Sarah Blasko
Sydney
Genre: Alternative
Blasko developed a musical interest without really thinking about it too much. Her mum's Olivia Newton-John cassette was a prized possession. In contrast, her father - an English/History Master - introduced her to the likes of Rachmaninov, Schubert, Bach and some of the less acclaimed works of Paul McCartney.
In her High School years, Blasko hid a love for music as one who leads a double life, carrying with her the impression that to make music one had to know a set of rules no more alluring than those that govern geometry.
Later in her teens, she started a band with her sister, and, as other girls were sneaking out at night to indulge in the sins of drinking and the company of boys, they began sneaking out to revel in the devilish sounds of live jazz and blues. One sacrilegious intervention, perhaps, in the eyes of her fellow parishioners, and Sarah's songbook no longer bore just hymns.
On what is very much an arrangement-centred record, Sarah’s voice is artfully paired with lush, atmospheric orchestrations and a palette of sounds ranging from organic to electronic; from classic and familiar to unique and purpose-designed. From the paired down suspense of its opening track to the sweeping layers of its dramatic closer, the album is a thoughtful and deliberate set of songs that form a genuinely cohesive body of work.
With minimal commercial radio play, Blasko's debut album built for her an attentive audience as much through her striking video clips and dynamic festival performances as from simple word of mouth. On the touring front, Sarah travelled her acclaimed live show across the length and breadth of her homeland. In two comprehensive national tours, Blasko and her five-piece band took her music from candlelit mountain guesthouses to overflowing festival bigtops.
Through a commitment to perform live the world over – often with a five-piece band, other times in a deconstructed duo mode – and the disarming power of the international music grapevine, Blasko also found she had fans in far away places even before the international release of "The Overture & the Underscore" in mid-2005.
Securing releases in Canada, the US, the UK and Europe, Blasko toured internationally the likes of British tunesmith Tom McRae, roots enigma Ray Lamontagne, and neo-folk ingénue Martha Wainwright, before returning home to begin work on her second album.
Recording in mid-2006, Sarah set to task bringing to life a brand new set of songs she only began working on at the beginning of the year. In a strange twist of fate, Blasko headed straight from her performance of the Crowded House flagship number, "Don't Dream It's Over", at the Commonwealth Games closing ceremony, to Neil Finn's own Roundhead Studios, in Auckland, New Zealand.
The result is her second album, "What The Sea Wants, The Sea Will Have". Recorded swiftly, the album displays a more succinct, a more lucid and a more forthright Sarah Blasko. Her lyrics shoot straight and the instrumentation is clear and purposeful in its application.
First announcement for Brisbane's Sunset Sounds
Australia’s newest, hottest, summer music festival SUNSET SOU...-
Bluesfest
April 5 - 9, 2012
- Meredith Music Festival 2011
- Australasian World Music Expo 2011
- Harvest Festival - Parramatta Park, S...
- Splendour in the Grass (2011)
- The Gum Ball - Belford, NSW
- Bluesfest plays host to the icons on ...
- Bluesfest brings the blues on day two
- Golden Plains 2011 in Review
- Playground Weekender 2011
- Sunset Sounds (2011)



