regurgitator, You Am I, Icecream Hands, Powderfinger, Silverchair and Something for Kate, were popular throughout the country. A small electronic music scene emerged around Sydney and Melbourne, with Severed Heads, and Ollie Olsen's No peaking in the 1990s.
Australian music experienced a rock renaissance in the 2000s with groups such as The Vines, Jet, Airbourne and Wolfmother charting internationally. Hilltop Hoods were the first Australian hip-hop group to reach the top of the ARIA chart. Channel 10's Australian Idol program was highly popular locally, as were the many "idols" produced.
First wave of Australian rock
In the mid-1950s, American rock and roll spread across the world. Sydney's independent record label Festival Records was the first to get on the bandwagon in Australia, releasing Bill Haley & His Comets' "Rock Around the Clock" in 1956. It became the biggest-selling Australian single ever released up to that time. American-born entrepreneur Lee Gordon, who arrived in Australia in 1953, played a key role in establishing the popularity of rock & roll with his famous "Big Show" tours, which brought to Australia many leading American rock'n'roll acts including Bill Haley & His Comets, Little Richard, Bo Diddley, Eddie Cochran, Gene Vincent, Buddy Holly & The Crickets and Jerry Lee Lewis. Gordon was also instrumental in launching the career of Johnny O'Keefe, the first Australian rock star, who rose to fame by imitating Americans like Elvis Presley and Little Richard. O'Keefe and other "first wave" bands were popular until about 1961, when a wave of clean-cut family bands took their place.
Though mainstream audiences in the early sixties preferred a clean-cut style – epitomised by the acts that appeared on the Nine Network pop show Bandstand – there were a number of 'grungier' guitar-oriented bands in major cities like Sydney and Melbourne, who were inspired by American and British instrumental and surf acts like Britain's The Shadows – who exerted an enormous influence on Australian and New Zealand music prior to the emergence of The Beatles – and American acts like guitar legend Dick Dale and The Surfaris. Notable Australian instrumental groups of this period included The Atlantics, The Denvermen, The Thunderbirds, The Planets, The Dee Jays, The Joy Boys, The Fabulous Blue Jays and The Whispers.
Jazz was another important influence on the first wave of Australian rock. Unlike the musicians in bands such as The Comets, or Elvis Presley's backing band, who had rockabilly or country music backgrounds, many musicians in Australian rock'n'roll bands – such as Johnny O'Keefe's famous backing group The Dee Jays – had a solid background in jazz.
Second wave of Australian rock
The "second wave" of Australian rock is said to have begun in about 1964, and followed directly on the impact of The Beatles. In the immediate wake of The Beatles' momentous Australian tour, many local groups that had formerly played guitar-based instrumental music recruited singers and took up the new 'beat' style. Some of the best-known and most popular acts in this period were Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs and Ray Brown & The Whispers, The Easybeats, The Masters Apprentices, The Twilights, The Groop, The Groove, The Loved Ones and cult acts like The Throb and solo star Normie Rowe, who quickly became Australia's most popular male pop vocalist. During this period a wave of acts also came from New Zealand, including Ray Columbus & the Invaders, Max Merritt & The Meteors, Dinah Lee, Larry's Rebels and The La De Das.
Many Australian bands and singers tried to enhance their careers by moving overseas, in particular to England, then seen as the mecca of popular music but few bands were successful and of those who relocated to the UK only The Seekers enjoyed any lasting success. Others that made the journey were The Easybeats (the first rock band to crack the UK market), The Twilights, The Groove, Lloyds World and the La De Das.
Third wave of Australian rock
The "third wave" of Australian rock began around 1970, by which time most of the major local pop groups of the 1960s had dissolved and former solo stars like Normie Rowe had faded from view. Few acts from this era attained major international success, and it was even difficult to achieve success across Australia, due to low radio airplay and the increasing dominance of overseas performers on the charts. A pivotal event was the 1970 radio ban, which lasted from May to October that year. The Ban was the climax of a simmering "pay for play" dispute between major record companies and commercial radio stations, who refused to pay a proposed new copyright fee for playing pop records on air. The dispute erupted into open conflict in May 1970—many commercial stations boycotted records by the labels involved and refused to list their releases on their Top 40 charts, while the record companies in turn refused to supply radio with free promotional copies of new releases.
An unexpected side-effect of the ban was that several emerging Australian acts signed to independent labels (who were not part of the dispute) scored hits with covers of overseas hits; these included The Mixtures' cover of Mungo Jerry's "In the Summertime"[34] and Liv Maessen's cover of Mary Hopkin's Eurovision song "Knock, Knock Who's There?".
Despite commercial radio resistance to the more progressive music being produced by bands like Spectrum and Tully, acts as diverse as AC/DC, Sherbet and John Paul Young were able to achieve major success and develop a unique sound for Australian rock. From 1975, key agents for the increased exposure of local music were the nationally broadcast ABC-TV television pop show Countdown, which premiered in late 1974, and Australia's first non-commercial all-rock radio station Double Jay, which opened in January 1975. Hard rock bands AC/DC and Rose Tattoo and harmony rock group Little River Band also found major overseas success in the late 1970s and early 1980s, touring all over the world. Meanwhile, a score of Australian expatriate solo performers like Helen Reddy, Olivia Newton-John and Peter Allen became major stars in the US and internationally. Icehouse also formed in the late 1970s.
This period also saw bands like Skyhooks moving towards new wave music, and the late 1970s saw the emergence of pioneering punk rock bands like The Saints and Radio Birdman, as well as electronic musical groups, such as Cybotron, Severed Heads, Whirlywirld and Essendon Airport. Perhaps most influential of the 'underground' scenes, however, was the burgeoning Australian pub rock circuit, which developed in the early 1970s and played a key role in the emergence of major bands of the late 1970s and early 1980s, including Cold Chisel and The Angels, and in Sydney Midnight Oil and Matt Finish. From the post-punk music scene which had sprung up in Melbourne came The Boys Next Door featuring guitarist Rowland S. Howard and Nick Cave. The Boys Next Door would eventually become The Birthday Party.
The Australian Music Industry as a business began to formalise during the late 1960s and the 1970s. Although not taken seriously by the mainstream business community in those early years, none could discount the pioneering spirit and business acumen of the likes of Michael Gudinski, Michael Chugg, Ray Evans, Glenn Wheatley, Harry M. Miller, Harley Medcalf, Michael Browning, Peter Rix, Ron Tudor, Roger Davies, Fred Bestall, Lance Reynolds, Alan Hely, Frank Stivala, Sebastian Chase, Philip Jacobsen, Peter Karpin, Roger Savage, John Sayers, Ernie Rose, Bill Armstrong (Australian music producer), Kevin Jacobsen, Phil Dwyer, Ken Brodziak, Denis Handlin, Stan Rofe, Jade Johnson, Terry Blamey and Ian 'Molly' Meldrum. These were the people largely responsible for promoting and developing the Australian music 'business' during those formative years.
Clubs and venues catering for the demand of live band entertainment flourished in capital cities all over the country, however, the central development of the Australian Music Industry during these years was in Sydney and Melbourne. Clubs such as Chequers, the Bondi Lifesaver and the Coogee Bay Hotel in Sydney, and the Thumpin Tum, Catcher, Berties, Sebastian's, the Hard Rock Cafe and the Q Club in Melbourne were synonymous with the biggest names in Australian rock & roll. In 1970 the first ever outdoor music festival, modelled on Woodstock, was held at Ourimbah near Sydney, and several other followed over the next two years, but most were a financial failure. In 1972 the first festival that proved successful enough to be repeated was the 1972 'Festival' which attracted some 35,000 music fans from across the country to Sunbury, Melbourne.
'Pop' magazines such as Go-Set (which began in 1966), the Daily Planet, RAM, and Juke, and television programs such as Countdown, Uptight, Sounds Unlimited and Happening 70 promoted Australian popular music to a youth market who had never before experienced such media exposure of their idols and stars. 'Pop Stars' were now being created by direct marketing to a targeted teenage audience. Recording studios such as 301, Alberts' and Trafalgar in Sydney and Armstrong Studios and TCS in Melbourne became legendary. Independent label Mushroom Records was founded in 1973 and although it struggled to survive for its first two years of existence, it was saved in early 1975 by the nationawide commercial breakthrough of Skyhooks, whose debut LP became the biggest-selling Australian rock album ever released up to that time; this success enabled Mushroom to become a significant player in the Australian music industry and compete with established companies like EMI, CBS and Festival.
The bands and solo artists who shaped Australian Music during these seminal years included:
- 50 Lions
- The Choirboys
- INXS
- Noiseworks
- Skyhooks
- AC/DC
- Renée Geyer
- Spectrum
- Chain
- Daddy Cool
- Marcia Hines
- Zoot
- The Masters Apprentices
- Dragon
- Air Supply
- The Radiators
- The Angels
- Axiom
- Kevin Borich Express
- Captain Matchbox Whoopee Band
- Carson
- Cheetah
- Richard Clapton
- Cold Chisel
- John Farnham
- Healing Force
- Lobby Loyde and the Coloured Balls
- Hawking Bros
- Flake
- Buffalo
- Bjerre
- Wendy Saddington
- The Seekers
- Ronnie Charles
- Company Caine
- Trevor Spry
- Radio Birdman
- Buster Brown
- Little River Band
- Ray Burgess
- Mental As Anything
- Marty Rhone
- Ariel
- The La De Das
- Peter Allen
- The Dingoes
- Babeez
- Mondo Rock
- Icehouse
- Midnight Oil
- Doug Parkinson
- Jon English
- Blackfeather
- Ronnie Burns
- The Ferrets
- Mike Brady
- Martin Gellatley
- Hush
- Tully
- Madder Lake
- Supernaut
- Russell Morris
- Allison Durbin
- Olivia Newton-John
- Ross D. Wyllie
- The News
- Max Merritt and the Meteors
- Debra Byrne
- Rose Tattoo
- The Reels
- The Saints
- Sebastian Hardie
- Lash
- William Shakespeare
- Samantha Sang
- Sherbet
- Silver Studs
- John St Peters
- Jeff St John
- Stylus
- Jim Keays
- Tamam Shud
- Ted Mulry Gang
- Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs
- Ol' 55
- Mark Holden
- Lyndon Hart
- Stevie Wright
- John Paul Young
- Helen Reddy
- Redgum
- Hot City Bump Band
- Jo Jo Zep & The Falcons
- Colleen Hewett
- Linda George
- Ayers Rock
- Brian Cadd
1980s
The 1980s saw a breakthrough in the independence of Australian rock—Nick Cave said that before the 1980s, "Australia still needed America or England to tell them what was good".[35] Shaddap You Face, by Joe Dolce, became, and still remains, the most successful Australian produced original-song of all time. An example of Australians breaking free from convention came in TISM. Formed in 1982, the band is known for its anonymous members, outrageous stage antics, and humorous lyrics. In the words of the band, "There's only one factor left that makes us work. And that factor, I think, we've burned away, with the crucible of time, into something that's actually genuine."[36]
Men at Work, Divinyls, and Hoodoo Gurus, all formed between 1979 and 1981, would go on to be hugely successful worldwide. Men at Work's "Down Under" hit number one in Australia, Europe, the UK, Canada, and the United States, and was considered the theme song of Australia's successful showing at the 1983 America's Cup.[37] Hoodoo Gurus, meanwhile, hit it big on the US college circuit—all of their 1980s albums topped the chart.[38] At the same time, a number of Australian bands relocated to the U.K. and particularly London to further their artistic and commercial endeavours, among whom were The Moodists, The Go-Betweens, The Birthday Party, Laughing Clowns, Foetus, SPK, The Triffids, and Tiny Town.[39]
In the 1980s, numerous innovative Australian rock bands arose. These included Hunters & Collectors, The Church, TISM, Divinyls, Hoodoo Gurus, Mondo Rock, the Sunnyboys, Men at Work, The Go-Betweens, The Triffids, Lime Spiders, Big Pig, The Celibate Rifles, the Cosmic Psychos and the Hard-Ons. During this period a number of Australian bands began to reflect their urban environment in songs dealing with day-to-day experiences of inner-city life e.g. Paul Kelly & the Coloured Girls perhaps best exemplified in his songs "From St Kilda to Kings Cross" and "Leaps & Bounds", John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong in songs such us "King Street" and The Mexican Spitfires in tracks like "Sydney Town" and "Town Hall Steps." This decade also saw the rise of world music groups like Dead Can Dance; of special importance is Yothu Yindi, who helped found the field of indigenous rock. Then soap star Kylie Minogue began her music career in the late 1980s and released "The Loco-Motion" which became the biggest selling single in Australia for the decade and quickly catapulted her to worldwide stardom. The first annual ARIA Music Awards were held in 1987. John Farnham and Crowded House were the most successful artists at the event.
Grunge
Grunge is a subgenre of alternative rock and a subculture that emerged during the mid-1980s in Australia and in the Pacific Northwest U.S. state of Washington. The early grunge movement in the US revolved around Seattle's independent record label Sub Pop and that region's underground music scene. By the early 1990s its popularity had spread, with grunge bands appearing in California, then emerging in other parts of the United States and in Australia, building strong followings and signing major record deals. Mark Arm, the vocalist for the Seattle band Green River—and later Mudhoney—stated that the term had been used in Australia in the mid-1980s to describe bands such as King Snake Roost, The Scientists, Salamander Jim, and Beasts of Bourbon.[40] Arm used grunge as a descriptive term rather than a genre term, but it eventually came to describe the punk/metal hybrid sound of the Seattle music scene.[41] C
Several Australian bands, including The Scientists, Cosmic Psychos and Feedtime, are cited as precursors to grunge, their music influencing the Seattle scene through the college radio broadcasts of Sub Pop founder Jonathan Poneman and members of Mudhoney.[42][43] Chris Dubrow from The Guardian states that in the late 1980s, Australia's "sticky-floored...alternative pub scene" in seedy inner-city areas produced grunge bands with "raw and awkward energy" such as The Scientists, X, Beasts of Bourbon, feedtime, Cosmic Psychos and Lubricated Goat.[44] Dubrow said "Cobain...admitted the Australian wave was a big influence" on his music.[44] Everett True states that "[t]here's more of an argument to be had for grunge beginning in Australia with the Scientists and their scrawny punk ilk."[10]
1990s: Indie rock
The 1990s saw continued overseas success from groups such as AC/DC,[45] INXS,[46] Men at Work, Midnight Oil, The Bad Seeds,[47] and a new indie rock scene started to develop locally. Sydney-based Ratcat were the first new band to achieve a mainstream following,[48] while bands such as the Hoodoo Gurus got off to a slower start; their debut album Stoneage Romeos earned a small following but failed to captivate a mainstream that at the time "didn't get it".[49] Later reviews would describe the band as "integral to the story of Aussie indie music", influencing bands including Frenzal Rhomb and Jet.[50] The band would go on to become an ARIA Hall of Fame inductee.[51] The Church, meanwhile, was highly successful in the 1980s, only to see their careers diminish in the next decade; 1994's Sometime Anywhere saw the band recede from a mainstream audience.[52]
Alternative rock began to gain popularity midway through the 1990s, with grunge and Britpop styles especially popular, resulting in a new wave of Australian bands. Some, such as Savage Garden, The Living End and Silverchair, also gained quick success in the United States,[53] while You Am I, Jebediah, Magic Dirt, Something for Kate, Icecream Hands and Powderfinger gained more success locally.[54] Bands such as Regurgitator and Spiderbait were hit heavily by the post-grunge backlash, losing in sales and critical acclaim.[53][55]
Much of the success of rock in Australia is attributed to the non-commercial Australian Broadcasting Corporation's radio station Triple J, which focuses heavily on Australian alternative music, and has done so since its formation as 2JJ in 1975.[56] Throughout the station's history, they have helped jump start the careers of numerous bands, through programs such as Unearthed, the Australian Music program Home & Hosed and the Hottest 100.[57]
The Big Day Out festival has showcased Australian and international acts, with line-ups spanning multiple genres, with an alternative focus. It has become highly popular amongst musicians; Foo Fighters lead singer Dave Grohl said "We play the Big Day Out because it's the best tour in the world. You ask any band in the world – they all want to play the Big Day Out, every single one of them."[58] Other festivals, such as Homebake, Livid, and Splendour in the Grass, are also rock focused, and together with Big Day Out are "united by the dominant presence of the indie-guitar scene".[59] Australia made its first appearance in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015 after being granted a spot in the final by the EBU.
Electronic and dance music
Electronic music in Australia emerged in the 1990s, but takes elements from funk, house, techno, trance, and numerous other genres.[61] Early innovators of the genre in Australia include Whirlywirld and Severed Heads, who formed in 1979 and were the first electronic group to play the Big Day Out.[62] The band achieved long-term success, winning an ARIA Award in 2005 for "Best Original Soundtrack" for The Illustrated Family Doctor, where lead singer Tom Ellard said the band would never fit into mainstream music.[63] FSOM (Future Sound of Melbourne) members including Davide Carbone, Josh Abrahams, and Steve Robbins, were in Australian electronic music groups. They released tracks on Candyline Records. Frank De Wulf's, Two Thumbs Records and Carl Cox's Ultimatum. FSOM also played at several Big Day Out festivals and supported artists including Björk, Tricky, and The Prodigy. Future Sound of Melbourne won the ARIA Award for "Best Dance Release" for their Chapter One album in 1996. The Avalanches released their debut album Since I Left You.
The genre has developed a following, to the point the University of Adelaide offers an Electronic Music Unit, teaching studio production and music technology.[64] The School of Synthesis was also set up in Melbourne by renowned artists including Davide Carbone to specifically cater to Australian Electronic producers. Traditional rock bands such as Regurgitator have developed an original sound by combining heavy guitars and electronic influences,[65] and rock-electro groups, most notably Rogue Traders, have become popular with mainstream audiences.[66][67] The genre is most popular in Melbourne, with multiple music festivals held in the city.[68] However, Cyclic Defrost, the only specialist electronic music magazine in Australia, was started in Sydney (in 1998) and is still based there.[69][70] Radio still lags somewhat behind the success of the genre—producer and artist manager Andrew Penhallow told Australian Music Online that "the local music media have often overlooked the fact that this genre has been flying the flag for Australian music overseas".[71] Over the past fifteen years, bands and producers such as Ollie Olsen, Angelspit, Cut Copy, The Presets, Miami Horror, Bag Raiders, The Potbelleez, Art vs. Science, Empire of the Sun, Sneaky Sound System, Little Nobody, Faydee and Pnau have made a name for themselves in the genre. The success of The Presets at the ARIA Music Awards of 2008 and the Potbelleez in the mainstream media was indicative of the rapidly growing popularity of electro house, progressive house and hardstyle in Australia.
Cut Copy frontman Dan Whitford has attributed the band's success to a change in public attitude as much as the band's quality, explaining "It's a case partly of timing and a growing awareness of electronic music in Australia".[72] Pnau's first album, Sambanova, was released in 1999, at a time when many in Australia considered electronic music to be a dying breed. Nonetheless, the band travelled around the US and Europe, and slowly made a name for themselves, and for a rebirth of electronic music in the country.[73][74] Individual DJs are also pioneering the electronic music scene globally. Dirty South (DJ) was ranked 59 in the 2009 DJ Mag Top 100 DJ poll. In recent years electronic festivals such as Stereosonic have overtaken other genres of music festivals to have the largest attendance in Australia.
Several festivals started developing over time, these festivals include: Defqon 1, IQON,[75] Masters of Hardcore, Utopia,[76] Doof, Rainbow Serpent Festival and Stereosonic. This also includes Teknivals which are generally held outside big cities and are not widely publicized.
Electronic
- Alison Wonderland
- Art vs. Science
- Bag Raiders
- Code Black
- Cut Copy
- Dirty South
- Empire of the Sun
- Flight Facilities
- Flume
- Hayden James
- Hook n Sling
- Infusion
- Joel Fletcher
- Kid Kenobi
- Knife Party
- MaRLo
- Miami Horror
- Midnight Juggernauts
- Sam Sparro
- ShockOne
- Ollie Olsen
- Peking Duk
- Pendulum
- Pnau
- Rogue Traders
- Sneaky Sound System
- Stafford Brothers
- The Aston Shuffle
- The Avalanches
- The Presets
- Timmy Trumpet
- Tommy Trash
- TyDi
- TV Rock
- Will Sparks
- Paul Gorrie AKA the straight guy at all the queer parties
Hardcore
In recent years, Australia has become known for hardcore punk bands such as:
- 50 Lions
- A Breach of Silence
- Alpha Wolf
- Against
- Behind Crimson Eyes
- Break Even
- BLKLST
- Buried in Verona
- Capture the Crown
- Carpathian
- Confession
- Cursed Earth
- Deez Nuts
- Diamond Construct
- Dream On, Dreamer
- Eleventh He Reaches London
- Extortion
- Hands Like Houses
- Hellions
- Forgiven Rival
- House vs. Hurricane
- Hand of Mercy
- I Killed the Prom Queen
- Iron Mind
- Imprisoned
- Ill Natured
- King Parrot
- In Hearts Wake
- Krakatoa
- Mary Jane Kelly
- Massappeal
- Miles Away
- Mindsnare
- Mortification
- Nicolas Cage Fighter
- Ocean Grove
- Parkway Drive
- Polaris
- Rupture
- Starve
- Totally Unicorn
- Trophy Eyes
- The Amity Affliction
- The Brave
- The Red Shore
- Toe to Toe
- Ultimatum
- Void of Vision
- Where's the Pope?
- Windwaker
Metal
Further to this, the Australian Metal scene has gained prominence in the past number of years with bands such as:
- Abominator
- AC/DC
- Airbourne
- Alarum
- Alchemist
- Armoured Angel
- Astriaal
- BB Steal
- Be'lakor
- Black Majesty
- Blood Duster
- Chaos Divine
- Claim the Throne
- Damaged
- Darker Half
- Daysend
- Disentomb
- Dreadnaught
- Deströyer 666
- Devolved
- Dungeon
- Electric Mary
- Empires of Eden
- Eye of the Enemy
- Frankenbok
- Feed Her to the Sharks
- For All Eternity
- Gospel of the Horns
- Grave Forsaken
- Heaven
- Heaven the Axe
- Hobbs' Angel of Death
- King Parrot
- Koritni
- Ilium
- Lord
- Make Them Suffer
- Mortal Sin
- Mortification
- Myridian
- Nazxul
- Ne Obliviscaris
- Northlane
- October Rage
- Our Last Enemy
- Orpheus Omega
- Paindivision
- Parkway Drive
- Pegazus
- Portal
- Psycroptic
- Roxus
- Sadistik Exekution
- Segression
- Southern Sons
- Striborg
- Superheist
- Sydonia
- Synthetic Breed
- The Amenta
- The Berzerker
- The Eternal
- The Mark of Cain
- The Red Shore
- Thy Art Is Murder
- Tria Mera
- Twelve Foot Ninja
- Universum
- Vanishing Point
- Virgin Black
- Voyager
- Wish for Wings
Punk rock/pop punk
Australia has built a strong and ongoing cult following of punk bands such as:
- 5 Seconds of Summer
- 28 Days
- Bodyjar
- Bored!
- Closure in Moscow
- Cosmic Psychos
- Dune Rats
- DZ Deathrays
- Exploding White Mice
- Exserts
- Frenzal Rhomb
- Goons of Doom
- Guttersnipes
- Hard-Ons
- JAB
- Lime Spiders
- New Race
- The Celibate Rifles
- The Leftovers
- The Living End
- The Rumjacks
- The Saints
- The Screaming Tribesmen
- The Survivors
- The Victims
- The Visitors
- The Zorros
- Toe to Toe
- Tonight Alive
- Vampire Lovers
- Yidcore
- The Veronicas
- With Confidence
Alternative rock
Australia has created many alternative rock bands such as:
- Area-7
- Ammonia
- Antistatic
- Antiskeptic
- After the Fall
- Ball Park Music
- The Beautiful Few
- Bird Automatic
- Birds of Tokyo
- Boy & Bear
- British India
- Bughouse
- Calling All Cars
- Camp Cope
- Ceres
- Closure in Moscow
- Cog
- Courtney Barnett
- Custard
- Dakuta
- Dan Sultan
- Dallas Crane
- Dead Letter Circus
- DMA's
- Drag
- Endorphin
- Eskimo Joe
- Epicure
- Even
- Gang of Youths
- Gerling
- Grinspoon
- Gyroscope
- Hands Like Houses
- Harts
- Happyland
- Hiatus Kaiyote
- Hockey Dad
- INXS
- Jebediah
- Jet
- John Butler Trio
- Julia Jacklin
- Karnivool
- Killing Heidi
- King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard
- Kingswood
- Kisschasy
- Luca Brasi
- Magic Dirt
- Mammal
- Matt Corby
- Matt Finish
- Methyl Ethel
- Motor Ace
- Not from There
- Pollyanna
- Pond
- Powderfinger
- PVT
- Regurgitator
- Rocket Science
- San Cisco
- Screamfeeder
- Sidewinder
- Silverchair
- Skunkhour
- Something for Kate
- Sonic Animation
- Sparkadia
- Spiderbait
- Sticky Fingers
- Sick Puppies
- Sydonia
- Taxiride
- Tame Impala
- Testeagles
- The Butterfly Effect
- The Exploders
- The Fauves
- The Getaway Plan
- The Meanies
- The Rubens
- The Smith Street Band
- The Superjesus
- The Temper Trap
- Thirsty Merc
- Thursday's Page
- Rubycon
- Reece Mastin
- The Vines
- TISM
- Tonight Alive
- Track 5
- Tumbleweed
- Violent Soho
- Mt Warning
- Wolfmother
- Winston Surfshirt
- You Am I
Hip-hop
The Australian hip-hop scene gained national momentum after the success of bands such as the Hilltop Hoods and The Herd in the early 2000s. Other artists in the genre include:
- 360
- A.B. Original
- Allday
- Baker Boy
- Bias B
- Bliss n Eso
- Brad Strut
- Briggs
- Carmouflage Rose
- Citizen Kay
- Cristian Alexanda
- Urthboy
- Diafrix
- Drapht
- Fluent Form
- J-Wess
- Kerser
- Kwame
- The Herd
- Hyjak N Torcha
- Iggy Azalea
- Illy
- Horrorshow
- Funkoars
- Pegz
- Pez
- Resin Dogs
- Sampa the Great
- Seth Sentry
- Selwyn
- Ry
- Thundamentals
- Tkay Maidza
- The Tongue
- Manu Crooks
- Milwaukee Banks
- Miracle
- M-Phazes
- Dialectrix
- Yung Warriors
Grime
Grime is a British electronic genre[77][78] that emerged in the early 2000s, derivative of electronic music such as UK garage and jungle,[79] and draws influence from dancehall, ragga, and hip hop.[80] The style is typified by rapid, syncopated breakbeats, generally around 140 bpm,[79][81] and often features an aggressive or jagged electronic sound.[82] Rapping is also a significant element of the style, and lyrics often revolve around gritty depictions of urban life.[83]
Australian grime emerged in 2010 after UK-born[84] artist Fraksha released his mixtape It's Just Bars.[85] Fraksha is widely regarded as a pioneer of the scene in Australia.[86][87][85][88] Fraksha, alongside fellow MC's Scotty Hinds, Diem and Murky, would go on to form the first Australian based grime collective, Smash Brothers, in 2010.[89][85] Smash Brothers pioneered what would become Australian grime music, and were known for their high energy performances. For the most part, few members initially released a lot of music other than Fraksha, but all were active in the raving scene where they would go on to expose many to grime music.[87] They also worked with UK based artists such as Skepta, Foreign Beggars and Dexplicit.[85] Another first for Fraksha was the launch of Melbourne radio show The Sunday Roast on KissFM with Affiks, dedicated to grime and Dubstep music. In 2011 he started the first Australian grime night alongside Affiks and Artic called 50/50. Fraksha in 2011 would go on to perform in New Zealand alongside UK grime pioneer Dizzee Rascal.[90][85]
The resurgence grime was experiencing in the UK during the mid 2010s would also reach Australia.[91][92][93] The sound's resurgence also affected the popularity of grime in Australia, with various other Australian MC's picking up the sound with success, such as Diem, Alex Jones, Shadow, Talakai, Nerve, Wombat and Seru.[94][95][96]
Art music
Classical music
Jazz
The history of jazz and related genres in Australia extends back into the 19th century. During the gold rush locally formed blackface (white actor-musicians in blackface) minstrel troupes began to tour Australia, touring not only the capital cities but also many of the booming regional towns like Ballarat and Bendigo. Minstrel orchestra music featured improvisatory embellishment and polyrhythm in the (pre-classic) banjo playing and clever percussion breaks. Some genuine African-American minstrel and jubilee singing troupes toured from the 1870s. A more jazz-like form of minstrelsy reached Australia in the late 1890s in the form of improvisatory and syncopated coon song and cakewalk music, two early forms of ragtime. The next two decades brought ensemble, piano and vocal ragtime and leading (mostly white) American ragtime artists, including Ben Harney, "Emperor of Ragtime" Gene Greene and pianist Charley Straight. Some of these visitors taught Australians how to 'rag' (improvise unsyncopated popular music into ragtime-style music).
By the mid-1920s, phonograph machines, increased contact with American popular music and visiting white American dance musicians had firmly established jazz (meaning jazz inflected modern dance and stage music) in Australia. The first recordings of jazz in Australia are Mastertouch piano rolls recorded in Sydney from around 1922 but jazz began to be recorded on disc by 1925, first in Melbourne and soon thereafter in Sydney. Soon after World War II, jazz in Australia diverged into two strands. One was based on the earlier collectively improvised called "dixieland" or traditional jazz. The other so-called modernist stream was based on big band swing, small band progressive swing, boogie woogie, and after WWII, the emerging new style of bebop. By the 1950s American bop, itself, was dividing into so-called 'cool' and 'hard' bop schools, the latter being more polyrhythmic and aggressive. This division reached Australia on a small scale by the end of the 1950s. From the mid-1950s rock and roll began to draw young audiences and social dancers away from jazz. British-style dixieland, called Trad, became popular in the early 1960s. Most modern players stuck with the 'cool' (often called West Coast) style, but some experimented with free jazz, modal jazz, experiment with 'Eastern' influences, art music and visual art concept, electronic and jazz-rock fusions.
The 1970s brought tertiary jazz education courses and continuing innovation and diversification in jazz which, by the late 1980s, included world music fusion and contemporary classical and jazz crossovers. From this time, the trend towards eclectic style fusions has continued with ensembles like The Catholics, Australian Art Orchestra, Tongue and Groove, austraLYSIS, Wanderlust, The Necks and many others. It is questionable whether the label jazz is elastic enough to continue to embrace the ever-widening range of improvisatory musics that are associated with the term jazz in Australia. However, mainstream modern jazz and dixieland still have the strongest following and patron still flock to hear famous mainstream artists who have been around for decades, such as One Night Stand players Dugald Shaw and Blair Jordan, reeds player Don Burrows and trumpeter James Morrison and, sometimes, the famous pioneer of traditional jazz in Australia, Graeme Bell. A non-academic genre of jazz has also evolved with a harder "street edge" style. The Conglomerate, The Bamboos, Damage, Cookin on Three Burners, Black Money John McAll are examples of this. See:
- Andrew Bisset. Black Roots White Flowers, Golden Press, 1978
- Bruce Johnson. The Oxford Companion to Australian Jazz OUP, 1987
- John Whiteoak. Playing Ad Lib: Improvisatory Music in Australia: 1836–1970, Currency Press, 1999
Funding
In March 2019, the Australian government announced an injection of funding worth A$30.9 million in the contemporary music sector. The funding covers support of live music venues, investment for Indigenous music, mentorship programs and music exports.[97]
Organisations
Major organisations involved in providing music funding or in receipt of music funding are:
Funding agencies
- Arts NT
- Arts Queensland
- Arts SA
- Arts Tasmania
- Arts Victoria
- Australia Council for the Arts
- Australian Music Centre
- Australian Music Office
- Create NSW (formerly Arts NSW)
- Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy
- Department of Culture and the Arts (formerly Arts WA)
- Music Australia
- Music Council of Australia
- Queensland Arts Council
- Regional Arts Australia
- Regional Arts NSW
- Symphony Australia
- Tasmanian Regional Arts
- Western Australian Arts Council
Music not-for-profit organisations
- Australian Festival of Chamber Music
- Chamber Music Australia
- Music SA
- Musica Viva Australia
- Youth Orchestras Australia
Symphony orchestras
- Canberra Symphony Orchestra
- Sydney Symphony Orchestra
- Queensland Symphony Orchestra
- Adelaide Symphony Orchestra
- Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra
- Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
- West Australian Symphony Orchestra
Orchestras (pit)
- Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra
- Orchestra Victoria
Orchestras (youth)
- Adelaide Youth Orchestra
- Australian Youth Orchestra
- Canberra Youth Music
- Darwin Youth Orchestra
- Melbourne Youth Music
- Northern Sydney Youth Orchestra
- Queensland Youth Orchestras
- Sydney Youth Orchestras
- Tasmanian Youth Orchestra
- Western Australian Youth Music Association
Chamber orchestras
- Adelaide Chamber Orchestra
- Australian Chamber Orchestra
- Australian Brandenburg Orchestra
- Camerata of St. John's
- Melbourne Chamber Orchestra
- Orchestra of the Antipodes
Chamber ensembles
- Australian Brass
- Australia Ensemble
- Australian String Quartet
- Clarity (chamber music ensemble)
- Collusion (chamber music ensemble)
- Compass Quartet
- Dean Emerson Dean
- ELISION Ensemble
- Ensemble Liaison
- Flinders Quartet
- Freshwater Trio
- Goldner String Quartet
- Guitar Trek
- Jouissance
- Kammer (chamber music ensemble)
- Kingfisher Trio
- Kurrawong Ensemble
- New Sydney Wind Quintet
- Nexas Quartet[98]
- Overland
- Seraphim Trio
- Shrewd Brass
- Southern Cross Soloists
- Sydney Omega Ensemble
- Sydney Soloists
- Synergy
- Tetrafide
- The Australian Trio
- Tinalley String Quartet
- TRIOZ
- Zephyr String Quartet
Music competitions
- Asia-Pacific Chamber Music Competition
- Cochran International Piano Competition
- Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition
- Sydney International Piano Competition
Choirs
- Australian Children's Choir
- Adelaide Chamber Singers
- Australian Boys Choir
- The Australian Voices
- Voices of Birralee
- Brisbane Chamber Choir
- Brisbane Chorale
- Canticum Chamber Choir
- Cantillation
- Exaudi Youth Choir
- Gondwana Choirs
- National Youth Choir of Australia
- Royal Melbourne Philharmonic Chorale
- Song Company
- Sydney Chamber Choir
- Sydney Philharmonia Choirs
- Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School Chamber Voices
- University of Melbourne Conservatorium of Music Vocal Ensemble
- West Australian Youth Chorale
Opera companies
- IHOS Opera
- Opera Australia
- Opera Queensland
- Pinchgut Opera
- State Opera Company of South Australia
- Victorian Opera
- West Australian Opera
See also
- APRA AMCOS
- Australian hip hop
- Culture of Australia
- Australia in the Eurovision Song Contest
- Australian Musician
- Australian Music Examinations Board
- Category:Australian musicians
- List of music festivals in Australia
- List of Australian composers
- List of Indigenous Australian musicians, Indigenous musicians and groups
- Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop
- Australian music charts
- Culture of Melbourne#Music
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Further reading
Books and articles
- Agardy, Susanna and Zion, Lawrence (1997). "The Australian Rock Music Scene", in Alison J. Ewbank and Fouli T. Papageorgiou (eds.), Whose master's voice? the development of popular music in thirteen cultures, Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, Ch. 1. ISBN 0-313-27772-9
- Agardy, Susanna. (1985), Young Australians and Music, Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, Melbourne.ISBN 0-642-09805-0
- Bebbington, Warren (ed.) (1998). The Oxford companion to Australian music. Oxford. ISBN 0-19-553432-8.
- Homan, Shane and Mitchell, Tony (eds) (2008). Sounds of then, sounds of now: Popular music in Australia, ACYS Publishing. ISBN 978-1-875236-60-2.
Online
- "Home page". Australian Folk Songs. "A comprehensive bibliography and discography and 93 articles about Australian folk songs and the Folk Revival... 1103 Songs and Poems", includes recently discovered original material published by Trove.
- "Australian singles and album charts, 1966-1974". GO-SET Magazine.
- "Australian Traditional Music Archive". Australian Traditional Music Archive."A searchable collection of tunes with associated supporting biographical and documentary material and recorded examples."
- Donoughue, Paul (13 August 2020). "Swedish songwriters punch above their weight in the pop world. Could Australia emulate that success?". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- Djubal, Clay (15 January 2014). "About". Australian Variety Theatre Archive: Popular Culture Entertainment: 1850-1930.
- Kimball, Duncan. "Australasian Music and Popular Culture 1964-1975". Milesago.
- Musée d'ethnographie de Genève Audio clips: Traditional Australian music. (in French)
- Walker, Clinton Australian Music Book Bibliography
Organisations
- National Film and Sound Archive homepage
- "Home page". Music Australia.
- "Australian Music Centre Online: Breaking Sound Barriers". Australian Music Centre. "The national service organisation dedicated to the promotion and support of art music in Australia."