Shelton Woolright

Shelton Woolright is a drummer, musician and photographer. Born and raised in Auckland, he became the drummer of alternative rock band Blindspott in 1997, before leaving the group in 2008. Later that year, Woolright formed the group I Am Giant in the United Kingdom, before the group returned to New Zealand to produce their music career. Woolright launched his solo project Deadbeat in November 2017.

Shelton Woolright
Woolright with I Am Giant in 2017
Background information
BornAuckland, New Zealand
GenresRock
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • drummer
  • photographer
InstrumentsDrums
Years active1997–present
LabelsSony
Associated acts

In March 2015, it was announced that Woolright would become a judge on the second series of The X Factor, replacing the sacked Willy Moon. He mentored Brendon Thomas and The Vibes to the final, where they finished in third place. The X Factor was later cancelled following the airing of the second series.

Early years

Woolright was born in New Zealand. He is of Tongan and French Canadian heritage.[1]

Woolright was the original drummer for the New Zealand band Blindspott whose 2002 debut album reached No 1 and went platinum in New Zealand in its first week.[2] Blindspott broke up in 2007, although Woolright retained an interest in the band. On 15 May 2010, it was announced on Facebook that Blindspott had reunited and were writing new material. As Woolright was not involved this eventually ended with him taking legal action. On 5 March 2011, the Blindspott lead singer Damian Alexander announced it would be releasing its new single From The Blind Spot under the name Blacklistt for legal reasons.[3] Entertainment lawyer Mick Sinclair was handling the case for Blindspott.[4]

Later career

I Am Giant

Following his departure from Blindspott, Woolright formed the band I Am Giant in 2008 with Paul Matthews, Ed Martin and Max O'Donnell. The band currently consists of Woolright, Matthews and Aja Timu.

Deadbeat

Woolright launched new solo project Deadbeat in November 2017. Deadbeat is a high energy drum DJ set, which involves Woolright layering live drums over a mashup of the biggest party tunes on the planet.[5]

Photography

On 14 March Shelton put on exhibition of his photography L’Art reflète la vie at the Viaduct in Auckland. The Auckland exhibition was to raise funds for Cure Kids, a child cancer sponsor.[6][7] He had first put his photography on display in Paris at The Hub, 5 rue Montorgueil on 12 February 2015.[1]

The X Factor

In March 2015, it was announced that Woolright would replace the sacked Willy Moon on the second series of the New Zealand version of The X Factor, along with Natalie Bassingthwaighte replacing Moon's wife, Natalia Kills, who was also sacked from the show.[8] Woolright mentored Brendon Thomas and The Vibes to the final where they finished in third place.

Discography

gollark: I assume someone probably happens to have a random copy in some backup or old folder somewhere, but who knows.
gollark: WASM's documentation is surprisingly nicely written and unhelpful simultaneously.
gollark: I could probably just make it accept base64-encoded code directly but that would be annoying.
gollark: No, you also have to require that they're above 32ish.
gollark: No, I mean try and make it so most code can be represented as printable ASCII.

References

  1. "10 things you didn't know about Shelton Woolright". TV3. Archived from the original on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  2. Shelton Woolright. retrieved 17 June 2015
  3. Leigh van der Stoep (6 March 2011). "Blindspott members take fight over band's name to court". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  4. Hurley, Bevan (3 April 2011). "Blindspott name stoush is a pie fight". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  5. https://www.rhythmandvines.co.nz/deadbeat/
  6. L’ART REFLÈTE LA VIE - by Shelton Woolright retrieved 17 June 2015
  7. Curekids organisation, retrieved 17 June 2015
  8. Mixed reaction to new X Factor judges, Published: 5:06AM Friday March 20, 2015 Source: ONE News, retrieved 17 June 2015
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