Paul Kelly discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 28 |
EPs | 4 |
Soundtrack albums | 9 |
Live albums | 6 |
Compilation albums | 8 |
Singles | 68 |
Video albums | 4 |
Music videos | 42 |
The discography of Paul Kelly, an Australian rock artist, includes solo releases, those from various bands that Paul Kelly has led, [nb 1] and material from the related projects. [2] Paul Kelly, under various guises, has released twenty-eight studio albums, sixty four singles, forty-two music videos, and contributed to ten film / television soundtracks and scores. [3]
In August 1978, Paul Kelly and the Dots was formed from the remains of Melbourne band High Rise Bombers. [2] In 1979, they released their debut single, "Recognition", on Mushroom Records and followed with other singles in 1980 including "Billy Baxter" in October, which peaked at No. 38 on the National singles charts. [4] Their debut album Talk followed in March 1981, [1] which peaked at No. 44 on the National albums charts. [4] Their single "Alive and Well", from the second album, Manila , had a video clip directed by Jack Egan in July 1982. [5] After the Dots folded in late 1982, Kelly was without a recording contract. [6] The Paul Kelly Band was formed in 1983, however by late 1984, Kelly had disbanded this group. [2] His next solo release was the single "From St Kilda to Kings Cross" in April 1985, with the associated album Post . [4]
By mid-1985, Kelly had formed Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls and their first single was "Before Too Long" in June 1986, which peaked at No. 15 and was followed by a double LP Gossip in September, which peaked at No. 15. [4] Gossip was trimmed back to a single LP for its 1987 international release on A&M Records under the name Paul Kelly and the Messengers. [2] [7] Australian releases still used Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls. [2] [4] "To Her Door" was released in September 1987 and peaked at No. 14 on the Australian singles charts. [4] "Dumb Things", another single from the album Under the Sun , was released in 1988 in Australia, [4] [8] and the US. [7] By 1989's So Much Water So Close to Home album the band were known as Paul Kelly and the Messengers in all markets, the album peaked at No. 10 with the next album Comedy from 1991 peaking at No. 12, but despite this success Paul Kelly and the Messengers disbanded in August 1991 with Hidden Things released in May 1992. [2] Kelly was already touring as a solo artist and recorded Live, May 1992 , he subsequently recorded further material under his own name, as the Paul Kelly Band, Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, and Paul Kelly and the Stormwater Boys.
In 1999, Kelly left Mushroom Records and signed with EMI Music to release Smoke by Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill, which is a bluegrass band; released at the same time was Professor Ratbaggy by Professor Ratbaggy, a dub reggae group formed by Kelly with members of the Paul Kelly Band. [2] Kelly toured with both Uncle Bill and Professor Ratbaggy. In a similar way Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions released Ways & Means in 2004 and became Stardust Five to release Stardust Five in 2006. [1] In 2004, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation television series Fireflies featured a score by Kelly and Stephen Rae, [9] [10] the associated soundtrack CD Fireflies: Songs of Paul Kelly included tracks by Kelly, Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, Professor Ratbaggy, Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill, and "Los Cucumbros" by the Boon Companions featuring Sian Prior, [11] which was later a track on Stardust Five. [12] Stolen Apples from 2007 was credited to Paul Kelly and followed by the live DVD Live Apples in April 2008 credited to Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions.
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales thresholds) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [13] | NZ [14] | |||
Talk |
| 44 | — | |
Manila |
| — | — | |
Post |
| — | — | |
Gossip |
| 15 | 34 | |
Under the Sun | 19 | 25 |
| |
So Much Water So Close to Home |
| 10 | 26 |
|
Comedy | 12 | 24 | ||
Hidden Things |
| 29 | 39 | |
Wanted Man | 11 | 19 | ||
Deeper Water |
| 40 | 30 | |
Words and Music |
| 17 | 44 |
|
Smoke (with Uncle Bill) | 36 | — |
| |
...Nothing but a Dream |
| 7 | 46 |
|
Ways & Means |
| 13 | — |
|
Foggy Highway |
| 22 | — |
|
Stolen Apples |
| 8 | — |
|
Spring and Fall | 8 | — |
| |
The Merri Soul Sessions |
| 17 | — | |
Seven Sonnets and a Song |
| 9 | — | |
Death's Dateless Night (with Charlie Owen) |
| 16 | — | |
Life Is Fine |
| 1 | — [nb 9] |
|
Nature |
| 1 | 40 | |
Thirteen Ways to Look at Birds (with James Ledger featuring Alice Keath and Seraphim Trio) |
| 43 | — | |
Forty Days |
| — | — | |
Please Leave Your Light On [27] (with Paul Grabowsky) |
| 3 | — | |
Paul Kelly's Christmas Train |
| 1 | — | |
Fever Longing Still |
| 3 [30] | — | |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales thresholds) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [13] [31] | ||||
Live, May 1992 |
| 72 | Solo live performances on 10 May 1992 at the Regal Theatre in Perth and 17 May at the Athenaeum Theatre in Melbourne. [32] [33] | |
Live at the Continental and the Esplanade | — | Live performances by Paul Kelly Band from The Continental in Prahran on 19 September 1994 and the Esplanade Hotel in St. Kilda on 29 May 1995. [34] | ||
The A – Z Recordings | 118 [35] | Live performances by Paul Kelly for his A – Z Tours from 2004 to 2010. 105 tracks are listed alphabetically, they were typically performed over four nights. Kelly's memoir, How to Make Gravy, is the written companion to this box set. [36] | ||
Conversations with Ghosts (with James Ledger, Genevieve Lacey & ANAM Musicians) |
| 65 | For a theatre production of the same name. First performed at Elisabeth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne in October 2012. [38] | |
Goin' Your Way (by Neil Finn and Paul Kelly) | 5 |
| Live performance by Kelly and Neil Finn at the Sydney Opera House in early 2013. [40] They were backed by Dan Kelly on guitar, Elroy Finn on drums, Zoe Hauptmann on guitar and bass guitar. [40] | |
Live at the Sydney Opera House [41] |
| 61 | ||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales thresholds) | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [13] | NZ [14] | ||||
Songs from the South |
| 2 | 17 | Compilation subtitled Paul Kelly's Greatest Hits, also released with a bonus disc featuring "Tease Me" / "It Started with a Kiss". [1] | |
Songs from the South Volume 2 | 22 | — |
| Compilation of Kelly related material over the ten years since the earlier compilation. Also released as a 2× CD with Songs from the South, and released with a DVD Paul Kelly – The Video Collection 1985–2008, a collection of Kelly's videos made over the past 23 years together with several live performances. [43] [44] | |
Songs from the South: 1985–2019 [46] [47] |
| 1 | — | ||
Time |
| 95 | — | ||
Rivers and Rain |
| — | — | ||
Drinking |
| — | — | ||
People |
| — | — | ||
Poetry |
| — | — | ||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales thresholds) | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [52] | |||||
Ways and Means | — | Live performances by Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions in support of the album of the same name. [53] | |||
Live Apples |
| 10 |
| Subtitled Stolen Apples Performed Live in its Entirety Plus 16 More Songs from show on 20 September 2007 in Toowoomba, Queensland by Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions. [55] | |
The Video Collection 1985–2008 |
| 24 | A compilation of music videos spanning Kelly's career from 1985 to 2008. | ||
Stories of Me |
| ||||
Goin' Your Way(by Neil Finn and Paul Kelly) |
| 1 [56] |
| The DVD or BD version of the live album of the same name. | |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [13] | ||||||
The Dots(by The Dots) |
| — | ||||
How to Make Gravy |
| 34 [57] | ||||
Roll on Summer | 40 | |||||
Paul Kelly Exclusive CD |
| — | ||||
Won't You Come Around |
| 55 | ||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales thresholds) | Album | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [13] [58] | US Main [7] | US Mod [7] | |||||||||||||
"Recognition" (by The Dots) [nb 12] | 1979 | — | — | — | The Dots (EP) | ||||||||||
"Seeing Is Believing" | 1980 | — | — | — | non-album single | ||||||||||
"Billy Baxter" | 38 | — | — | Talk | |||||||||||
"Low Down" | 1981 | — | — | — | |||||||||||
"Clean This House" | 1982 | — | — | — | Manila | ||||||||||
"Alive and Well" | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Rocking Institution" [nb 13] | — | — | — | shared single release | |||||||||||
"Love Is the Law" [nb 14] | 1983 | — | — | — | Midnite Spares | ||||||||||
"From St Kilda to Kings Cross" | 1985 | — | — | — |
| Post | |||||||||
"Before Too Long" [nb 5] | 1986 | 15 | — | — |
| Gossip | |||||||||
"Darling It Hurts" | 25 | 19 | — | ||||||||||||
"Leaps and Bounds" / "Bradman" | 1987 | 51 | — | — |
| ||||||||||
"Look So Fine, Feel So Low" | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"To Her Door" | 14 | — | — |
| Under the Sun | ||||||||||
"The Execution" | — | — | — | Gossip | |||||||||||
"Forty Miles to Saturday Night" | 1988 | 85 | — | — | Under the Sun | ||||||||||
"Don't Stand So Close to the Window" | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Dumb Things" | 36 | — | 17 |
| |||||||||||
"Sweet Guy" | 1989 | 53 | — | — | So Much Water So Close to Home | ||||||||||
"Careless" | 116 | — | — |
| |||||||||||
"Most Wanted Man in the World" | 1990 | 74 | — | — | |||||||||||
"Pouring Petrol on a Burning Man" | 109 | — | — | single-only release | |||||||||||
"Don't Start Me Talking" | 1991 | 105 | — | — | Comedy | ||||||||||
"Keep It to Yourself" | 146 | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Wintercoat" | 170 | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Hey Boys" (by Paul Kelly and Mark Seymour) [nb 15] | 1992 | 71 | — | — | Garbo | ||||||||||
"When I First Met Your Ma" | 131 | — | — | Hidden Things | |||||||||||
"He Can't Decide" (by Paul Kelly, Vika Bull, Renée Geyer, Deborah Conway) [nb 16] | 1993 | 112 | — | — | Seven Deadly Sins | ||||||||||
"Last Train" (by Paul Kelly and Christine Anu) | 93 | — | — | single-only release | |||||||||||
"Song from the Sixteenth Floor" | 1994 | 87 | — | — | Wanted Man | ||||||||||
"Love Never Runs on Time" | 111 | — | — | ||||||||||||
"God's Hotel" | 149 | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Give in to My Love" | 1995 | 129 | — | — | Deeper Water | ||||||||||
"Deeper Water" / "Behind the Bowler's Arm" | 147 | — | — |
| |||||||||||
"How to Make Gravy" [nb 11] | 1996 | 144 | — | — | How to Make Gravy EP | ||||||||||
"Tease Me" / "It Started with a Kiss" | 1997 | 69 | — | — | Songs from the South [bonus disc] | ||||||||||
"Before Too Long" | — | — | — | re-released as a single-only | |||||||||||
"Nothing on My Mind" | — | — | — | Words and Music | |||||||||||
"Saturday Night and Sunday Morning" | 1998 | 196 | — | — | |||||||||||
"I'll Be Your Lover" | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Roll on Summer" | 2000 | 40 | — | — | Roll on Summer EP | ||||||||||
"Somewhere in the City" | 2001 | 106 | — | — | ...Nothing but a Dream | ||||||||||
"Love Is the Law" | 194 | — | — | ||||||||||||
"If I Could Start Today Again" | 2002 | 146 | — | — | |||||||||||
"The Gift That Keeps on Giving" | — | — | — | single-only release | |||||||||||
"Just About to Break" | 189 | — | — | ...Nothing but a Dream | |||||||||||
"Won't You Come Around" | 2003 | 55 | — | — | Won't You Come Around EP | ||||||||||
"Beautiful Feeling" | 2004 | — | — | — | Ways & Means | ||||||||||
"I Wish I Was a Train" (Paul Kelly and Troy Cassar-Daley) | 2004 | — | — | — | single-only release | ||||||||||
"God Told Me To" | 2007 | — | — | — | Stolen Apples | ||||||||||
"Right Outta My Head" | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"To Her Door" (live) | 2008 | — | — | — | Live Apples | ||||||||||
"Whistling Cannonballs" (with Shane Nicholson) [67] | 2011 | — | — | — | Bad Machines (Shane Nicholson album) | ||||||||||
"New Found Year" | 2012 | — | — | — | Spring and Fall | ||||||||||
"Firewood and Candles" | 2017 | — | — | — |
| Life is Fine | |||||||||
"With the One I Love" [68] | 2018 | — | — | — | Nature | ||||||||||
"A Bastard Like Me" [69] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"And Death Shall Have No Dominion" [70] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"How to Make Gravy" [nb 11] | 37 | — | — |
| How to Make Gravy | ||||||||||
"Every Day My Mother's Voice" (with Dan Sultan) [71] | 2019 | — | — | — | Songs from the South: 1985–2019 | ||||||||||
"Rally Round the Drum" (with Archie Roach) [72] | — | — | — | Tell Me Why (Archie Roach album) | |||||||||||
"When We're Both Old & Mad" (with Kasey Chambers) [73] | — | — | — | Songs from the South: 1985–2019 | |||||||||||
"Sleep, Australia, Sleep" [74] | 2020 | — [A] | — | — | non-album single | ||||||||||
"Hummin' to Myself" [76] | — | — | — | non-album single | |||||||||||
"If I Could Start Today Again" (with Paul Grabowsky) [77] | — | — | — | Please Leave Your Light On | |||||||||||
"Please Leave Your Light On" (with Paul Grabowsky) [78] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Young Lovers" (with Paul Grabowsky) [79] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"You Broke a Beautiful Thing" (with Paul Grabowsky) [80] | — | — | — | non-album single | |||||||||||
"Little Things" (Ziggy Ramo featuring Paul Kelly) [81] | 2021 | — | — | — | Human? | ||||||||||
"Every Step of the Way" [82] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Christmas" [83] | — | — | — | Paul Kelly's Christmas Train | |||||||||||
"Northern Rivers" [49] | 2022 | — | — | — | Rivers and Rains | ||||||||||
"Alone with You" [84] | 2023 | — | — | — | Mushroom: Fifty Years of Making Noise (Reimagined) | ||||||||||
"Khawaja" [85] | — | — | — | tbc | |||||||||||
"If Not Now" [86] | — | — | — | tbc | |||||||||||
"Sing You Over" (Emma Donovan featuring Paul Kelly) [87] | 2024 | — | — | — | Til My Song Is Done | ||||||||||
"Taught by Experts" [29] | — | — | — | Fever Longing Still | |||||||||||
"Going to the River with Dad" [88] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Houndstooth Dress" [89] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"All Those Smiling Faces" [90] | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Notes
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Certifications | Album |
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS | ||||
"From Little Things Big Things Grow" | 1991 | — |
| Comedy |
"Four Seasons in One Day" (with Angus Stone) | 2010 | — |
| He Will Have His Way |
Title | Year | Director(s) |
---|---|---|
"Alive and Well" | 1982 | Jack Egan [5] |
"From St Kilda to Kings Cross" | 1985 | Ian Pringle [5] [91] |
"Before Too Long" | 1986 | John Witteron [5] [91] |
"Darling It Hurts" | Claudia Castle [5] [91] | |
"Leaps and Bounds" | 1987 | Mick Bell [5] [91] |
"Bradman" | Jack Egan [5] [91] | |
"To Her Door" | Claudia Castle [5] [91] | |
"Forty Miles to Saturday Night" | 1988 | Sue Davis [5] [91] |
"Dumb Things" | 1989 | Larry Williams [5] [91] |
"Sweet Guy" | Claudia Castle [5] | |
"Careless" | Kimble Rendall [5] [91] | |
"Don't Start Me Talking" | 1991 | John Reddon, John Witteron [5] |
"Keep It to Yourself" | Rob Wellington [5] | |
"When I First Met Your Ma" | 1992 | Paul Elliot [5] |
"Last Train" (with Christine Anu) | 1993 | Paul Elliot, Sally Bongers [5] [92] |
"Love Never Runs on Time" | 1994 | Ronny Reinhard [5] [91] |
"Songs from the Sixteenth Floor" | Tony Mahony [91] | |
"Tease Me" | 1997 | Robbie Douglas Taylor [5] [91] |
"It Started With a Kiss" | Robbie Douglas Taylor [5] [91] | |
"Nothing on My Mind" | 1998 | Tony Mahony [5] [91] |
"I'll Be Your Lover" | Tony Mahony [5] [91] | |
"Saturday Night and Sunday Morning" | Tony Mahony [5] [91] | |
"Our Sunshine" | 1999 | Tony Mahony [5] [91] |
"You Can't Take It with You" | Tony Mahony [5] [91] | |
"Can't Fake It" | Tony Mahony [5] [91] | |
"You're so Fine" | 2000 | Tony Mahony [5] [91] |
"Somewhere in the City" | 2001 | Tony Mahony [5] [91] |
"Love Is the Law" | Tony Mahony [5] [91] | |
"If I Could Start Today Again" | 2002 | Tony Mahony [5] [91] |
"Just about to Break" | Ben Saunders [5] [91] | |
"Sure Got Me" | 2003 | Tony Mahony [5] |
"Wish I Was a Train" (with Troy Cassar-Daly) | Tony Mahony [5] | |
"Won't You Come Around" | 2004 | Ben Saunders [5] [91] |
"The Mess We're In" (with Katy Steele) [nb 17] | 2005 | John Lang [5] [94] |
"You're Learning" (with Kasey Chambers, Stormwater Boys) [nb 18] | Rod McCormack, Paul Kelly [5] [95] | |
"They Thought I Was Asleep" (with the Stormwater Boys) [nb 19] | Rod McCormack, Paul Kelly [5] [95] | |
"How to Make Gravy" (with the Stormwater Boys) [nb 19] | Rod McCormack, Paul Kelly [5] [95] | |
"Meet Me in the Middle of the Air" (with the Stormwater Boys) [nb 19] | Rod McCormack, Paul Kelly [5] [95] | |
"Shane Warne" [nb 20] | 2007 | Andy Doherty [5] [91] |
"God Told Me To" | Natasha Pinkus [5] [91] | |
"To Her Door" (live) | 2008 | Paul Drane [5] |
"Stolen Apples Are the Sweetest" | Paul Drane [5] [91] | |
"Rally Round the Drum" | 2019 | Mushroom Creative House |
"When We're Both Old & Mad" | Siân Darling [97] | |
"Sleep, Australia, Sleep" | 2020 | Siân Darling [98] |
"Hummin' to Myself" | Andy Doherty [99] | |
"If I Could Start Today Again" (with Paul Grabowsky) | [77] | |
"Christmas" | 2021 | [83] |
Title | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
Funerals and Circuses | 1992 | Musical score composed by Paul Kelly, for the play of the same name, written by Roger Bennett. [100] |
Seven Deadly Sins: Music from the ABC TV Series | 1993 | Tracks co-composed and performed by Kelly and others, for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV miniseries, Seven Deadly Sins . [101] |
Everynight... Everynight | 1994 | Co-composed by Kelly and Shane O'Mara, [102] both members of Paul Kelly Band. [1] for the score of the feature film of the same name. |
The Big House | 2000 | Score composed by Kelly for the short film of the same name, directed by Rachel Ward. [103] |
One Night the Moon: Original Soundtrack | 2001 | Co-composed by Kelly, Kev Carmody, Maireed Hannan; for score and soundtrack of the short film of the same name, which is directed by Rachel Perkins. Kelly also starred in a lead role as Jim; his then-real life wife, Kaarin Fairfax, appeared as Jim's wife, Rose; and their daughter, Memphis Kelly, portrayed the couple's daughter, Emily. [104] |
Music for the Feature Film Lantana | Co-composed by Kelly, Stephen Hadley, Bruce Haymes and Peter Luscombe (also members of Professor Ratbaggy) [105] and Shane O'Mara, who are all members of Paul Kelly Band. [1] Used for the score and soundtrack for the feature film, Lantana . | |
Silent Partner | Co-composed by Kelly, Gerry Hale [106] (of the band, Uncle Bill); [1] used for the score of the feature film of the same name. | |
Fireflies: Songs of Paul Kelly | 2004 | Co-composed by Kelly and Stephen Rae, Kelly also provided the theme song, "Beautiful Feeling", from his solo album, Ways & Means. [9] [107] Used on the score and soundtrack for the TV series, Fireflies . The CD includes tracks performed by Kelly, Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, Professor Ratbaggy, Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill, and Boon Companions featuring Sian Prior. [11] |
Tom White | Co-composed by Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, for the score of the feature film of the same name. [108] [109] | |
Jindabyne | 2006 | Co-composed by Kelly and Dan Luscombe, [110] both members of Stardust Five and of Paul Kelly Band, [1] for the feature film of the same name. |
Title | Year | Album |
---|---|---|
"Hand Me Down", "Billy Baxter" (by Paul Kelly with Jo Jo Zep & the Falcons) [1] [111] | 1982 | Mushroom Evolution Concert |
"Only the Lonely Heart", "I Need Something Inside Me" (by Paul Kelly and the Dots) [1] | Rocking Australia Live | |
"Special Treatment" (live) [1] | 1989 | Building Bridges – Australia Has a Black History |
"Farewell Don + Edward Kelly" [1] | 1993 | Going Home – Australian Artists, Australian Songs |
"When I First Met Your Ma" (acoustic version) [1] | Triple M Cordless | |
"Ode to a Nightingale" [1] | 1996 | Native Tongue – Loudspeaker |
"Madeleine" [1] [111] | Lullaby and Goodnight | |
"Thanks a Lot" (Paul Kelly & Uncle Bill) [1] | 1997 | Where Joy Kills Sorrow |
"Sunlander" (Paul Kelly & Uncle Bill) [1] [111] | 1998 | Not So Dusty – A Tribute to Slim Dusty |
"Leaps and Bounds", "Wide Open Road" (by Paul Kelly and Chris Bailey), "To Her Door" [1] | Mushroom 25 Live | |
"Tease Me" [1] | 1999 | Triple J - Lust for Live: Live at the Wireless 4 |
"Blues for Skip" [1] | Liberdade: Viva East Timor | |
"Little Kings" [1] | Music Live from the Panel | |
"To Her Door" [1] | 2000 | Cold: Live at the Chapel |
"To Her Door", "Before Too Long" [1] [111] | Rock the Millennium: A Celebration of Australian Music | |
"Little Red Corvette" [1] | 2001 | The Andrew Denton Breakfast Show – Musical Challenge Vol. 2 |
"Somewhere in the City" [1] [111] | Rove [Live] – ... Some Music | |
"Christmas Must Be Tonight" | The Spirit of Christmas 2001 | |
"Khe Sanh" [1] | 2007 | Standing on the Outside: The Songs of Cold Chisel |
"Droving Woman" (by Paul Kelly, Glenn Richards, Missy Higgins) [1] | Cannot Buy My Soul: The Songs of Kev Carmody | |
"Every Day My Mother's Voice" (featuring Jess Hitchcock) | 2020 | Music from the Home Front |
Ways & Means is a double album recorded by Australian artist Paul Kelly and originally released in February 2004, which peaked at #13 on the ARIA Albums Charts. It won the 2004 ARIA Music Award for Best Adult Contemporary Album. It was issued on EMI in Australia and Cooking Vinyl in the US. Kelly's backing band were later called The Boon Companions and consisted of his nephew Dan Kelly on guitar, Peter Luscombe on drums and his brother Dan Luscombe on guitar and keyboards, and Bill McDonald on bass guitar. "Beautiful Feeling" was used as the theme song for the ABCTV series Fireflies (2004).
...nothing but a dream is a studio album recorded by Australian singer-songwriter, Paul Kelly. It was released on 13 August 2001 via EMI Records, and peaked at No. 7 on the ARIA Albums Chart and No. 46 on the Official New Zealand Music Chart. It was also released in the United States on Cooking Vinyl and included four tracks from Kelly's earlier extended play, Roll on Summer (2000). In Australia and New Zealand the album provided three singles, "Somewhere in the City", "Love Is the Law" (October) and "If I Could Start Today Again".
The English rock group the Rolling Stones have released 31 studio albums, 13 live albums, 28 compilation albums, 3 extended plays, 122 singles, 31 box sets, 51 video albums, 2 video box sets and 77 music videos. Throughout their career, they have sold over 250 million records worldwide, making them one of the best-selling music artists of all time. Billboard ranked them as the 2nd Greatest artist of all time. The Rolling Stones have scored 38 top-10 albums on the Billboard 200 and 8 No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. According to the Recording Industry Association of America, they have sold 66.5 million albums in the US, making them the 16th best-selling group in history.
The Irish rock band U2 has released 15 studio albums, one live album, three compilation albums, 84 singles, and nine extended plays (EPs). The band formed at Mount Temple Comprehensive School in 1976 as teenagers. In 1979, the group issued their first release, the EP U2-3, which sold well in Ireland. The following year, the group signed to Island Records and released their debut album, Boy. It reached number 52 in the UK and number 63 in the US. They followed it up with the release of October (1981) and War (1983). War was a commercial success, becoming the band's first number-one album in the UK while reaching number 12 in the US. The album included the singles "Two Hearts Beat As One", "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and "New Year's Day". On the subsequent War Tour, the group recorded the live album Under a Blood Red Sky and concert film U2 Live at Red Rocks, both of which sold well and helped establish them globally as a live act.
American singer Usher has released nine studio albums, ten compilation albums, eight extended plays, and 81 singles. His music has been released on the LaFace, Arista, Jive, RCA, and gamma record labels. Usher has sold more than 33 million albums in the United States alone and over 65 million albums worldwide. With over 150 million total records sold worldwide, he is one of the best selling music artists of all time. He has nine number-one singles and 18 Hot 100 top-ten singles on the US Billboard Hot 100. In 1994, Usher released his self-titled debut album in North America, which went onto sell 500,000 copies, and produced the singles "Can U Get wit It", "Think of You", and "The Many Ways". The former two peaked in the lower half of the UK and US charts. His follow-up 1997 album My Way sold over 8 million copies worldwide, becoming his breakthrough album. It is certified seven-times platinum in the US, and spawned three successful singles, including his first UK number-one song, "You Make Me Wanna...", and first US Hot 100 number-one song, "Nice & Slow". Usher's success continued in 2001, with his third studio album, 8701. It debuted at number four on the Billboard 200. The album produced two number-one singles, such as "U Remind Me" and "U Got It Bad". In 2002, the album was certified five-times platinum in the US for sales of 5 million copies. As of 2010, its worldwide sales stand at over 8 million.
The discography of INXS, an Australian rock band, consists of 12 studio albums, 71 singles, 12 compilation albums, 4 live albums and 5 extended plays.
Australian singer-songwriter Delta Goodrem has released seven studio albums, one extended play, four video albums and thirty-eight singles and an additional five as a featured artist. Goodrem signed a record deal with Sony Music Entertainment in 1999 and, since then, has achieved five number one albums and nine number one songs in Australia.
English singer-songwriter George Michael's releases consist of five studio albums, two compilation albums, one extended play, 44 singles, six promotional singles, 36 music videos, and five video albums. In his career, Michael sold an estimated 100 million to 125 million records worldwide, making him one of the world's best-selling artists of all time.
The discography of the Smashing Pumpkins, an American alternative rock band formed in Chicago, Illinois, consists of thirteen studio albums, four live albums, one digital live album series, seven compilation albums, five extended plays, 55 singles, four video albums, 37 music videos, and contributions to five soundtrack albums. This list does not include material recorded by the Smashing Pumpkins members with other side projects.
American singer and songwriter Pink has released nine studio albums, one live album, five video albums, six compilation albums, 59 singles, three charity singles, six promotional singles, and 51 music videos. Throughout her career, Pink has sold 60 million albums, 75 million singles and 2.4 million DVDs worldwide. According to RIAA, she has sold 18 million albums and 13.5 million digital singles. She is also UK's second best-selling female artist of the 21st century. Billboard ranked her as the fifth top female artist of the 2000s, eighth top female artist of the 2010s and the 59th greatest artist of all time. Official Charts Company hailed her as UK's most played female artist of the 21st century.
The discography of Powderfinger, an Australian alternative rock group, consists of seven studio albums, thirty-three singles, six extended plays, three live albums, four compilation albums, one video album and twenty-nine music videos. They have been nominated for forty-nine ARIA Music Awards, of which they have won eighteen. Shortly after the independent release of their debut self-titled EP in 1993, Powderfinger signed on to a major record label to release their second EP, Transfusion. In 1994 they issued their debut album Parables for Wooden Ears, which did not reach the ARIA Albums Chart. After performances at music festivals, touring and supporting international artists, Powderfinger released their second studio album, Double Allergic (1996), which became their charting breakthrough by peaking at No. 4. Following public recognition from the album's high-selling singles, Powderfinger went on to release Internationalist in 1998, which was their first number-one album; it was certified five times platinum by ARIA for shipment of 350,000 copies.
The discography of Silverchair, an Australian alternative rock band, consists of five studio albums, one extended play (EP), twenty singles, one live album, two compilation albums, four video albums, and twenty music videos.
This is a discography for the rock band Crowded House. As of 2024 Crowded House have sold over 15 million albums worldwide.
The discography of the Living End, an Australian punk rock and psychobilly group, consists of eight studio albums, twenty-three singles, six extended plays (EPs), four video albums and three compilation albums. Chris Cheney, Scott Owen and Joe Piripitzi formed the Living End in 1994; their debut release was Hellbound, an eight-track EP, in 1995. The group's first single, "From Here on In", was issued in 1996 from their second EP, It's for Your Own Good, which received airplay on Triple J, an Australian radio station. Soon after, Piripitzi was replaced on drums by Travis Demsey. The band's breakthrough hit occurred in 1997 with "Second Solution / Prisoner of Society", a double A-side single/EP, which became the highest-selling Australian-made single of the 1990s. It peaked at number four and spent 47 weeks in the ARIA Top 50 Singles chart, and charted in the top 30 of the United States' Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart.
Australian pop duo the Veronicas have released six studio albums, two live albums, one compilation album, three extended plays, twenty-four singles, fifteen music videos and two video albums. Their debut studio album, The Secret Life Of..., was released in Australia in October 2005. Influenced by pop rock, pop punk and teen pop genres, the album was successful in Australia, where it reached number two and gained quadruple Platinum certification from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). The album's lead single, "4ever", peaked at number two on the Australian Singles Chart and became a top-twenty hit in countries such as Ireland, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Four additional singles were released from the album, including "Everything I'm Not" and "When It All Falls Apart", which reached the top ten in Australia and earned Gold certification.
The discography of Australian rock group Midnight Oil consists of thirteen studio albums, forty-three singles, two EPs, five video albums, seven live albums, and six compilation albums. The band have sold over 20 million albums.
Australian singer and songwriter Jessica Mauboy has released five studio albums, one live album, three soundtrack albums, two extended plays, and forty-three singles. Mauboy was the runner-up on the fourth season of Australian Idol in 2006, and subsequently signed a contract with Sony Music Australia. She released her debut live album The Journey in February 2007, which features songs she performed as part of the top twelve on Australian Idol. The album debuted at number four on the ARIA Albums Chart and was certified gold by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), denoting shipments of 35,000 copies. Mauboy briefly became a member of the Australian pop girl group Young Divas later that year, before resuming her solo career early in 2008.
Australian singer-songwriter Tina Arena has released thirteen studio albums, four live albums, four compilations, fifty-two singles and forty-three music videos.
The Rubens are an Australian alternative rock band from Menangle, New South Wales. The band comprises the three Margin brothers, Izaac, Sam and Elliott, Scott Baldwin and William Zeglis. Their debut self-titled album The Rubens gained them domestic success with it reaching number 3 on the ARIA Charts and being nominated for a J Award for Album of the Year.
Cold Chisel are an Australian pub rock band. The band have released nine studio albums. The band were included into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 1993.
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