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Title: Sarah Blasko All I Want
Description: Music video directed by Damon Escott & Stephen Lance of Head Pictures. From Sarah's album "As Day Follows Night". As heard on ...

Title: Sarah Blasko Planet New Year
Description: The next single from 'What The Sea Wants, The Sea Will Have', in which Sarah meets and marries a piano!

Title: Sarah Blasko No Turning Back
Description: Directed by Celeste Potter. From the album 'As Day Follows Night', out July 10th.

Title: Sarah Blasko Dont U Eva
Description: Live performance at our own famous Melbourne Chapel (thanks vodafone). Cinders is my fav song from this gig but sebxavier beat me to it.

Title: Sarah Blasko Dont Dream Its Over
Description: sarahblasko.com Sarah Blasko Don't Dream It's Over Common Wealth Games AUS
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Faster Louder - Found Oct. 20, 2009 The audiences response suggested they wanted more, so heres to hoping for a quick return. Sarah Blasko separated her set into two parts. |
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Sydney Morning Herald - Found Oct. 8, 2009 Which '90s TV star is your all-time crush? You tell us! It is safe to say Sarah Blasko has not gone all rock'n'roll on us. |
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Brisbane Courier-Mail - Found Sep. 19, 2009 : Email : Print Submit comment: Submit comment Sally Browne SARAH Blasko hates Facebook. |
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Brisbane Courier-Mail - Found 21 hours ago ... also perform at the event, alongside local acts and nominees Jessica Mauboy, Empire of the Sun, Sarah Blasko, Lisa Mitchell and Kate Miller... Kate Ritchie starstruck - Brisbane Courier-Mail Underbelly stars to rock the ARIAs - Brisbane Times ARIA hosts announced - Herald Sun Explore All |
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Best Syndication - Found Nov. 6, 2009 ... conceived by hot celebrity, Johnny Depp and performed by Marianne Faithfull, Tim Robbins, Baby Gramps, Sarah Blasko and David Johansen. Sydney drops off the global dining map - Sydney Morning Herald Explore All |
Sydney Morning Herald |
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Sydney Morning Herald - Found Nov. 6, 2009 ... and sea songs conceived by Johnny Depp and featuring Marianne Faithfull, Tim Robbins, Baby Gramps, Sarah Blasko and New York Dolls singer... |
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Sydney Morning Herald - Found Nov. 6, 2009 ... line-up, including Marianne Faithfull, Tim Robbins, David Johansen, Gavin Friday, Baby Gramps, David Thomas, Norma Waterson and Sarah Blasko. |
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Brisbane Courier-Mail - Found Nov. 6, 2009 Among the talent will be Florence + The Machine and Sarah Blasko. It will be first time Brisbane sees London folkies Mumford & Sons. |
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Sydney Morning Herald - Found Nov. 5, 2009 Tim Robbins, Gavin Friday, Norma Waterson (The Watersons), David Thomas (Pere Ubu), Baby Gramps, Sarah Blasko, Katy Steele (Little Birdy... |
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Brisbane Times - Found Nov. 4, 2009 ... and sea songs conceived by Johnny Depp and featuring Marianne Faithfull, Tim Robbins, Baby Gramps, Sarah Blasko and New York Dolls singer... Festival acts to come from our back yard - The Australian Of royalty, rogues and rollicking good times - Brisbane Times Al Green headlines 2010 Sydney Festival - ABC Online Explore All |
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Sarah Blasko
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| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2009) |
| Sarah Blasko | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Sarah Blasko |
| Born | September 23, 1976 |
| Origin | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
| Genres | Indie rock, indie pop |
| Years active | 2002 – Present |
| Labels | Dew Process (Australia) Low Altitude Records (US) |
| Website | Sarah Blasko official site |
Sarah Blasko (born September 23, 1976) is an ARIA Award winning Australian singer-songwriter.
Contents |
Blasko was born in Sydney soon after her family returned from French-speaking Réunion where her parents had been missionaries.citation needed
In the mid-1990s she fronted Sydney band Acquiesce and toured France with founding members Dave Hemmings on drums, Paul Camilleri on guitar, and her sister Kate Halcrow. With material written by Blasko and Camilleri, they recorded a single and an EP with producer Hugh Wilson, receiving some local attention.citation needed
In 2002, Blasko decided to go solo. Material for the Prelusive EP — a result of initial explorative collaborations with Wilson but fully realised with Nick Schneider and Steve Francis — was originally recorded as demos.citation needed Blasko eventually released and promoted the material independently. With the financial assistance of then-manager Craig New, she also produced a music video for the leading track, "Your Way".
The track was picked up by local community stations such as 2SER, as well as the national youth broadcaster Triple J, who also gave light rotation to two other EP tracks, "Will You Ever Know" and "Be Tonight". "Your Way" was also featured on the test loop of fledgling Sydney community radio station 2FBi, when the station began to broadcast full-time.
After this initial success, Blasko was approached by and eventually signed to Brisbane-based label, Dew Process, who repackaged and re-released the EP. There are minor variations to the packaging of the major label release, which make the independent release slightly more valuable to collectors.citation needed
In late 2004, Blasko released her debut album, The Overture & the Underscore, recorded in Hollywood at the studio of engineer Wally Gagel. She co-produced the album with Gagel and fellow songwriter Robert F. Cranny.
Gagel engineered and mixed the album, with some assistance from Bruce MacFarlane. Joey Waronker — a studio drummer and touring musician for artists such as Beck and R.E.M. — played all of the drums and percussion on the album. He was the only substantial musical contributor to the album outside of the two writers.
The album was met with critical acclaim and received gold accreditation in Australia, despite limited commercial radio play. In 2005, Blasko was rewarded for her work with four ARIA nominations, among them a nomination for album of the Year.
Three music videos were produced for album tracks: "Don't U Eva", "Always Worth It" and "Perfect Now". The video for "Always Worth It" shows Blasko laying, unharmed, on the bottom of an inverted car before exiting and joyfully skipping against the stream of people heading towards the site of the wrecked vehicle. The track, "Always Worth It", featured in the final episode of the US television series, Six Feet Under.
With her debut EP and album focused around acoustic guitar and utilizing both live and programmed drums, Sarah’s early recordings possessed much appeal for fans of indietronica, and in particular the more "singer-songwriter" type artists who aspire to this kind of production.citation needed Bernard Zuel wrote in The Sydney Morning Herald that: "Blasko works in the territory where Ed Harcourt and Fiona Apple shine, taking some of the new acoustic framework (think Turin Brakes) and some of the folk-meets-electronica stuff that came out in the post-Portishead years and applies them to straightforward pop songs."1
Furthermore, her live interpretations of the same material display a harder edge and a greater dynamic range than the recordings. Drummer Jeff De Araujo often applies an additional layer of broken beats and percussion to the sampled drum loops; the presence of electric guitars is more pronounced; and Sarah is known to deliver her vocals with increased rawness and energy.
Bret Gladstone, for the Australian Associated Press, wrote: "'The Overture and the Underscore' finds the 28-year-old Aussie delivering a carefully crafted collection of compositions — torn between reverence of love and weariness of a reality that obliterates it — that will satisfy anyone who has felt that Norah Jones, Radiohead and Coldplay would serve well as composite musical DNA. Steering away from swanky vocal effects like double-tracking, and, for the most part, harmonies, producer Wally Gagel hones sic in on the breathy, weathered velvet of Blasko's voice, valuing the authenticity of its imperfections as well as its soul-weary grace, while framing it within wide-screen sonic atmospheres at once funereal and emboldened."2
In the period following the release of her debut album, Blasko demonstrated her enthusiasm and flair for interpreting the songs of others.
With Robert F. Cranny, she produced a cover version of a signature Crowded House number, "Don't Dream It's Over", which featured on the tribute album, She Will Have Her Way: The Songs of Neil & Tim Finn. The track was engineered by David Trump at Big Jesus Burger studios in Sydney, and mixed by David Hemmings. In 2006, Sarah performed this song live at the closing ceremony of the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne.
The pair have also laid claim to a stripped-back version of Underground Lovers' "Losin’ It". Performed with voice and acoustic guitar, the song has become a favourite in their live set and has led to a collaboration between Blasko and the song’s co-writer, Glenn Bennie, for his second album with project, GB3.
Sarah also appears on a cover of the Cold Chisel song, "Flame Trees", which was on the soundtrack to the Rowan Woods film, Little Fish, and featured on the 2007 Cold Chisel tribute album Standing on the Outside. This track was produced by two highly respected Australian musicians, Wayne Connolly, who has worked with iconic Australian bands such as Underground Lovers, You Am I, The Vines and more recently Youth Group, and Jim Moginie, a key member of legendary band, Midnight Oil.
Blasko has also performed a cover of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" by Elton John, which appears on the ABC Records release, Triple J: Like A Version - Vol 2. She also performed the New Buffalo track, "Come Back", when that artist was forced to cancel a number of support slots in February 2005.
Blasko spent most of April 2006 recording her second album in Auckland, New Zealand at Roundhead Studio, the studio of Crowded House frontman Neil Finn.3
Sarah produced the album with Robert F Cranny, and Flame Trees collaborator and Midnight Oil guitarist and keyboard player, Jim Moginie. The recording session was engineered by Paul McKercher, who has worked with numerous Australian bands including Glide, The Cruel Sea, You Am I and more recently Augie March.
The final addition to this all-Australian team was New York-based producer/engineer Victor Van Vugt, who mixed the record. Van Vugt has worked on a number of Beth Orton records and has a long association with Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, mixing a number of their albums as well as some Mick Harvey solo work and production efforts such as PJ Harvey’s Stories From the City, Stories From the Sea.
The album features Dave Symes on bass guitar and Jeff De Araujo on drums & percussion. Jim Moginie makes cameos on a number of tracks, playing wurlitzer, piano, guitar, omnichord and other gadgets. Blasko appears throughout the record on guitar, organ, vibraphone, wurlitzer and drum programming. Robert F Cranny plays acoustic & electric guitars, piano, organ, harmonium, synthesiser, bass guitar, and wurlitzer. The choir and strings were arranged by Cranny and Blasko and conducted by Cranny.
The first radio-only single released from the album is entitled "{Explain}". It was released to Australian radio on September 11, 2006. An accompanying video clip appears on Blasko's official website. The next single is "Always on This Line". A video was made, and received play on VH1 and Max. A video was also made for "Planet New Year", in which she was in love with a piano.
"{Explain}" and "Always on This Line" both made Triple J's Hottest 100 for 2006, with "{Explain}" reaching number 79 and "Always on This Line" reaching number 58. The album was also nominated for the 2006 J Award.
The album was released in Australia on October 21, 2006, and debuted at number 7 on the ARIA Albums Chart.
Blasko recorded her third studio album in Stockholm, Sweden, and blogged on her official site about her experiences4. The album was produced by Bjorn Yttling5 and was released in Australia on July 10, 2009. The first single from the album, "All I Want", debuted on triple j on Sunday 3 May 2009.
Sarah Blasko has toured extensively in Australia, as well as the US, Canada, the UK and Ireland. Although the exact configuration varies, she performs with a five or six piece band usually consisting of drums, electric and synth bass, acoustic and electric guitar plus keyboards and various samplers/ effects units. Due to the breadth of arrangement most of the touring musicians are multi-instrumentalists.
She also performs in a duo with only Cranny accompanying on guitar and keyboards. In both formats, Sarah plays acoustic guitar and occasional keyboards. She has toured with folk/roots artists such as Ray LaMontagne and played outdoor rock festivals such as Australia’s famous Big Day Out.
Blasko has toured the UK and Ireland with Tom McRae, and the US and Canada with Ray LaMontagne, James Blunt and Martha Wainwright. Sarah has played at Woodford Folk Festival, The Falls Festival, Homebake, Splendour in the Grass, the Festival of the Sun, the WOMADelaide festival and in 2006 joined the national Big Day Out tour.
In March 2007 Blasko performed a special concert in Perth, Western Australia in the Octagon Theatre of the University of Western Australia. It lasted two hours with Blasko supported by a string quartet and a local guitarist. During the show she performed a duet with Joe McKee, frontman of local rock band Snowman.
Charting on the national airplay charts:
| Year | Award-giving Body | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | ARIA Award | Best Female Artist (Prelusive) | Nominated |
| 2005 | ARIA Award | Breakthrough Artist - Album (The Overture & the Underscore) | Nominated |
| 2005 | ARIA Award | Best Pop Release (The Overture & the Underscore) | Nominated |
| 2005 | ARIA Award | Best Female Artist (The Overture & the Underscore) | Nominated |
| 2005 | ARIA Award | Album Of The Year (The Overture & the Underscore) | Nominated |
| 2006 | Jimmies | Hottest Female Artist | Nominated |
| 2006 | Australian Music Prize | The Amp (What the Sea Wants, the Sea Will Have) | Nominated |
| 2006 | J Award | Australian Album of the Year (What the Sea Wants, the Sea Will Have) | Nominated |
| 2007 | ARIA Award | Best Pop Release (What the Sea Wants, the Sea Will Have) | Won |
| 2007 | ARIA Award | Best Female Artist (What the Sea Wants, the Sea Will Have) | Nominated |
| 2009 | ARIA Award | Album Of The Year (As Day Follows Night) | Nominated |
| 2009 | ARIA Award | Best Female Artist (As Day Follows Night) | Nominated |
| 2009 | ARIA Award | Best Pop Release (As Day Follows Night) | Nominated |
| 2009 | ARIA Award | Best Cover Art (As Day Follows Night) | Nominated |
| 2009 | ARIA Award | Best Video (All I Want) | Nominated |
| 2009 | J Award | Australian Album of the Year (As Day Follows Night) | Nominated |
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