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Soul, country-folk, rock and the didgeridoo will comprise just some of
the styles that will open for legendary pop superstar Elton John on his
three-concert tour of Australia this month – playing Perth, Sydney and,
for the first time in history, Darwin.
When Sir Elton kicks off the first concert of his tour in Perth on May
10, Broome-based indigenous country folk/rock band the Pigram Brothers
will open, whilst Aussie soul sensation, Eran James (who supported
Elton by special request last year), again graces the pop superstar’s
stage for all three concerts, including the prestigious 25 year
celebrations at the Sydney Entertainment Centre on May 12.
When the Rocket Man lands in Darwin on May 17, Eran James will start
the TIO Stadium’s open-air concert, followed by blind aboriginal
multi-instrumentalist Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, who will perform
songs from his Gumatj country, one of the First Nations of North East
Arnhemland, and mostly in his Yolngu tongue.
Hailed by the Sydney Morning Herald as “the greatest voice this
continent has ever recorded”, Yunupingu sings with the voice of an
angel, his love of country, being born blind, the death of his father
and creation stories of his Yolngu people.
Elton John’s interest and support of new and eclectic artists is
legendary – he gave a leg up to Australia’s Catherine Britt who scored
a Nashville signing after he made a couple of calls; was the butt of
2001’s mad media storm when he performed a duet with then break-through
controversial rapper Eminem at the Grammys; and cited “25-year-old
bohemian, sharp, witty and brilliant songwriter”, Ryan Adams and his
Heartbreaker album as the inspiration for his 2001 Songs From the West
Coast. Elton thanked Adams on the album’s liner notes “for making me
do better” and told MTV, “I also like Macy Gray and Mary J. Blige.
These people are very inspiring to me. They are young, very talented,
and they give me a kick of new life. I've made 40 albums. It's nice to
listen to new things."
And it’s new things Elton is assured to hear on this tour: from the
saltwater-lifestyle, earthy harmonies of the seven-piece Pigram
Brothers (yes, all seven are brothers), to the elegant soul of teenager
Eran James, and the beautiful singing voice, and songs, of Yunupingu.
With Elton’s ear, and influence, genuinely tuned to new and exciting
talent, could Australia be the next frontier in scouting new
international megastars at the grand master’s hand?
Certainly it’s a distinct possibility for the “I can’t believe he’s
white” Eran James. The 19 year old Melbourne-born prodigy has been
signing since he was eight and signed his first record deal with
Universal Music when he was just 13. They say he’s the business, the
real deal, and already he’s worked with the same big fish as Craig
David, Christina Aguilera, Brandy and Norah Jones.
His debut album Reviewing The Situation was released in 2004 and his
sophomore album Ten Songs About Love came out in October last year,
just before he hit the road with Elton the first time.
Elton is a fan and the return of James for the multi-Grammy Award
winner's three 2008 concerts is a testament to the young talent’s
substance.
From the pearling town of Broome, the bright lights of the big city
might not be as enticing to the Pigram Brothers who have already shied
away from beckoning international stardom.
Their original music has an enormous affinity with the visually
spectacular Broome and Kimberley landscapes and captures their
Saltwater Spirit and Country. Pigram Brothers songs have become
hometown anthems and their CDs are rated one of Broome’s most popular
souvenirs.
Despite winning numerous Awards, being featured on national radio and
TV programs and being tempted with international Festival spots, the
Pigram Brothers tour only occasionally and prefer to stay at home, be
with family, go fishing and stay connected to their country.
They reckon that Broome is a tourist hot-spot and with the several
hundred thousand who visit each year, they play some of their biggest
gigs, and get considerable exposure, staying home.
Probably not too dissimilar for the intensely shy and blind from birth,
Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, a former member of Yothu Yindi, he’s an
old hat at the star-turn, has toured the world and played for the
Queen. Constant touring tired him and he likes living on Elcho Island,
his birthplace, 560 kilometres off the north coast of Australia.
The 37-year-old’s February-released debut album Gurrumul is already a
rare phenomenon, breaking into the mainstream; it knocked the John
Butler Trio out of the number one spot on iTunes Roots music chart and
hit number five on the mainstream iTunes chart in early April.
His voice is described as “a gift from the gods”. His music has no political agenda; he just wants to tell stories.
And it is stories that will be told by any of these superb Australian
artists performing on the same stage as Sir Elton when he tours this
month.
Whether the story is of a great concert, given by great artists, shared
on a great line-up or, whether bigger things turn for any one, or all,
of them at the hand of Elton, doesn’t matter in the long run.
In the short run, for Australian audiences it’s all good news. Great
music, by great artists and you can only see it here – in Perth, Sydney
or Darwin.
Elton John
Perth
Sat 10th May Members Equity Stadium – Perth, WA
Tickets through Ticketmaster
www.ticketmaster.com or 136 100
Sydney
Mon 12th May Sydney Entertainment Centre, NSW
Tickets through Ticketmaster
www.ticketmaster.com or 1300 883 622
Darwin
Sat 17th May TIO Stadium, Darwin, NT
Tickets through Ticketek
www.ticketek.com.au or 132 849
Tickets on sale now!
For more information visit www.chuggentertainment.com
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Thursday, 08 January 2009
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