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Wikipedia

Paul Kelly (Australian musician)

Paul Maurice Kelly AO (born 13 January 1955) is an Australian rock music singer-songwriter and guitarist. He has performed solo, and has led numerous groups, including the Dots, the Coloured Girls, and the Messengers. He has worked with other artists and groups, including associated projects Professor Ratbaggy and Stardust Five. Kelly's music style has ranged from bluegrass to studio-oriented dub reggae, but his core output straddles folk, rock and country. His lyrics capture the vastness of the culture and landscape of Australia by chronicling life about him for over 30 years. David Fricke from Rolling Stone calls Kelly "one of the finest songwriters I have ever heard, Australian or otherwise".[1] Kelly has said, "Song writing is mysterious to me. I still feel like a total beginner. I don't feel like I have got it nailed yet."[2]

Paul Kelly
Kelly performing at Byron Bay Bluesfest on 6 April 2015
Background information
Birth namePaul Maurice Kelly
Born (1955-01-13) 13 January 1955 (age 68)
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • singer-songwriter
  • producer
  • poet
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • harmonica
Years active1974–present
Labels
Websitepaulkelly.com.au

After growing up in Adelaide, Kelly travelled around Australia before settling in Melbourne in 1976. He became involved in the pub rock scene and drug culture and recorded two albums with the Dots. Kelly moved to Sydney by 1985, where he formed Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls. The band was renamed Paul Kelly and the Messengers, initially only for international releases, to avoid possible racial interpretations of the word "coloured". At the end of the 1980s, Kelly returned to Melbourne, and in 1991 he disbanded the Messengers.

Kelly's Top 40 singles include "Billy Baxter", "Before Too Long", "Darling It Hurts", "To Her Door" (his highest-charting local hit in 1987), "Dumb Things" (appeared on United States charts in 1988) and "Roll on Summer". Top-20 albums include Gossip, Under the Sun, Comedy, Songs from the South (1997 compilation), ...Nothing but a Dream, Stolen Apples, Spring and Fall, The Merri Soul Sessions, Seven Sonnets and a Song, Death's Dateless Night (with Charlie Owen), Life Is Fine (his first number-one album) and Nature. Kelly has won 14 Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Music Awards, including his induction into their hall of fame in 1997. Dan Kelly, his nephew, is a singer and guitarist in his own right. Dan performed with Kelly on Ways and Means and Stolen Apples. Both were members of Stardust Five, which released a self-titled album in 2006. On 22 September 2010, Kelly released his memoir, How to Make Gravy, which he described as "it's not traditional; it's writing around the A–Z theme – I tell stories around the song lyrics in alphabetical order".[3] His biographical film Paul Kelly: Stories of Me, directed by Ian Darling, was released to cinemas in October 2012.

In 2001, the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) listed the Top 30 Australian songs of all time, which included Kelly's To Her Door, and Treaty, written by Kelly and members of Yothu Yindi. Aside from Treaty, Kelly wrote or co-wrote several songs on Indigenous Australian social issues and historical events. He provided songs for many other artists, tailoring them to their particular vocal range. The album Women at the Well from 2002 had 14 female artists record his songs in tribute.

Kelly was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2017 for distinguished service to the performing arts and to the promotion of the national identity through contributions as a singer, songwriter and musician.[4] Kelly was married and divorced twice; he has three children and resides in St Kilda, a suburb of Melbourne.

Early life

Paul Maurice Kelly[5] was born on 13 January 1955 in Adelaide, to John Erwin Kelly, a lawyer, and Josephine (née Filippini), the sixth of eight surviving children.[6][7] According to Rip It Up magazine, "legend has it" that Kelly's mother gave birth to him "in a taxi outside North Adelaide's Calvary Hospital".[8]

Although Kelly was raised as a Roman Catholic, he later described himself as a non-believer.[9][10] He is the great-great-grandson of Jeremiah Kelly, who emigrated from Ireland in 1852 and settled in Clare, South Australia.[11] His paternal grandfather, Francis Kelly, established a law firm in 1917, which his father, John, joined in 1937.[12]

John Kelly died in 1968 at the age of 52, after having been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease three years earlier.[13] Paul Kelly was thirteen years old when his father died.[14] Kelly described his father: "I have good memories, he was the kind of father that, well, I missed him when he died very much. The older children were growing into him at the time he died. He was not well enough to play sport with me."[15][16]

Kelly's maternal grandfather was an Argentine-born, Italian-speaking opera singer, Count Ercole Filippini, a leading baritone for the La Scala Opera Company in Milan.[17]

Filippini was touring Australia in 1914 with a Spanish opera company when World War I broke out; Filippini stayed and later married Anne McPharland, one of his students.[11] As Countessa Anne Filippini, she was Australia's first female symphony orchestra conductor.[15] She sang the role of Marguerite in Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Radio Perth's performance of Faust in 1928.[17]

Kelly's grandparents started the Italo-Australian Opera Company, which toured the country in the 1920s.[18]

Josephine raised the younger children alone after John's death, but found time to assist others in need.[14] Paul's oldest sister, Anne, became a nun and went on to write hymns, while a younger sister, Mary-Jo, plays piano in Latin bands and teaches music.[19][20]

An older brother, Martin, works for Edmund Rice International,[21][22] with another brother, Tony, a drug and alcohol counsellor, who ran as an Australian Greens candidate in the 2001 and 2004 federal elections.[23][24] Josephine Kelly moved to Brisbane, where she died in 2000 at the age of 76.[25]

Kelly attended Rostrevor College, a Christian Brothers school, where he played trumpet and studied piano, became the first XI cricket captain, played in the first XVIII football (Australian rules), and was named dux of his senior year.[26][27] He studied arts at Flinders University in 1973, but left after a term, disillusioned with academic life. He began writing prose and started a magazine with some friends.[28]

Kelly spent several years working odd jobs, travelling around the country and learning guitar before he moved to Melbourne in 1976.[29][30]

Career

1974–1984: Early career and with the Dots

 
Salamanca Place, Hobart (2007), where, in mid-1974, Kelly made his first public performance—a two-song set comprising Bob Dylan's "Girl from the North Country" and "Streets of Forbes", a traditional Australian folk song about bushranger Ben Hall.[31]

While travelling around Australia, Paul Kelly made his first public performance in 1974 in Hobart.[19][32] He later recalled:

I was living there at the time and there was a folk club at Salamanca Place. They had a night, I think a Monday night, where anyone could get up. I sang Dylan's "Girl from North Country" and "Streets of Forbes", a traditional Australian song about Ben Hall. I can't really remember how it went – I remember I had a lot to drink afterwards from relief. I was incredibly nervous.[33]

His first published song, "It's the Falling Apart that Makes You", was written after listening to Van Morrison's Astral Weeks at the age of 19,[26] although in an interview with Drum Media he recalled writing his first song: "It was an open-tuning and had four lines about catching trains. I have got a recording of it somewhere. It was called 'Catching a Train'. I wrote a lot of songs about trains early on, trains and fires, and then I moved on to water".[33]

In 1976, Kelly appeared on Debutantes, a compilation album featuring various Melbourne-based artists, and joined pub-rockers The High Rise Bombers from 1977 to 1978.[30][34] The High Rise Bombers included Kelly (vocals, guitar, songwriter), Martin Armiger (guitar, vocals, songwriter), Lee Cass (bass guitar), Chris Dyson (guitar), Sally Ford (saxophone, songwriter), John Lloyd (drums), and Keith Shadwick (saxophone).[35] Chris Langman (guitar, vocals) replaced Dyson in early 1978. [Langman never played with the High Rise Bombers and is incorrectly listed as a guitarist on the Melbourne Club album]. In August, after Armiger left for The Sports and Ford for The Kevins, Kelly formed Paul Kelly and the Dots with Langman and Lloyd.[30] The High Rise Bombers recorded two tracks, "She's Got It" and "Domestic Criminal", which appeared on The Melbourne Club, a 1981 compilation by various artists on Missing Link Records.[30]

Kelly had already established himself as a respected songwriter—other Melbourne musicians would go to see him on their nights off.[36] Richard Guilliatt, writing for The Monthly, later described Kelly from a 1979 performance at Richmond's Kingston Hotel, the singer was "a skinny guy with a head of black curls framing a pale face and a bent nose... singing with his eyes closed, one arm outstretched and the other resting on the body of the Fender Telecaster".[37] Kelly was introduced to Hilary Brown at one of the Dots' gigs and they later married – the relationship is described in "When I First Met Your Ma" (1992).[38][39] Brown's father supplied Kelly with a gravy recipe – used on "How to Make Gravy" (1996).[40] Their son, Declan, was born in 1980.[38][39]

The Dots included various line-ups from 1978 to 1982.[41] The band released their debut single "Recognition" in 1979, which did not reach the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart top 50.[30][42] The Dots then signed to Mushroom Records, and at the record company's insistence, were renamed Paul Kelly and the Dots. They issued "Billy Baxter" in November 1980, which peaked at No. 38.[30][42] Rock music historian, Ian McFarlane described the single as a "delightful, ska-tinged" track.[30] Kelly's first television performance was "Billy Baxter" on the national pop show Countdown.[43] Their debut album, Talk, followed in March 1981, which reached No. 44 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart.[42] Late in 1981 Paul Kelly and the Dots recorded their second album, Manila, in the Philippines' capital. It was issued in August 1982, but had no chart success.[30] Release was delayed by line-up changes and because Kelly was assaulted in Melbourne – he had his jaw broken.[30][44]

In an October 1982 interview with The Australian Women's Weekly, Kelly indicated he was more pleased with Manila than Talk as "It has more unity ... with this one we didn't have people dropping into the studio to play."[45] Years later Kelly disavowed both Dots albums: "I wish I could grab the other two and put 'em in a big hole".[19][46] The 1982 film, Starstruck, was directed by Gillian Armstrong and starred Jo Kennedy.[47] Paul Kelly and the Dots supplied "Rocking Institution" for its soundtrack and Kelly added to the score.[48] Kennedy released "Body and Soul", a cover of Split Enz' "She Got Body, She Got Soul" as a shared single with "Rocking Institution".[48] Acting in a minor role in Starstruck was Kaarin Fairfax, who later became Kelly's second wife.[19][47] Kelly was without a recording contract after the Dots folded in 1982.[27]

Paul Kelly Band was formed in 1983 with Michael Armiger (Martin Armiger's younger brother, bass guitar), Chris Coyne (saxophone), Maurice Frawley (guitar) and Greg Martin (drums). By 1984 Michael Barclay (ex-the Zimmermen) replaced Martin on drums and Graham Lee (guitar, pedal steel guitar) joined.[30][49] Kelly's involvement in the Melbourne drug culture—he described his heroin addiction as "a long period of occasional use"—resulted in erratic performances.[44] Problems with his marriage and drug use disrupted his career, and by 1984 the marriage had broken up. Hilary had moved to Sydney, initially leaving their young son with Kelly.[50] He disbanded the group three months later and relocated to Sydney so he could share parenting responsibilities with Hilary while Declan grew up.[15][51]

1985–1991: Coloured Girls to Messengers

 
Paul Kelly & the Coloured Girls,
Long Bay Gaol, Christmas Eve, 1985

Paul Kelly stayed with Don Walker (Cold Chisel) in Kings Cross – Walker had lived with Hilary's sister – and wrote new songs on Walker's piano.[52] Kelly then moved into a flat with Paul Hewson (Dragon) in Elizabeth Bay.[39][53] Both Walker and Hewson encouraged Kelly to continue with his song-writing.[52] By January 1985, he recorded the self-funded album—at a cost of $3,500—Post.[10] Session musicians included Michael Barclay (Weddings Parties Anything) on harmonies, guitarist Steve Connolly (The Zimmermen), and bass guitarist Ian Rilen (Rose Tattoo, X).[27][54] They spent two weeks recording at Clive Shakespeare's studio. Shakespeare engineered the album and co-produced with Kelly. It was released in May 1985 on the independent label White Records, and licensed to Mushroom Records.[27][46]

Kelly dedicated Post to his former flatmate, Hewson, who had died of a heroin overdose in January.[55][56] According to McFarlane: "[it's] a stark, highly personalised collection of acoustic songs that showcased the extraordinary breadth of Kelly's songwriting skills."[30] Rolling Stone (Australia) hailed Post as the best record of 1985.[10][15] AllMusic's Mike DeGagne felt "While he focuses on life's daily tragedies and tribulations, there is a missing element in the music, as it lacks any vigor or flash".[57] A single, "From St. Kilda to King's Cross", was released from the album, but did not chart.[30] Russell Crowe, during his first trip to the US, visited the tourist venue of Death Valley and used Post to refocus himself: "[his] concise insights and acerbic wisdom are exactly the music for strolling the bottom of ancient oceans, both literal and metaphoric".[46] After recording Post, Kelly established a full-time band, which included Armiger, Barclay, and Connolly, bass guitarist Jon Schofield, and keyboardist Peter Bull.[58]

Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls were named through a joke based on Lou Reed's song "Walk on the Wild Side".[30][46] Armiger soon left, and the Coloured Girls line-up stabilised in late 1985 as Barclay, Bull, Connolly, and Schofield.[30][34] Stuart Coupe, Kelly's manager, advised him to sign with Regular Records due to difficulty re-signing with Mushroom's Michael Gudinski.[46] Michelle Higgins, Mushroom's public relations officer, was a Kelly supporter and locked herself into a Sebel Townhouse Hotel room—at Mushroom's expense—for nearly a week in mid-1986, and refused to leave until Gudinski had signed Kelly to a two-album recording contract.[46][59] Kelly performed for The Rock Party, a charity project initiated by The National Campaign Against Drug Abuse, which included other Australasian musicians. The Rock Party released a 12" single, "Everything to Live For", which was produced by Joe Wissert, Phil Rigger, and Phil Beazley.[60][61]

In September, Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls released a 24-track double LP, Gossip.[34] The album included remakes of four songs from Post, and also featured "Maralinga (Rainy Land)", a song about the effects of British nuclear tests on the Maralinga Tjarutja (indigenous people of Maralinga, South Australia).[19][32] Gossip peaked at No. 15, with singles chart success for "Before Too Long" which peaked at No. 15, and "Darling It Hurts" which reached No. 25.[42] A single LP version of Gossip featuring 15 songs was issued in the United States by A&M Records in July 1987.[34] DeGagne noted that "[it] bursts at the seams with blustery, distinguished tunes captivating both the somberness and the intrigue thrown forward from this fine Australian storyteller".[62]

Gossip was co-produced by Kelly and Alan Thorne (Hoodoo Gurus, The Stems) who, according to music journalist Robert Forster (former The Go-Betweens singer-songwriter), helped the band create "a sound that will not only influence future roots-rock bands but, through its directness, sparkle and dedication to the song, will also come to be seen as particularly Australian. Ultimately, it means the records these people made together are timeless".[63] Due to possible racist connotations, the band changed its name for international releases to Paul Kelly and the Messengers.[30][46] They made a US tour, initially supporting Crowded House and then headlining, travelling across the US by bus.[30] "Darling It Hurts" peaked at No. 19 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart in 1987.[64] The New York Times rock critic Jon Pareles wrote "Mr. Kelly sang one smart, catchy three-minute song after another – dozens of them – as the band played with no-frills directness" following the band's performance at the Bottom Line Club in New York.[65]

Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls' second album, Under the Sun, was released in late 1987 in Australia and New Zealand, and in early 1988 in North America and Europe (under the name Paul Kelly and the Messengers).[34] On the Kent Music Report Albums Chart, it reached No. 19. The lead single "To Her Door", written by Kelly, peaked at No. 14 on the related singles chart.[42][66] Forster indicated that the song demonstrated one of Kelly's finest qualities as a songwriter which is his unforced empathy.[63] DeGagne observed a style similar to Elvis Costello and Steve Forbert, and said the album provided "acoustically bright story songs and character-based tales with unlimited substance".[67]

Another single, "Dumb Things", was released in early 1989 and attained No. 36 on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Singles Chart.[68] In the US, it reached No. 16 on the Billboard Modern Rock chart.[64] The song was included on the soundtrack for the 1988 Yahoo Serious film Young Einstein.[69] The video, directed by Claudia Castle, won an ARIA Award for 'Best Video'.[70][71] Kelly met Kaarin Fairfax, his second wife, in 1988 and they married in 1993.[15][72] From 1989 to 1992 Fairfax supplied backing vocals on tracks by Paul Kelly and the Messengers. In 1990, as country music artist Mary-Jo Starr, she released three singles and an album, Too Many Movies, using the Messengers and Kelly as session musicians. Michael Armiger, Connolly, and Frawley were in her backing tour band, The Drive-in Motel.[34][73] Fairfax and Kelly's two children are Madeleine and Memphis.[15]

So Much Water So Close to Home was released in 1989 by Paul Kelly and the Messengers in all markets. It peaked at No. 10 on the ARIA Albums Chart, but none of its singles reached the ARIA Top 40 Singles Chart.[68] Forster stated that, with "Everything's Turning to White", Kelly shows mastery in condensing a Raymond Carver tale of fishermen who discover a dead woman's body but continue to fish before reporting their find.[63] The same short story was used for the 2006 film, Jindabyne, for which Kelly composed the soundtrack.[74] DeGagne preferred "Everything's Turning to White" and "Sweet Guy" to the other album tracks, which "seem a little weak in the content department".[75] Kelly relocated back to Melbourne after having lived in Sydney for six years.[15][19] Another US tour was undertaken, but there was no further chart success for albums or singles released in the US market.[30]

In 1991 the band released Comedy, which peaked at No. 12 on the ARIA Albums Chart.[68] DeGagne noticed "a folk-filled tinge to each song, but the occasional quickened pace balances out these tunes rather nicely".[76] "From Little Things Big Things Grow", a seven-minute track from the album, was co-written by Kelly and Kev Carmody.[66] It highlights the Gurindji Strike and Vincent Lingiari as part of the Indigenous Australian struggle for land rights and reconciliation.[30][77] Forster indicates it has Dylanesque influences, and shows Kelly "honing the skills of a fine balladeer and storyteller".[63] A cover version that was released in May 2008 by The GetUp Mob, part of the GetUp! advocacy group, peaked at No. 4 on the ARIA singles charts.[78] This version included samples from speeches by Prime Ministers Paul Keating in 1992 and Kevin Rudd in 2008.[79] It featured vocals by Carmody and Kelly, as well as other Australian artists. Kelly collaborated with members of indigenous band Yothu Yindi to write "Treaty", which peaked at No. 11 in September 1991.[80][81]

"To Her Door" and "Treaty" were voted into the APRA Top 30 Australian songs of all time in 2001.[82] Paul Kelly and the Messengers gave their last performance in August 1991, with Kelly set to pursue a solo career.[30] He justified his decision: "We forged a style together. But I felt if we had kept going it would have got formulaic and that's why I broke it up. I wanted to try and start moving into other areas, start mixing things up".[55] Paul Kelly and the Messengers' final album, Hidden Things, was a collection of previously released B-sides, stray non-LP tracks, radio sessions, and other rarities. It was released in May 1992, and reached No. 29.[68] One track, "Rally Around the Drum", written with Archie Roach, was about an indigenous tent boxing man.[30]

1992–99: Solo career and with others

 
Hotel Esplanade, St Kilda. In May 1995, Kelly recorded tracks for Live at the Continental and the Esplanade (1996) in the hotel's Gershwin Room.[83]

Since 1992 Paul Kelly has had a solo career, fronted the Paul Kelly Band, and worked in occasional collaborations with other songwriters and performers.[30] In 1992 he was asked to compose songs for Funerals and Circuses, a Roger Bennett play about racial tensions in small-town Australia.[84][85] Kelly took the role of a petrol attendant when the play premiered at the Adelaide Fringe Festival that year and was directed by his wife, Fairfax.[86][87] Kelly co-wrote "Hey Boys" with Mark Seymour (Hunters & Collectors) for the soundtrack of the 1992 Australian film, Garbo; when released as a single it peaked at No. 62.[88] Kelly contributed songs and vocals to the soundtrack of the 1993 television series Seven Deadly Sins.[89]

Kelly's first post-Messengers solo release was the live double CD Live, May 1992, released in November 1992.[30] AllMusic's Brett Hartenbach noted that Kelly's band had fleshed out his songs in the studio, but he was still able to show "his vignettes of life, love, and the underbelly of both have plenty of power on their own".[90] Kelly had relocated to Los Angeles and signed with Vanguard Records to tour the US as a solo artist.[30] While in Los Angeles he produced fellow Australian Renée Geyer's album Difficult Woman (1994).[34] Kelly returned to Australia in 1993 and wrote a collection of lyrics, aptly titled Lyrics, which opens with a quote from Anton Chekhov: "I don't have what you would call a philosophy or coherent world view so I shall have to limit myself to describing how my heroes love, marry, give birth, die and speak."[91]: ii [92]

His next album Wanted Man, released in 1994, reached No. 11.[68] Kelly also composed music for the 1994 film Everynight ... Everynight, directed by Alkinos Tsilimidos. It is set in the notorious H division of Victoria's Pentridge Prison.[93][94] Kelly's next solo releases were Deeper Water in 1995 and Live at the Continental and the Esplanade in 1996.[34] Between March and May 1995 Kelly undertook a seven-week tour of North America, appearing on several dates with Liz Phair and Joe Jackson.[95]

By 1996, Paul Kelly Band members included Stephen Hadley (bass, ex-Black Sorrows), Bruce Haymes (keyboards), Peter Luscombe (drums, ex-Black Sorrows), and Shane O'Mara (guitar).[34] Spencer P. Jones (Beasts of Bourbon) was guest guitarist on some performances.[30] This line-up issued the CD-EP How to Make Gravy, with the title track earning Kelly a 'Song of the Year' nomination at the 1998 Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) Music Awards.[96] APRA's Debbie Kruger noted Kelly's "attraction to the theatrical" where the same protagonist is described in "To Her Door", "Love Never Runs on Time" (from Wanted Man) and "How to Make Gravy".[26]

In 1997, Kelly released his compilation album, Songs from the South: Paul Kelly's Greatest Hits, on Mushroom Records.[34] The 20-track album peaked at No. 2, and has achieved quadruple platinum certification, indicating sales of over 280,000.[68][97] Kelly won the ARIA Award in 1997 for 'Best Male Artist', having been previously nominated in 1993, 1995, and 1996.[70] At 20 September 1997 ceremony, he was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame.[98] Kelly won the 'Best Male Artist' award again in 1998, and has been nominated for the same award a further seven times.[70]

Kelly's next album, Words and Music, appeared in 1998, which peaked at No. 17, and included three singles that did not reach the Top 40.[68] Andrew Ford interviewed Kelly for ABC radio's The Music Show in May. Ford found the album "very exciting, very visceral ... you can almost smell the sex". Kelly admitted that he preferred R & B music which deals with sex, love, and joy without becoming "either banal or smug". He finds such songs more difficult to write but believes he has started to do so.[99] 1998 also saw Kelly undertaking a three-week tour of Canada and the US to promote Words and Music.[100]

Smoke was released by Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill; the latter is a Melbourne bluegrass band comprising Gerry Hale on guitar, dobro, mandolin, fiddle, and vocals; Adam Gare on fiddle, mandolin, and vocals; Peter Somerville on banjo and vocals; and Stuart Speed on double bass.[30][34] The album featured a mix of old and new Kelly songs treated in classic bluegrass fashion.[30][32] "Our Sunshine", newly written, was a tribute to Ned Kelly, a famous Australian outlaw (not related). Kelly had previously recorded a Slim Dusty track with Uncle Bill, "Thanks a Lot", for the compilation Where Joy Kills Sorrow (1997).[30][101] Smoke was issued on Kelly's new label, Gawdaggie, through EMI Records in October 1999, and peaked at No. 36.[68] It won three awards from the Victorian Country Music Association: 'Best Group (Open)', 'Best Group (Victorian)', and 'Album of the Year' in 2000.[102] In September Kelly performed at the Spiegeltent at the Edinburgh Festival, as well as shows in London and Dublin.[103]

In 1999 Kelly formed the band Professor Ratbaggy with Hadley (bass guitar, backing vocals), Haymes (keyboards, organ, backing vocals) and Luscombe (drums). Kelly provided guitars and vocals for their debut album, Professor Ratbaggy, on EMI Records.[104] Songs were written jointly by all group members and their work was a more groove-oriented style compared to Kelly's usual folk or rock formula, using samples, synthesiser and percussion.[30] Kelly's second anthology of lyrics entitled Don't Start Me Talking was first published in 1999, with subsequent songs appended in the 2004 edition.[105] This second edition was added to the Victorian Certificate of Education English reading list for Year 12 (final year of secondary schooling) in 2006.[106]

2000–2009: Soundtracks and tribute albums

During the 2000s Paul Kelly worked as a composer for film and TV scores and soundtracks, including Lantana (also as a member of Professor Ratbaggy), Silent Partner, and One Night the Moon in 2001, Fireflies in 2004, and Jindabyne in 2006.[107] These works have resulted in five award wins: ARIA 'Best Original Soundtrack' for Lantana (with Hadley, Haymes and O'Mara); Australian Film Institute (AFI) 'Open Craft Award', Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards 'Best Music Score', and Screen Music Award 'Best Soundtrack Album' for One Night the Moon (with Mairead Hannan, Carmody, John Romeril, Deirdre Hannan, and Alice Garner); Valladolid International Film Festival 'Best Music' award for Jindabyne; and six further nominations.[nb 1]

Kelly also acted in One Night the Moon alongside his then wife, Fairfax, and with their younger daughter Memphis.[107][118] All three sing on the soundtrack, including together for the lullaby, "One Night the Moon".[119] According to Romaine Moreton, Australian Screen Online curator, the "lullaby that the family sings, written by Paul Kelly, sets the tone of the film ... The song is used in this film as a vehicle to explore the characters' interior worlds, something very unusual for a film".[119] Kelly and Fairfax separated before the film's release.[87]

Roll on Summer was released in 2000 as a four-track EP, which peaked at No. 40 on the ARIA singles charts.[34][68] Kelly issued ...Nothing but a Dream in 2001, returning to his core singer-songwriter style.[32] It peaked at No. 7 on the albums chart,[68] and achieved gold record status.[120] The North American version of ...Nothing but a Dream added all four tracks from the Roll on Summer EP as bonus tracks.[121] Murray Bramwell appraised four Kelly-related works in Adelaide Review, "each of them indicative of the rich variety of his gift". On the album ...Nothing but a Dream, he preferred the opening track, "If I Could Start Today Again", to the radio single, "Somewhere in the City", and found the album generally to be "full of familiar Kelly riffs and trademarks". On Silent Partner Kelly's songwriting with Hale provides "some splendid instrumentals" with "a delightfully airy sound". The Lantana soundtrack showed Kelly's "confidence as a composer and his strong grasp of a wide range of musical styles". Finally, One Night the Moon included Mairead Hannan's "richly melodic Irish airs" which "beautifully counterpoint Kelly's work" and Carmody's "distinctive ballads".[122]

In March 2001 Kelly was a support act for Bob Dylan's tour of Australia.[123] Between August and November Kelly performed a series of acoustic shows in New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Spain, and France (the latter supporting Ani DiFranco).[124] In 2002 he undertook a six-week tour of North America,[125][126] which was followed by a tour of the UK and Ireland later that year.[127] In 2002 and 2003 two tribute albums of Kelly's songs were released: Women at the Well featured songs performed by female artists, including Bic Runga, Jenny Morris, Renée Geyer, Magic Dirt, Rebecca Barnard (Rebecca's Empire), Christine Anu, and Kasey Chambers;[32][128] and Stories of Me, which featured fellow songwriters James Reyne, Mia Dyson, and Jeff Lang.[129] Chambers, a country music artist, sees Kelly as a role model: "He's the perfect example of the storyteller that I would love to be".[130] In 2003 Kelly undertook a tour of North America, the UK, and Ireland, performing at the Edmonton International Fringe Festival and again at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.[131][132]

Ways & Means was issued in 2004 and peaked at No. 13.[68] Though identified as a solo record, it was more of a group effort, with a backing band, later dubbed the Boon Companions, co-writing most of the tracks. The Boon Companions consisted of Kelly's nephew Dan Kelly on guitar, Peter Luscombe on drums, his brother Dan Luscombe on guitar and keyboards, and Bill McDonald on bass guitar.[34][133] Bramwell was impressed with their live performance in May: "Kelly steers and shapes not only his music, but the way he presents it. A live show is never just knocked together ... the details are always careful".[133] In February ABC Television started broadcasting the series Fireflies, which featured a score by Kelly and Stephen Rae.[134] The associated soundtrack CD, Fireflies: Songs of Paul Kelly, included tracks by Kelly, Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, Professor Ratbaggy, and Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill.[135] Sian Prior sang with the Boon Companions on the Fireflies track "Los Cucumbros", which later appeared on Stardust Five.[136][137] Prior, an opera singer, became Kelly's girlfriend in 2002.[19][138] They met when she interviewed him for Sunday Arts on ABC Radio. Prior is also a journalist and university lecturer.[19][138]

In March 2004 Kelly performed across North America, including New York, Boston, Chicago, Seattle, and Los Angeles.[139] This was followed by a more extensive series of shows between July and September throughout North America and Europe.[140] In December, in Melbourne, Kelly performed 100 of his songs in alphabetical order over two nights.[141] A similar set of shows were performed in a studio at Sydney Opera House in December 2006, these and similar sets became known as his A to Z shows.[142][143] Foggy Highway was a second bluegrass-oriented album for Kelly, credited to Paul Kelly and the Stormwater Boys and issued in 2005. It peaked at No. 23 on the ARIA albums charts.[68] The line-up for the majority of the tracks was Kelly, Mick Albeck (fiddle), James Gillard (bass guitar), Rod McCormack (guitar), Ian Simpson (banjo), and Trev Warner (mandolin).[144] As with Smoke (his previous bluegrass release), Foggy Highway consisted of a mix of new compositions and rearranged Kelly classics. The Canadian edition of the release included a four-song bonus EP of out-takes.[145]

In June 2005 Kelly put together Timor Leste – Freedom Rising, a collaboration of Australian artists donating new recordings, unreleased tracks, and b-sides to make connections between a wide range of music to raise money for environmental, health, and education projects in East Timor (Timor-Leste).[146] Funds raised from the album went to Life, Love and Health and The Alola Foundation.[147][148] On 26 March 2006 Kelly performed at the Commonwealth Games closing ceremony in Melbourne, singing "Leaps and Bounds" and "Rally Around the Drum".[149][150] On 8 October Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, Hoodoo Gurus, and Sime Nugent performed at the Athenaeum Theatre in Melbourne to again raise funds for Life, Love and Health, and to help support their ongoing programs in Timor-Leste in response to the needs of the people during the humanitarian crisis.[148][151]

Kelly formed Stardust Five in 2006, with the same line-up as Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions from Ways & Means. They released their self-titled debut album in March, with each member contributing by composing the music and Kelly providing lyrics.[152] The album has backing vocals by Prior on two tracks.[153] Kelly toured North America again in 2006,[154] appearing together with The Waifs at clubs and festivals in several US states and the Canadian province of Alberta.[155][156] In November–December Kelly undertook his A-Z tour, a series of solo acoustic performances playing 100 of his songs in alphabetical order over four nights, at the Brisbane Powerhouse, Melbourne's Spiegeltent, and at the Sydney Opera House.[143][157]

In 2007 Kelly released Stolen Apples, containing songs based on religious themes; it peaked at No. 8, and achieved gold record status.[68][158] Following the album's recording, Dan Luscombe left to join The Drones. He was replaced by Ashley Naylor (Even) on guitar and Cameron Bruce (The Polaroids) on keyboards.[8] A tour in support of the album saw Kelly perform the entire album plus selected hits from his catalogue. One of the last performances, on 20 September 2007 in Toowoomba, was filmed and released on DVD as Live Apples: Stolen Apples Performed Live in its Entirety Plus 16 More Songs, in April 2008.[159][160]

Kelly made his first appearance at the Big Day Out concerts across Australia in early 2008,[161] while in March he performed at the South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas.[162] Kelly released Stolen Apples in Ireland and the UK in July, and followed with a tour there in August.[163] In June The Age newspaper commemorated 50 years of Australian rock 'n' roll (the anniversary of the release of Johnny O'Keefe's "Wild One") by selecting the Top 50 Australian Albums. Kelly's albums Gossip and Post rated at No. 7 and No. 30 on the list.[164][165] Kelly was nominated as 'Best Male Artist' for "To Her Door (Live)" and Best Music DVD for Live Apples at the 2008 ARIA Awards.[70] In September he announced that he had reacquired the rights to his old catalogue, including those originally released by Mushroom Records—later bought out by Warner Bros. Records.[166]

 
Country singer Melinda Schneider and Kelly collaborated on "Still Here".
Photo taken in December 2008

In November, as a result of the acquisition EMI released Songs from the South – Volume 2, a collection of Kelly's songs from the last decade, following on from Songs from the South – Volume 1.[167] The new compilation featured the first physical release of Kelly's song, "Shane Warne". Volume 1 and Volume 2 are available separately but also as a combined double album. EMI released a DVD, Paul Kelly – The Video Collection 1985–2008,[167][168] a collection of Kelly's home videos made over the past 23 years. Also included are several live performances.[166] Songs from the South – Volume 2 included one new song, "Thoughts in the Middle of the Night", which he described as "It's a band song, we all wrote it together. There's a poem by James Fenton, a British poet, called "The Mistake", which is probably an influence on the lyrics. It's a waking up in the middle of the night song, for anyone who's woken up at 3 am and not been able to get back to sleep".[33]

In the beginning of 2009 he supported Leonard Cohen's tour of Australia – his first return in 24 years.[169] Kelly's duet with country singer Melinda Schneider, "Still Here", won 'Vocal Collaboration of the Year' at the 2009 CMAA Country Music Awards of Australia.[170] In February, in response to hearing about the devastation to the Yarra Valley region of Victoria in Australia, Cohen and Kelly donated $200,000 to the Victorian Bushfire Appeal in support of those affected by the extensive Black Saturday bushfires that razed the area just weeks after their performance at the Rochford Winery for the A Day on the Green concert.[171] Kelly performed at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 14 March for Sound Relief, a multi-venue rock music concert in support of victims of the bushfires.[172] The event was held simultaneously with a concert at the Sydney Cricket Ground.[172] All proceeds from the Melbourne concert went to the Red Cross Victorian Bushfire relief.[172] Also performing at the Melbourne concert were Augie March, Bliss n Eso with Paris Wells, Gabriella Cilmi, Hunters & Collectors, Jack Johnson, Chambers and Shane Nicholson with Troy Cassar-Daley, Kings of Leon, Jet, Midnight Oil, Liam Finn, Split Enz, and Wolfmother.[173]

On 13 and 14 November, radio station Triple J presented a Kelly tribute concert—marking his 30th anniversary as a solo artist—at the Forum Theatre in Melbourne, and highlighted his contribution to Australian music. The line-up included Missy Higgins, John Butler, Paul Dempsey (Something for Kate), Katy Steele (Little Birdy), Bob Evans, Ozi Batla (The Herd), Dan Kelly, Clare Bowditch, Jae Laffer (The Panics), Adalita Srsen (Magic Dirt), Dan Sultan, and Megan Washington interpreting Kelly's songs, with members of Augie March as the backing band and Ashley Naylor as musical director.[55] A recording of the concerts was released by ABC Music as a DVD and a double CD, Before Too Long, with a bonus CD featuring original songs by Kelly, on 19 February 2010.[174] Kelly's national 'More Songs from the South' tour in December 2009 included band members Vika Bull on vocals, Peter Luscombe on drums, Bill McDonald on bass guitar and backing vocals, Naylor on guitar, and Cameron Bruce on keyboards.[175][176] Kelly contributed to the national magazine, The Monthly, from 2009 to 2010.[177]

2010–2013: How to Make Gravy, Stories of Me and Spring and Fall

 
Kelly performing "The A-Z Shows" in New York City, September 2011. The tour was in support of his memoir, How to Make Gravy and the related 8×CD boxed set, A – Z Recordings, both issued in September 2010.[178][179]

Paul Kelly published his memoir, How to Make Gravy, via Penguin Books (Australia) on 22 September 2010.[178] "It's a mongrel memoir. It's a bit hard to describe at the moment. It's not traditional; it's writing around the A-Z theme – I tell stories around the song lyrics in alphabetical order. It's slow, so it will be a while coming, but I'll get there".[3] As a companion to his memoir, he issued an 8×CD box set, A – Z Recordings, with live performances from his A – Z Tours from 2004 to 2010.[143] The 105 tracks are listed alphabetically, and were typically performed over four nights. The set includes a booklet of photographs.[179] The related audio book on 16×CDs has Kelly joined by Australian actors, Cate Blanchett, Russell Crowe, Judy Davis, Hugh Jackman and Ben Mendelsohn each reading a chosen chapter.[180]

Maurice Frawley, a guitarist for Kelly in various groups who co-wrote "Look So Fine, Feel So Low" (1987), died of cancer in May 2009.[181] Kelly worked with Charlie Owen and others to create a 3×CD tribute album, Long Gone Whistle – The Songs of Maurice Frawley, which was released in August 2010.[182][183] In July that year, Kelly performed at Splendour in the Grass.[184] On 15 December 2010 he was inducted into The Age EG Awards Hall of Fame.[185][186] In April 2011 Kelly performed at the East Coast Blues & Roots Music Festival (Bluesfest), which was followed by appearances as a special guest at Dylan's concerts in Sydney and Melbourne.[187][188] Later that month, Kelly co-headlined a show with Neil Finn at Red Hill Auditorium in Perth; it was the first music concert at the new venue.[189] In May his memoir, How to Make Gravy, was short-listed for the Prime Minister's Literary Award in the non-fiction category; while in July it was co-winner of 'Biography of the Year' at the Australian Book Industry Awards – with Anh Do's The Happiest Refugee.[190][191]

On 29 September 2012 Kelly performed "How to Make Gravy" and "Leaps and Bounds" at the AFL Grand Final although most of the performance was not broadcast on Seven Network's pre-game segment.[192] Nui Te Koha of Sunday Herald Sun declared "Kelly, an integral part of Melbourne folklore and its music scene, and a noted footy tragic, deserved his place on the Grand Final stage – which has been long overdue ... broadcaster Seven's refusal to show Kelly's performance, except the last verse of 'Leaps and Bounds', was no laughing matter".[192] On 19 October that year, Kelly issued a new studio album, Spring and Fall, which debuted at No. 8.[68] It was recorded with Dan Kelly and Machine Translations' J Walker. Guest musicians include former band members Peter and Dan Luscombe, Vika and Linda Bull, and new collaborator, Laura Jean.[193][194]

 
Neil Finn (left) and Kelly. In February and March 2013 the pair toured Australia, which is recorded on a live album and related DVD, Goin' Your Way (November 2013).[195][196]
Finn had earlier praised Kelly's song writing "There is something unique and powerful about the way Kelly mixes up everyday detail with the big issues of life, death, love and struggle – not a trace of pretence or fakery in there".[19]

Also in October, a biographical film, Paul Kelly: Stories of Me, directed by Ian Darling, was released.[197] Darling had worked on the project for two years and it included "insights from family, friends, musicians and music journalists, as well as Kelly himself".[197] The Australian Financial Review's Katrina Strickland described the documentary as "not a critique of his music, nor an intrusive look at his personal life" which uses a "much less linear approach to the life of a musician whose career has spanned four decades".[197] After it appeared on ABC-TV in October of the following year, Andrew P. Street of The Guardian noted it "brings an ambitious, complex young Kelly to life – making a relisten of his work essential".[198]

2013–2016: Collaborative albums

During February and March 2013, Kelly and Neil Finn undertook a collaborative tour of Australia.[195][196] Their performance on 10 March at the Sydney Opera House was recorded for the live album, Goin' Your Way (8 November 2013).[195] It was issued as a 2× CD, which peaked at No. 5 on the ARIA Albums Chart;[199] and also as a DVD, which peaked at No. 1 on the related ARIA Music DVD Chart.[200] Later in March, Kelly toured New Zealand with Dan Kelly to promote Spring and Fall by playing in church venues.[201]

Goin' Your Way was the first of several collaborative albums Kelly would release in the following years. The Merri Soul Sessions was released December 2014, and features contributions from the Bull sisters, Kira Puru, Clairy Browne and Dan Sultan. The ensemble would also tour together in late 2014 and early 2015. In 2016, Kelly would release two albums: Seven Sonnets and a Song in April, which was a musical recreation of selected works by William Shakespeare; and Death's Dateless Night in October, a covers album with Charlie Owen.

2017–present: Life Is Fine and Nature

 
Kelly coached Espy Rockdogs to victory at the 2011 Community Cup in Australian rules football. Kelly an ardent supporter of the code, performed at the 2019 AFL Grand Final. He also wrote "Every Step of the Way" to honour indigenous player Eddie Betts, is his struggle against racism in that sport in 2021.

Kelly's first solo album in five years, Life Is Fine, was released in August 2017.[68] The album became his first number-one album and won him four ARIA Awards at that year's ceremony.[68][202] In November and December 2017, Kelly and his band undertook a seventeen-performance tour of thirteen metropolitan and regional Australian cities, as well as four performances in three cities in New Zealand to promote the release of Life is Fine. Supports on the tour included Steve Earle, Middle Kids, Busby Marou and The Eastern.[203][204] Kelly was also a featured artist on the 2018 Groovin' the Moo festival.

In August 2018, Kelly announced the release of a new album, Nature, in October. The album's lead single, "With the One I Love", was released on the same day.[205] He released another compilation album in November 2019, covering 1985–2019, Songs from the South: 1985-2019. In September 2019, he performed at the MCG in the pre-game show at the 2019 AFL Grand Final Day.[206]

On 5 February 2020, Kelly released a single titled, "Sleep, Australia, Sleep". The song addresses Australia's response to climate change.[207] Before the release of the single, the lyrics were published by The Sydney Morning Herald, with Kelly describing the song as "a lament in the form of a lullaby. Paradoxically, it can also be heard as a wake up call - a critique of the widespread attitude amongst humans that we are the most important life form on the planet."[208]

In September 2021, Kelly released a song inspired by Australian Rules footballer Eddie Betts and his battle with racism, titled "Every Step of the Way". On 19 November 2021, Kelly released his twenty-eighth studio album, Paul Kelly's Christmas Train.[209]

Musical style and songwriting

 
Kelly with a harmonica in a cradle, Chill Island Festival, Phillip Island, November 2007

Paul Kelly has been acknowledged as one of Australia's best singer-songwriters.[210] His music style has ranged from bluegrass to studio-oriented dub reggae, but his core output comfortably straddles folk, rock, and country.[51][211] His lyrics capture Australia's vastness both in culture and landscape; he has chronicled life about him for over 30 years and is described as the poet laureate of Australia.[14][30] According to music writer Glenn A. Baker, his Australian-ness may be a reason Kelly has not achieved international success.[19] David Fricke from Rolling Stone calls Kelly "one of the finest songwriters I have ever heard, Australian or otherwise."[1]

Fellow songwriter Neil Finn (Crowded House) has said, "There is something unique and powerful about the way Kelly mixes up everyday detail with the big issues of life, death, love and struggle – not a trace of pretence or fakery in there".[19] Ross Clelland, writing for Rolling Stone, described Kelly: "[W]hile he was (rightly) lauded for his ability to sing of injustice without ranting, or deal with the darker sides of human nature non-judgementally, often overlooked was the fact he could write a damn fine melodic hook to go with those words".[212] Tim Freedman (The Whitlams) acknowledges Kelly, Peter Garrett (Midnight Oil), and John Schumann (Redgum) as inspiring him by "[furnishing] our suburbs with our own myths and social history".[213] However, Kelly has been quoted as saying "Song writing is mysterious to me. I still feel like a total beginner. I don't feel like I have got it nailed yet".[2][214] In 2007 Kelly donated his 'Lee Oskar' harmonica to the Sydney Powerhouse Museum. The museum's statement of significance cites Kelly's talent as a songwriter, his distinctive voice, and his harmonica playing, particularly on Live, May 1992.[210]

Kelly described his songwriting as "a scavenging art, a desperate act. For me it's a bit from here, a bit from there, fumbling around, never quite knowing what you're doing ... Song writing is like a way of feeling connected to mystery."[33] He has resisted the label of 'storyteller' and insists that his songs are not strictly autobiographical; "they come from imagining someone in a particular situation. Sometimes a sequence of events happens which makes it more a story, but other times it's just that situation".[26] Sometimes the same character is found in different songs, such as in "To Her Door", "Love Never Runs on Time", and "How to Make Gravy".[26]

Kelly has also provided songs for many other artists, tailoring them to their particular vocal range. Women at the Well (2002) had 14 female artists record his songs in tribute.[32] According to Kelly, he adapted his song "Foggy Highway" for Renée Geyer because "I admired her deep soul singing, ferocious and vulnerable ... When I heard the finished version ... the hairs rose up on the back of my neck."[215] Kelly and The Stormwater Boys recorded it in a bluegrass style as the title track for the 2005 album Foggy Highway.[216] Divinyls' lead singer Christina Amphlett recorded "Before Too Long"—she was attracted by the lyrics—she interpreted the song's narrator as being a stalker, and provided a female perspective in a darkly menacing manner à-la Fatal Attraction.[128]

Kelly has written songs with and for numerous artists, including Mick Thomas, Geyer, Kate Ceberano, Vika and Linda Bull, Nick Cave, Nick Barker, Kasey Chambers, Yothu Yindi, Archie Roach, Gyan, Monique Brumby, Kelly Willis, Missy Higgins, and Troy Cassar-Daley.[26] He has described how some songs he writes are suited to other vocal ranges. "Quite often, I'm trying to write a certain kind of song and it's more ambitious than what my voice will get to. That's how I started writing songs with other people in mind".[217] Kelly and Carmody's "From Little Things Big Things Grow" was analysed by Sydney University's Linguistics professor James R Martin. "[They] render the story as a narrative ... with the familiar Orientation, Complication, Evaluation, Resolution and Coda staging". Martin finds that Kelly and Carmody made the point that when people exert their rights with support from friends, they may defeat those with prestige.[218]

Kelly understands that co-writing with other songwriters lends power to his songs. "You often write songs with collaborators that you would never write by yourself. It's a way of dragging a song out of you that you wouldn't have come up with".[26] One of his collaborators, Linda Bull, described Kelly's process: they would start with a simple chat. "We'd just chuck ideas around and he'd pick the best bits. He'd take all the bluntness and crudeness out of it and make it beautiful; that's his magic ... It's conversations that you have everyday [sic]".[19] Forster summarised his 2009 review of Kelly's compilation, Songs from the South, with "[his songs] sound easy and approachable ... Then you think: If the songs are so simple and the ideas behind them so clear, why aren't more people writing like Paul Kelly and sounding as good as he does?"[63] In 2010 Carmody and Kelly's "From Little Things Big Things Grow" was added to the National Film and Sound Archive's Sounds of Australia Registry.[219]

Personal life

Kelly's first marriage (1980–84) was to Hilary Brown; the couple had a son, Declan, who later worked as a radio presenter on 3RRR's Against the Arctic from 2006.[15][19] As of 2007, he was a DJ around Melbourne and played the drums.[220] For Paul Kelly: Stories of Me, Declan recalled his feelings whenever he hears "When I First Met Your Ma", which describes Kelly's courtship of Hilary Brown.[198] Brown remembered "songs written especially for and about her" but also about other women, she quipped "There are too many girls out there! One for every song!"[198]

Kelly's second marriage (1993–2001) was to actress Kaarin Fairfax.[72] The Monthly's Richard Guilliatt travelled with Kelly, his band and "his new love and future wife, the diminutive" Fairfax on a section of the group's US tour prior to the release of Under the Sun.[37] The couple have two daughters, Madeleine and Memphis.[15] From 1989 to 1992, Fairfax supplied backing vocals on tracks by Paul Kelly and the Messengers. In 1990, as Mary-Jo Starr, a country music artist, Fairfax released three singles and an album called Too Many Movies. Memphis Kelly starred alongside her parents in the Rachel Perkins short film One Night the Moon (2001) for which Paul Kelly composed the score.[15][107] After the couple separated in 2001, Madeleine and Memphis stayed with Fairfax, but Kelly maintained contact with his daughters.[19] In 2010, Madeleine and Memphis formed a pop indie trio, Wishful, with Sam Humphrey; they were later joined by Harley Hamer and Caleb Williams. In March 2014, Wishful performed at the Port Fairy Folk Festival.[221]

Kelly was in a relationship with Sian Prior, a journalist, university lecturer and opera singer, from 2002-11.[19][138] They met when Kelly was interviewed on her Sunday Arts ABC radio program.[19] Kelly wrote "You're 39, You're Beautiful and You're Mine" for Prior who was already 40 by the time he finished.[19] Prior has played clarinet and provided backing vocals on some of Kelly's songs, as well as with the Stardust Five.[222] She has performed live with Kelly on several occasions, including clarinet on six tracks of his A – Z Recordings boxed set.[223][224][225]

In his memoir, Kelly credited Prior with inspiring him to give up his long-term heroin addiction, "I got lucky, I met a woman who said: 'It's me or it'. She gave me the number of a counsellor ... I thought about 'it' every day for a long time. Less now".[226] The couple had separated during the making of Kelly's biopic, however the separation is not mentioned and Prior is not interviewed in the film.[197][198] According to Prior after a date in 2011, "[we] came home. He sat on the bed. 'I've decided I want to be single again,' he told her. 'Yes, I have been with other women.'"[227] The split occurred after she had filmed her interview and "after the breakup, [she] requested the footage not be used. Her presence in Kelly's life is as a footnote in the credits. It's as if she was never there."[227]

Siân Darling became Kelly's partner. They met in 2014 performing in a theatre show called Funeral. The couple continue to live and work together from their St Kilda base. Darling is an artist, activist, curator and producer and has been working on Kelly's professional management team since 2018.[citation needed] Her influence on Kelly's work is noted in the Stuart Coupe biography. Darling is the subject of several songs and has produced and directed some of Kelly's music videos: "With the One I Love", "Sleep Australia Sleep" and "When We're Both Old and Mad". Darling produced the 2020 re-issue version of Carmody's album Cannot Buy My Soul.[228]

 
Paul Kelly (at right) and his nephew, Dan Kelly, performing at Rockwood Music Hall in September 2011

Kelly's brother, Martin, is the father of Dan Kelly, a singer-guitarist.[229] Dan has performed with his uncle on several of Kelly's albums, including Ways and Means, as a member of Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions, and on Stolen Apples. Dan and Paul were both members of Stardust Five, which released Stardust Five.

Paul Kelly's younger sister, Mary Jo Kelly, is a Melbourne-based pianist who performed with him on the track "South of Germany" for Paul Kelly Live at the Athenaeum, May 1992 (1992).[136] She has performed in Latin bands and worked as a music teacher at the Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School.[19][20] Mary Jo provided piano on Archie Roach's album Charcoal Lane (1990), which was produced by Kelly and Connolly.[230][231]

Awards and recognition

Paul Kelly has won several awards, including 16 ARIA Awards from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), and three APRA Awards from either the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) alone or together with the Australian Guild of Screen Composers. APRA named "To Her Door", solely written by Kelly,[66] and "Treaty", written by Kelly and members of Yothu Yindi,[81] in their Top 30 best Australian songs of all time in 2001.[82] Kelly was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 1997, alongside the Bee Gees and Graeme Bell.[70][98] He has won six Country Music Awards from the Country Music Association of Australia,[232][233] and four Mo Awards (Australian entertainment industry).[234][235] Kelly was a Victorian State Finalist for the 2012 Australian of the Year Award.[236] Kelly was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2017 for distinguished service to the performing arts and to the promotion of the national identity through contributions as a singer, songwriter and musician.[4]

In August 2022, the City of Adelaide renamed a laneway in the city centre off Flinders Street Paul Kelly Lane. Previously named Pilgrim Lane after the adjacent Pilgrim Uniting Church, the lane is now called Paul Kelly Lane. It is the fourth such renaming after musicians associated with the city, the others being Sia Furler, No Fixed Address, and Cold Chisel.[237]

Bibliography

Paul Kelly has written, co-written or edited the following:[84][238]

  • Kelly, Paul; Paine, Richard (1990). Songs [musical score]. Sydney: Wise. ISBN 978-0-949785-27-5.
  • Kelly, Paul; Paine, Richard (1993). Songs. Book two [musical score]. Sydney: Wise. ISBN 978-0-949785-31-2.
  • Kelly, Paul (29 September 1993). Lyrics. Pymble, New South Wales: Angus & Robertson. ISBN 978-0-207-18221-1.
  • Bennett, Roger (1995). Funerals and circuses. Songs by Paul Kelly. Sydney: Currency Press. ISBN 978-0-86819-380-9.
  • Kelly, Paul (2004) [1999]. Don't start me talking: lyrics 1984–2004 (2nd ed.). St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-86508-105-2.
  • Kelly, Paul; Judith, Kate; National Educational Advancement Programs (2005). Don't start me talking: lyrics 1984–2004. Carlton, Victoria: National Educational Advancement Programs (NEAP). ISBN 978-1-86478-099-4.
  • Kelly, Paul; Carmody, Kev (1 December 2008). From Little Things Big Things Grow. Illustrators: Peter Hudson, Kalkarinji School Children Northern Territory. Camberwell East, Victoria: One Day Hill. ISBN 978-0-9805643-1-0.
  • Kelly, Paul (21 September 2010). How to Make Gravy. Camberwell, Vic: Penguin Books (Australia). ISBN 978-1-926428-22-2.
  • Kelly, Paul (19 November 2019). Love Is Strong As Death: Poems Chosen by Paul Kelly. Camberwell, Vic: Penguin Books (Australia). ISBN 978-1-760892-68-5.

Discography

Studio albums

Films

Paul Kelly: Stories of Me (1 October 2012) is an Australian documentary by Shark Island Productions.[197] The film is an intimate portrait of Kelly that follows his 40-year career as Australia's foremost singer-songwriter.[197] The film won the Film Critics Circle Award in 2012 for Best Documentary, and the ASE Award in 2013 for Best Documentary Editing. Nominations include the ADG Award in 2013 for Best Documentary Feature and AACTA Award 2013 for Best Sound in a Documentary. The film was part of the Official Selection at the Melbourne International Film Festival 2012[240] and the Canberra International Film Festival in that year.[241]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Award wins mentioned here are:

References

General
  • Doyle, Brian (25 January 2004). "Chapter Ten: Deeper Water". Spirited Men: Story, Soul & Substance. Cambridge, Mass. pp. 113–127. ISBN 978-1-56101-258-9.
  • Kelly, Paul (21 September 2010). How to Make Gravy. Camberwell, Victoria: Penguin Books (Australia). ISBN 978-1-926428-22-2.
  • Leser, David (1999). "Paul Kelly – June 1991" (PDF). The Whites of Their Eyes: Profiles. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. pp. 203–211. ISBN 978-1-86508-114-4. Retrieved 2 December 2017. Note: Original profile was published as "Paul Kelly" in Good Weekend, The Sydney Morning Herald, on 2 June 1991.ISSN 0312-6315. OCLC 226369741.
  • McFarlane, Ian (1999). . St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-86508-072-7. Archived from the original on 10 October 2004. Retrieved 23 July 2011. Note: Archived copy at WHAMMO (Worldwide Home of Australasian Music and More Online) homepage of Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop.
  • Nimmervoll, Ed. "Paul Kelly > Biography". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  • Spencer, Chris; Nowara, Zbig; McHenry, Paul (2002) [1987]. The Who's Who of Australian Rock. notes by Ed Nimmervoll. Noble Park, Victoria: Five Mile Press. ISBN 978-1-86503-891-9.[242]
Specific
  1. ^ a b David, Fricke (1997). Songs from the South: Paul Kelly's Greatest Hits (Media notes). Paul Kelly. Mushroom Records. p. 2. MUSH33009.2.
  2. ^ a b "Paul Kelly Biography". Dumbthings. Paul Kelly Official Website (Eva Zsigri). June 1997. Archived from the original on 14 April 1999. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  3. ^ a b Donovan, Patrick (15 May 2009). . The Age. ISSN 0312-6307. OCLC 224060909. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  4. ^ a b (PDF). Australia Day 2017 Honours List. Governor-General of Australia. 26 January 2017. p. 36. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 November 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  5. ^ Sargent, S. (2016). Indigenous Rights: Changes and Challenges in the 21st Century. Legend Press. p. 140. ISBN 978-1-78955-131-0. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  6. ^ Doyle, p. 115.
  7. ^ . Music Australia. Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  8. ^ a b . Rip It Up Magazine. No. 992. 17–23 July 2006. Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 25 June 2011.
  9. ^ Kelly (2010), pp. 190–193.
  10. ^ a b c McMahon, Bruce (7 July 2007). "Paul Kelly Has no Answers". The Courier-Mail. ISSN 1322-5235. OCLC 223420922. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  11. ^ a b Doyle, p. 116.
  12. ^ . Kelly & Co. Lawyers. Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 14 March 2010.
  13. ^ Kelly (2010), p. 223.
  14. ^ a b c Denton, Andrew (5 July 2004). . Enough Rope with Andrew Denton. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Archived from the original on 22 August 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Wilkie, Meredith (25 April 2004). "Lure of Hearth and Home". The Age. ISSN 0312-6307. OCLC 224060909. from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  16. ^ Kelly (2010), p 10.
  17. ^ a b Leser, p. 204.
  18. ^ (PDF). CO.AS.IT. 2006. p. 1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Horsburgh, Susan (4 June 2007). . The Sydney Morning Herald. ISSN 0312-6315. OCLC 226369741. Archived from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  20. ^ a b "Music Curriculum – VCASS". Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School (VCASS). from the original on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  21. ^ Higgins-Devine, Kelly; Hayes, Rita (10 June 2004). . Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Radio Queensland. Archived from the original on 28 January 2005. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  22. ^ . Edmund Rice Oceania. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  23. ^ Bunworth, Mick (10 October 2001). . The 7.30 Report. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Television. Archived from the original on 25 February 2006. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
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External links

  • Official website
  • "From Little Things Big Things Grow" Audio sample and description at Australian Screen.

paul, kelly, australian, musician, confused, with, american, musician, irish, musician, paul, maurice, kelly, born, january, 1955, australian, rock, music, singer, songwriter, guitarist, performed, solo, numerous, groups, including, dots, coloured, girls, mess. Not to be confused with the American musician or the Irish musician Paul Maurice Kelly AO born 13 January 1955 is an Australian rock music singer songwriter and guitarist He has performed solo and has led numerous groups including the Dots the Coloured Girls and the Messengers He has worked with other artists and groups including associated projects Professor Ratbaggy and Stardust Five Kelly s music style has ranged from bluegrass to studio oriented dub reggae but his core output straddles folk rock and country His lyrics capture the vastness of the culture and landscape of Australia by chronicling life about him for over 30 years David Fricke from Rolling Stone calls Kelly one of the finest songwriters I have ever heard Australian or otherwise 1 Kelly has said Song writing is mysterious to me I still feel like a total beginner I don t feel like I have got it nailed yet 2 Paul KellyAOKelly performing at Byron Bay Bluesfest on 6 April 2015Background informationBirth namePaul Maurice KellyBorn 1955 01 13 13 January 1955 age 68 Adelaide South Australia AustraliaGenresAustralian rock folkOccupation s Musician singer songwriter producer poetInstrument s Vocals guitar harmonicaYears active1974 presentLabelsMushroom A amp M Gawdaggie EMI CapitolWebsitepaulkelly wbr com wbr au After growing up in Adelaide Kelly travelled around Australia before settling in Melbourne in 1976 He became involved in the pub rock scene and drug culture and recorded two albums with the Dots Kelly moved to Sydney by 1985 where he formed Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls The band was renamed Paul Kelly and the Messengers initially only for international releases to avoid possible racial interpretations of the word coloured At the end of the 1980s Kelly returned to Melbourne and in 1991 he disbanded the Messengers Kelly s Top 40 singles include Billy Baxter Before Too Long Darling It Hurts To Her Door his highest charting local hit in 1987 Dumb Things appeared on United States charts in 1988 and Roll on Summer Top 20 albums include Gossip Under the Sun Comedy Songs from the South 1997 compilation Nothing but a Dream Stolen Apples Spring and Fall The Merri Soul Sessions Seven Sonnets and a Song Death s Dateless Night with Charlie Owen Life Is Fine his first number one album and Nature Kelly has won 14 Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA Music Awards including his induction into their hall of fame in 1997 Dan Kelly his nephew is a singer and guitarist in his own right Dan performed with Kelly on Ways and Means and Stolen Apples Both were members of Stardust Five which released a self titled album in 2006 On 22 September 2010 Kelly released his memoir How to Make Gravy which he described as it s not traditional it s writing around the A Z theme I tell stories around the song lyrics in alphabetical order 3 His biographical film Paul Kelly Stories of Me directed by Ian Darling was released to cinemas in October 2012 In 2001 the Australasian Performing Right Association APRA listed the Top 30 Australian songs of all time which included Kelly s To Her Door and Treaty written by Kelly and members of Yothu Yindi Aside from Treaty Kelly wrote or co wrote several songs on Indigenous Australian social issues and historical events He provided songs for many other artists tailoring them to their particular vocal range The album Women at the Well from 2002 had 14 female artists record his songs in tribute Kelly was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2017 for distinguished service to the performing arts and to the promotion of the national identity through contributions as a singer songwriter and musician 4 Kelly was married and divorced twice he has three children and resides in St Kilda a suburb of Melbourne Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1974 1984 Early career and with the Dots 2 2 1985 1991 Coloured Girls to Messengers 2 3 1992 99 Solo career and with others 2 4 2000 2009 Soundtracks and tribute albums 2 5 2010 2013 How to Make Gravy Stories of Me and Spring and Fall 2 6 2013 2016 Collaborative albums 2 7 2017 present Life Is Fine and Nature 3 Musical style and songwriting 4 Personal life 5 Awards and recognition 6 Bibliography 7 Discography 8 Films 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life EditPaul Maurice Kelly 5 was born on 13 January 1955 in Adelaide to John Erwin Kelly a lawyer and Josephine nee Filippini the sixth of eight surviving children 6 7 According to Rip It Up magazine legend has it that Kelly s mother gave birth to him in a taxi outside North Adelaide s Calvary Hospital 8 Although Kelly was raised as a Roman Catholic he later described himself as a non believer 9 10 He is the great great grandson of Jeremiah Kelly who emigrated from Ireland in 1852 and settled in Clare South Australia 11 His paternal grandfather Francis Kelly established a law firm in 1917 which his father John joined in 1937 12 John Kelly died in 1968 at the age of 52 after having been diagnosed with Parkinson s disease three years earlier 13 Paul Kelly was thirteen years old when his father died 14 Kelly described his father I have good memories he was the kind of father that well I missed him when he died very much The older children were growing into him at the time he died He was not well enough to play sport with me 15 16 Kelly s maternal grandfather was an Argentine born Italian speaking opera singer Count Ercole Filippini a leading baritone for the La Scala Opera Company in Milan 17 Filippini was touring Australia in 1914 with a Spanish opera company when World War I broke out Filippini stayed and later married Anne McPharland one of his students 11 As Countessa Anne Filippini she was Australia s first female symphony orchestra conductor 15 She sang the role of Marguerite in Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Radio Perth s performance of Faust in 1928 17 Kelly s grandparents started the Italo Australian Opera Company which toured the country in the 1920s 18 Josephine raised the younger children alone after John s death but found time to assist others in need 14 Paul s oldest sister Anne became a nun and went on to write hymns while a younger sister Mary Jo plays piano in Latin bands and teaches music 19 20 An older brother Martin works for Edmund Rice International 21 22 with another brother Tony a drug and alcohol counsellor who ran as an Australian Greens candidate in the 2001 and 2004 federal elections 23 24 Josephine Kelly moved to Brisbane where she died in 2000 at the age of 76 25 Kelly attended Rostrevor College a Christian Brothers school where he played trumpet and studied piano became the first XI cricket captain played in the first XVIII football Australian rules and was named dux of his senior year 26 27 He studied arts at Flinders University in 1973 but left after a term disillusioned with academic life He began writing prose and started a magazine with some friends 28 Kelly spent several years working odd jobs travelling around the country and learning guitar before he moved to Melbourne in 1976 29 30 Career Edit1974 1984 Early career and with the Dots Edit Salamanca Place Hobart 2007 where in mid 1974 Kelly made his first public performance a two song set comprising Bob Dylan s Girl from the North Country and Streets of Forbes a traditional Australian folk song about bushranger Ben Hall 31 While travelling around Australia Paul Kelly made his first public performance in 1974 in Hobart 19 32 He later recalled I was living there at the time and there was a folk club at Salamanca Place They had a night I think a Monday night where anyone could get up I sang Dylan s Girl from North Country and Streets of Forbes a traditional Australian song about Ben Hall I can t really remember how it went I remember I had a lot to drink afterwards from relief I was incredibly nervous 33 His first published song It s the Falling Apart that Makes You was written after listening to Van Morrison s Astral Weeks at the age of 19 26 although in an interview with Drum Media he recalled writing his first song It was an open tuning and had four lines about catching trains I have got a recording of it somewhere It was called Catching a Train I wrote a lot of songs about trains early on trains and fires and then I moved on to water 33 In 1976 Kelly appeared on Debutantes a compilation album featuring various Melbourne based artists and joined pub rockers The High Rise Bombers from 1977 to 1978 30 34 The High Rise Bombers included Kelly vocals guitar songwriter Martin Armiger guitar vocals songwriter Lee Cass bass guitar Chris Dyson guitar Sally Ford saxophone songwriter John Lloyd drums and Keith Shadwick saxophone 35 Chris Langman guitar vocals replaced Dyson in early 1978 Langman never played with the High Rise Bombers and is incorrectly listed as a guitarist on the Melbourne Club album In August after Armiger left for The Sports and Ford for The Kevins Kelly formed Paul Kelly and the Dots with Langman and Lloyd 30 The High Rise Bombers recorded two tracks She s Got It and Domestic Criminal which appeared on The Melbourne Club a 1981 compilation by various artists on Missing Link Records 30 Billy Baxter source source Paul Kelly amp the Dots first charting single Billy Baxter released in November 1980 Ahead of their debut 1981 album Talk It has a delightful ska tinged style 30 Problems playing this file See media help Kelly had already established himself as a respected songwriter other Melbourne musicians would go to see him on their nights off 36 Richard Guilliatt writing for The Monthly later described Kelly from a 1979 performance at Richmond s Kingston Hotel the singer was a skinny guy with a head of black curls framing a pale face and a bent nose singing with his eyes closed one arm outstretched and the other resting on the body of the Fender Telecaster 37 Kelly was introduced to Hilary Brown at one of the Dots gigs and they later married the relationship is described in When I First Met Your Ma 1992 38 39 Brown s father supplied Kelly with a gravy recipe used on How to Make Gravy 1996 40 Their son Declan was born in 1980 38 39 The Dots included various line ups from 1978 to 1982 41 The band released their debut single Recognition in 1979 which did not reach the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart top 50 30 42 The Dots then signed to Mushroom Records and at the record company s insistence were renamed Paul Kelly and the Dots They issued Billy Baxter in November 1980 which peaked at No 38 30 42 Rock music historian Ian McFarlane described the single as a delightful ska tinged track 30 Kelly s first television performance was Billy Baxter on the national pop show Countdown 43 Their debut album Talk followed in March 1981 which reached No 44 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart 42 Late in 1981 Paul Kelly and the Dots recorded their second album Manila in the Philippines capital It was issued in August 1982 but had no chart success 30 Release was delayed by line up changes and because Kelly was assaulted in Melbourne he had his jaw broken 30 44 In an October 1982 interview with The Australian Women s Weekly Kelly indicated he was more pleased with Manila than Talk as It has more unity with this one we didn t have people dropping into the studio to play 45 Years later Kelly disavowed both Dots albums I wish I could grab the other two and put em in a big hole 19 46 The 1982 film Starstruck was directed by Gillian Armstrong and starred Jo Kennedy 47 Paul Kelly and the Dots supplied Rocking Institution for its soundtrack and Kelly added to the score 48 Kennedy released Body and Soul a cover of Split Enz She Got Body She Got Soul as a shared single with Rocking Institution 48 Acting in a minor role in Starstruck was Kaarin Fairfax who later became Kelly s second wife 19 47 Kelly was without a recording contract after the Dots folded in 1982 27 Paul Kelly Band was formed in 1983 with Michael Armiger Martin Armiger s younger brother bass guitar Chris Coyne saxophone Maurice Frawley guitar and Greg Martin drums By 1984 Michael Barclay ex the Zimmermen replaced Martin on drums and Graham Lee guitar pedal steel guitar joined 30 49 Kelly s involvement in the Melbourne drug culture he described his heroin addiction as a long period of occasional use resulted in erratic performances 44 Problems with his marriage and drug use disrupted his career and by 1984 the marriage had broken up Hilary had moved to Sydney initially leaving their young son with Kelly 50 He disbanded the group three months later and relocated to Sydney so he could share parenting responsibilities with Hilary while Declan grew up 15 51 1985 1991 Coloured Girls to Messengers Edit Paul Kelly amp the Coloured Girls Long Bay Gaol Christmas Eve 1985 Paul Kelly stayed with Don Walker Cold Chisel in Kings Cross Walker had lived with Hilary s sister and wrote new songs on Walker s piano 52 Kelly then moved into a flat with Paul Hewson Dragon in Elizabeth Bay 39 53 Both Walker and Hewson encouraged Kelly to continue with his song writing 52 By January 1985 he recorded the self funded album at a cost of 3 500 Post 10 Session musicians included Michael Barclay Weddings Parties Anything on harmonies guitarist Steve Connolly The Zimmermen and bass guitarist Ian Rilen Rose Tattoo X 27 54 They spent two weeks recording at Clive Shakespeare s studio Shakespeare engineered the album and co produced with Kelly It was released in May 1985 on the independent label White Records and licensed to Mushroom Records 27 46 Kelly dedicated Post to his former flatmate Hewson who had died of a heroin overdose in January 55 56 According to McFarlane it s a stark highly personalised collection of acoustic songs that showcased the extraordinary breadth of Kelly s songwriting skills 30 Rolling Stone Australia hailed Post as the best record of 1985 10 15 AllMusic s Mike DeGagne felt While he focuses on life s daily tragedies and tribulations there is a missing element in the music as it lacks any vigor or flash 57 A single From St Kilda to King s Cross was released from the album but did not chart 30 Russell Crowe during his first trip to the US visited the tourist venue of Death Valley and used Post to refocus himself his concise insights and acerbic wisdom are exactly the music for strolling the bottom of ancient oceans both literal and metaphoric 46 After recording Post Kelly established a full time band which included Armiger Barclay and Connolly bass guitarist Jon Schofield and keyboardist Peter Bull 58 Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls were named through a joke based on Lou Reed s song Walk on the Wild Side 30 46 Armiger soon left and the Coloured Girls line up stabilised in late 1985 as Barclay Bull Connolly and Schofield 30 34 Stuart Coupe Kelly s manager advised him to sign with Regular Records due to difficulty re signing with Mushroom s Michael Gudinski 46 Michelle Higgins Mushroom s public relations officer was a Kelly supporter and locked herself into a Sebel Townhouse Hotel room at Mushroom s expense for nearly a week in mid 1986 and refused to leave until Gudinski had signed Kelly to a two album recording contract 46 59 Kelly performed for The Rock Party a charity project initiated by The National Campaign Against Drug Abuse which included other Australasian musicians The Rock Party released a 12 single Everything to Live For which was produced by Joe Wissert Phil Rigger and Phil Beazley 60 61 In September Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls released a 24 track double LP Gossip 34 The album included remakes of four songs from Post and also featured Maralinga Rainy Land a song about the effects of British nuclear tests on the Maralinga Tjarutja indigenous people of Maralinga South Australia 19 32 Gossip peaked at No 15 with singles chart success for Before Too Long which peaked at No 15 and Darling It Hurts which reached No 25 42 A single LP version of Gossip featuring 15 songs was issued in the United States by A amp M Records in July 1987 34 DeGagne noted that it bursts at the seams with blustery distinguished tunes captivating both the somberness and the intrigue thrown forward from this fine Australian storyteller 62 Gossip was co produced by Kelly and Alan Thorne Hoodoo Gurus The Stems who according to music journalist Robert Forster former The Go Betweens singer songwriter helped the band create a sound that will not only influence future roots rock bands but through its directness sparkle and dedication to the song will also come to be seen as particularly Australian Ultimately it means the records these people made together are timeless 63 Due to possible racist connotations the band changed its name for international releases to Paul Kelly and the Messengers 30 46 They made a US tour initially supporting Crowded House and then headlining travelling across the US by bus 30 Darling It Hurts peaked at No 19 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart in 1987 64 The New York Times rock critic Jon Pareles wrote Mr Kelly sang one smart catchy three minute song after another dozens of them as the band played with no frills directness following the band s performance at the Bottom Line Club in New York 65 To Her Door source source Paul Kelly amp the Coloured Girls highest charting single To Her Door released in September 1987 Ahead of their December album Under the Sun Problems playing this file See media help Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls second album Under the Sun was released in late 1987 in Australia and New Zealand and in early 1988 in North America and Europe under the name Paul Kelly and the Messengers 34 On the Kent Music Report Albums Chart it reached No 19 The lead single To Her Door written by Kelly peaked at No 14 on the related singles chart 42 66 Forster indicated that the song demonstrated one of Kelly s finest qualities as a songwriter which is his unforced empathy 63 DeGagne observed a style similar to Elvis Costello and Steve Forbert and said the album provided acoustically bright story songs and character based tales with unlimited substance 67 Another single Dumb Things was released in early 1989 and attained No 36 on the Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA Singles Chart 68 In the US it reached No 16 on the Billboard Modern Rock chart 64 The song was included on the soundtrack for the 1988 Yahoo Serious film Young Einstein 69 The video directed by Claudia Castle won an ARIA Award for Best Video 70 71 Kelly met Kaarin Fairfax his second wife in 1988 and they married in 1993 15 72 From 1989 to 1992 Fairfax supplied backing vocals on tracks by Paul Kelly and the Messengers In 1990 as country music artist Mary Jo Starr she released three singles and an album Too Many Movies using the Messengers and Kelly as session musicians Michael Armiger Connolly and Frawley were in her backing tour band The Drive in Motel 34 73 Fairfax and Kelly s two children are Madeleine and Memphis 15 So Much Water So Close to Home was released in 1989 by Paul Kelly and the Messengers in all markets It peaked at No 10 on the ARIA Albums Chart but none of its singles reached the ARIA Top 40 Singles Chart 68 Forster stated that with Everything s Turning to White Kelly shows mastery in condensing a Raymond Carver tale of fishermen who discover a dead woman s body but continue to fish before reporting their find 63 The same short story was used for the 2006 film Jindabyne for which Kelly composed the soundtrack 74 DeGagne preferred Everything s Turning to White and Sweet Guy to the other album tracks which seem a little weak in the content department 75 Kelly relocated back to Melbourne after having lived in Sydney for six years 15 19 Another US tour was undertaken but there was no further chart success for albums or singles released in the US market 30 In 1991 the band released Comedy which peaked at No 12 on the ARIA Albums Chart 68 DeGagne noticed a folk filled tinge to each song but the occasional quickened pace balances out these tunes rather nicely 76 From Little Things Big Things Grow a seven minute track from the album was co written by Kelly and Kev Carmody 66 It highlights the Gurindji Strike and Vincent Lingiari as part of the Indigenous Australian struggle for land rights and reconciliation 30 77 Forster indicates it has Dylanesque influences and shows Kelly honing the skills of a fine balladeer and storyteller 63 A cover version that was released in May 2008 by The GetUp Mob part of the GetUp advocacy group peaked at No 4 on the ARIA singles charts 78 This version included samples from speeches by Prime Ministers Paul Keating in 1992 and Kevin Rudd in 2008 79 It featured vocals by Carmody and Kelly as well as other Australian artists Kelly collaborated with members of indigenous band Yothu Yindi to write Treaty which peaked at No 11 in September 1991 80 81 To Her Door and Treaty were voted into the APRA Top 30 Australian songs of all time in 2001 82 Paul Kelly and the Messengers gave their last performance in August 1991 with Kelly set to pursue a solo career 30 He justified his decision We forged a style together But I felt if we had kept going it would have got formulaic and that s why I broke it up I wanted to try and start moving into other areas start mixing things up 55 Paul Kelly and the Messengers final album Hidden Things was a collection of previously released B sides stray non LP tracks radio sessions and other rarities It was released in May 1992 and reached No 29 68 One track Rally Around the Drum written with Archie Roach was about an indigenous tent boxing man 30 1992 99 Solo career and with others Edit Main article Professor Ratbaggy Hotel Esplanade St Kilda In May 1995 Kelly recorded tracks for Live at the Continental and the Esplanade 1996 in the hotel s Gershwin Room 83 Since 1992 Paul Kelly has had a solo career fronted the Paul Kelly Band and worked in occasional collaborations with other songwriters and performers 30 In 1992 he was asked to compose songs for Funerals and Circuses a Roger Bennett play about racial tensions in small town Australia 84 85 Kelly took the role of a petrol attendant when the play premiered at the Adelaide Fringe Festival that year and was directed by his wife Fairfax 86 87 Kelly co wrote Hey Boys with Mark Seymour Hunters amp Collectors for the soundtrack of the 1992 Australian film Garbo when released as a single it peaked at No 62 88 Kelly contributed songs and vocals to the soundtrack of the 1993 television series Seven Deadly Sins 89 Kelly s first post Messengers solo release was the live double CD Live May 1992 released in November 1992 30 AllMusic s Brett Hartenbach noted that Kelly s band had fleshed out his songs in the studio but he was still able to show his vignettes of life love and the underbelly of both have plenty of power on their own 90 Kelly had relocated to Los Angeles and signed with Vanguard Records to tour the US as a solo artist 30 While in Los Angeles he produced fellow Australian Renee Geyer s album Difficult Woman 1994 34 Kelly returned to Australia in 1993 and wrote a collection of lyrics aptly titled Lyrics which opens with a quote from Anton Chekhov I don t have what you would call a philosophy or coherent world view so I shall have to limit myself to describing how my heroes love marry give birth die and speak 91 ii 92 How to Make Gravy source source Paul Kelly s 1996 extended play How to Make Gravy contained the title track released in November It was nominated as Song of the Year at the 1998 APRA Awards The recipe for gravy was supplied by his first father in law Problems playing this file See media help His next album Wanted Man released in 1994 reached No 11 68 Kelly also composed music for the 1994 film Everynight Everynight directed by Alkinos Tsilimidos It is set in the notorious H division of Victoria s Pentridge Prison 93 94 Kelly s next solo releases were Deeper Water in 1995 and Live at the Continental and the Esplanade in 1996 34 Between March and May 1995 Kelly undertook a seven week tour of North America appearing on several dates with Liz Phair and Joe Jackson 95 By 1996 Paul Kelly Band members included Stephen Hadley bass ex Black Sorrows Bruce Haymes keyboards Peter Luscombe drums ex Black Sorrows and Shane O Mara guitar 34 Spencer P Jones Beasts of Bourbon was guest guitarist on some performances 30 This line up issued the CD EP How to Make Gravy with the title track earning Kelly a Song of the Year nomination at the 1998 Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Music Awards 96 APRA s Debbie Kruger noted Kelly s attraction to the theatrical where the same protagonist is described in To Her Door Love Never Runs on Time from Wanted Man and How to Make Gravy 26 In 1997 Kelly released his compilation album Songs from the South Paul Kelly s Greatest Hits on Mushroom Records 34 The 20 track album peaked at No 2 and has achieved quadruple platinum certification indicating sales of over 280 000 68 97 Kelly won the ARIA Award in 1997 for Best Male Artist having been previously nominated in 1993 1995 and 1996 70 At 20 September 1997 ceremony he was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame 98 Kelly won the Best Male Artist award again in 1998 and has been nominated for the same award a further seven times 70 Kelly s next album Words and Music appeared in 1998 which peaked at No 17 and included three singles that did not reach the Top 40 68 Andrew Ford interviewed Kelly for ABC radio s The Music Show in May Ford found the album very exciting very visceral you can almost smell the sex Kelly admitted that he preferred R amp B music which deals with sex love and joy without becoming either banal or smug He finds such songs more difficult to write but believes he has started to do so 99 1998 also saw Kelly undertaking a three week tour of Canada and the US to promote Words and Music 100 Smoke was released by Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill the latter is a Melbourne bluegrass band comprising Gerry Hale on guitar dobro mandolin fiddle and vocals Adam Gare on fiddle mandolin and vocals Peter Somerville on banjo and vocals and Stuart Speed on double bass 30 34 The album featured a mix of old and new Kelly songs treated in classic bluegrass fashion 30 32 Our Sunshine newly written was a tribute to Ned Kelly a famous Australian outlaw not related Kelly had previously recorded a Slim Dusty track with Uncle Bill Thanks a Lot for the compilation Where Joy Kills Sorrow 1997 30 101 Smoke was issued on Kelly s new label Gawdaggie through EMI Records in October 1999 and peaked at No 36 68 It won three awards from the Victorian Country Music Association Best Group Open Best Group Victorian and Album of the Year in 2000 102 In September Kelly performed at the Spiegeltent at the Edinburgh Festival as well as shows in London and Dublin 103 In 1999 Kelly formed the band Professor Ratbaggy with Hadley bass guitar backing vocals Haymes keyboards organ backing vocals and Luscombe drums Kelly provided guitars and vocals for their debut album Professor Ratbaggy on EMI Records 104 Songs were written jointly by all group members and their work was a more groove oriented style compared to Kelly s usual folk or rock formula using samples synthesiser and percussion 30 Kelly s second anthology of lyrics entitled Don t Start Me Talking was first published in 1999 with subsequent songs appended in the 2004 edition 105 This second edition was added to the Victorian Certificate of Education English reading list for Year 12 final year of secondary schooling in 2006 106 2000 2009 Soundtracks and tribute albums Edit Main article Stardust Five During the 2000s Paul Kelly worked as a composer for film and TV scores and soundtracks including Lantana also as a member of Professor Ratbaggy Silent Partner and One Night the Moon in 2001 Fireflies in 2004 and Jindabyne in 2006 107 These works have resulted in five award wins ARIA Best Original Soundtrack for Lantana with Hadley Haymes and O Mara Australian Film Institute AFI Open Craft Award Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards Best Music Score and Screen Music Award Best Soundtrack Album for One Night the Moon with Mairead Hannan Carmody John Romeril Deirdre Hannan and Alice Garner Valladolid International Film Festival Best Music award for Jindabyne and six further nominations nb 1 Kelly also acted in One Night the Moon alongside his then wife Fairfax and with their younger daughter Memphis 107 118 All three sing on the soundtrack including together for the lullaby One Night the Moon 119 According to Romaine Moreton Australian Screen Online curator the lullaby that the family sings written by Paul Kelly sets the tone of the film The song is used in this film as a vehicle to explore the characters interior worlds something very unusual for a film 119 Kelly and Fairfax separated before the film s release 87 Roll on Summer was released in 2000 as a four track EP which peaked at No 40 on the ARIA singles charts 34 68 Kelly issued Nothing but a Dream in 2001 returning to his core singer songwriter style 32 It peaked at No 7 on the albums chart 68 and achieved gold record status 120 The North American version of Nothing but a Dream added all four tracks from the Roll on Summer EP as bonus tracks 121 Murray Bramwell appraised four Kelly related works in Adelaide Review each of them indicative of the rich variety of his gift On the album Nothing but a Dream he preferred the opening track If I Could Start Today Again to the radio single Somewhere in the City and found the album generally to be full of familiar Kelly riffs and trademarks On Silent Partner Kelly s songwriting with Hale provides some splendid instrumentals with a delightfully airy sound The Lantana soundtrack showed Kelly s confidence as a composer and his strong grasp of a wide range of musical styles Finally One Night the Moon included Mairead Hannan s richly melodic Irish airs which beautifully counterpoint Kelly s work and Carmody s distinctive ballads 122 In March 2001 Kelly was a support act for Bob Dylan s tour of Australia 123 Between August and November Kelly performed a series of acoustic shows in New Zealand the United Kingdom Ireland Spain and France the latter supporting Ani DiFranco 124 In 2002 he undertook a six week tour of North America 125 126 which was followed by a tour of the UK and Ireland later that year 127 In 2002 and 2003 two tribute albums of Kelly s songs were released Women at the Well featured songs performed by female artists including Bic Runga Jenny Morris Renee Geyer Magic Dirt Rebecca Barnard Rebecca s Empire Christine Anu and Kasey Chambers 32 128 and Stories of Me which featured fellow songwriters James Reyne Mia Dyson and Jeff Lang 129 Chambers a country music artist sees Kelly as a role model He s the perfect example of the storyteller that I would love to be 130 In 2003 Kelly undertook a tour of North America the UK and Ireland performing at the Edmonton International Fringe Festival and again at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 131 132 Ways amp Means was issued in 2004 and peaked at No 13 68 Though identified as a solo record it was more of a group effort with a backing band later dubbed the Boon Companions co writing most of the tracks The Boon Companions consisted of Kelly s nephew Dan Kelly on guitar Peter Luscombe on drums his brother Dan Luscombe on guitar and keyboards and Bill McDonald on bass guitar 34 133 Bramwell was impressed with their live performance in May Kelly steers and shapes not only his music but the way he presents it A live show is never just knocked together the details are always careful 133 In February ABC Television started broadcasting the series Fireflies which featured a score by Kelly and Stephen Rae 134 The associated soundtrack CD Fireflies Songs of Paul Kelly included tracks by Kelly Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions Professor Ratbaggy and Paul Kelly with Uncle Bill 135 Sian Prior sang with the Boon Companions on the Fireflies track Los Cucumbros which later appeared on Stardust Five 136 137 Prior an opera singer became Kelly s girlfriend in 2002 19 138 They met when she interviewed him for Sunday Arts on ABC Radio Prior is also a journalist and university lecturer 19 138 In March 2004 Kelly performed across North America including New York Boston Chicago Seattle and Los Angeles 139 This was followed by a more extensive series of shows between July and September throughout North America and Europe 140 In December in Melbourne Kelly performed 100 of his songs in alphabetical order over two nights 141 A similar set of shows were performed in a studio at Sydney Opera House in December 2006 these and similar sets became known as his A to Z shows 142 143 Foggy Highway was a second bluegrass oriented album for Kelly credited to Paul Kelly and the Stormwater Boys and issued in 2005 It peaked at No 23 on the ARIA albums charts 68 The line up for the majority of the tracks was Kelly Mick Albeck fiddle James Gillard bass guitar Rod McCormack guitar Ian Simpson banjo and Trev Warner mandolin 144 As with Smoke his previous bluegrass release Foggy Highway consisted of a mix of new compositions and rearranged Kelly classics The Canadian edition of the release included a four song bonus EP of out takes 145 In June 2005 Kelly put together Timor Leste Freedom Rising a collaboration of Australian artists donating new recordings unreleased tracks and b sides to make connections between a wide range of music to raise money for environmental health and education projects in East Timor Timor Leste 146 Funds raised from the album went to Life Love and Health and The Alola Foundation 147 148 On 26 March 2006 Kelly performed at the Commonwealth Games closing ceremony in Melbourne singing Leaps and Bounds and Rally Around the Drum 149 150 On 8 October Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions Hoodoo Gurus and Sime Nugent performed at the Athenaeum Theatre in Melbourne to again raise funds for Life Love and Health and to help support their ongoing programs in Timor Leste in response to the needs of the people during the humanitarian crisis 148 151 Kelly formed Stardust Five in 2006 with the same line up as Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions from Ways amp Means They released their self titled debut album in March with each member contributing by composing the music and Kelly providing lyrics 152 The album has backing vocals by Prior on two tracks 153 Kelly toured North America again in 2006 154 appearing together with The Waifs at clubs and festivals in several US states and the Canadian province of Alberta 155 156 In November December Kelly undertook his A Z tour a series of solo acoustic performances playing 100 of his songs in alphabetical order over four nights at the Brisbane Powerhouse Melbourne s Spiegeltent and at the Sydney Opera House 143 157 In 2007 Kelly released Stolen Apples containing songs based on religious themes it peaked at No 8 and achieved gold record status 68 158 Following the album s recording Dan Luscombe left to join The Drones He was replaced by Ashley Naylor Even on guitar and Cameron Bruce The Polaroids on keyboards 8 A tour in support of the album saw Kelly perform the entire album plus selected hits from his catalogue One of the last performances on 20 September 2007 in Toowoomba was filmed and released on DVD as Live Apples Stolen Apples Performed Live in its Entirety Plus 16 More Songs in April 2008 159 160 Kelly made his first appearance at the Big Day Out concerts across Australia in early 2008 161 while in March he performed at the South by Southwest music festival in Austin Texas 162 Kelly released Stolen Apples in Ireland and the UK in July and followed with a tour there in August 163 In June The Age newspaper commemorated 50 years of Australian rock n roll the anniversary of the release of Johnny O Keefe s Wild One by selecting the Top 50 Australian Albums Kelly s albums Gossip and Post rated at No 7 and No 30 on the list 164 165 Kelly was nominated as Best Male Artist for To Her Door Live and Best Music DVD for Live Apples at the 2008 ARIA Awards 70 In September he announced that he had reacquired the rights to his old catalogue including those originally released by Mushroom Records later bought out by Warner Bros Records 166 Country singer Melinda Schneider and Kelly collaborated on Still Here Photo taken in December 2008 In November as a result of the acquisition EMI released Songs from the South Volume 2 a collection of Kelly s songs from the last decade following on from Songs from the South Volume 1 167 The new compilation featured the first physical release of Kelly s song Shane Warne Volume 1 and Volume 2 are available separately but also as a combined double album EMI released a DVD Paul Kelly The Video Collection 1985 2008 167 168 a collection of Kelly s home videos made over the past 23 years Also included are several live performances 166 Songs from the South Volume 2 included one new song Thoughts in the Middle of the Night which he described as It s a band song we all wrote it together There s a poem by James Fenton a British poet called The Mistake which is probably an influence on the lyrics It s a waking up in the middle of the night song for anyone who s woken up at 3 am and not been able to get back to sleep 33 In the beginning of 2009 he supported Leonard Cohen s tour of Australia his first return in 24 years 169 Kelly s duet with country singer Melinda Schneider Still Here won Vocal Collaboration of the Year at the 2009 CMAA Country Music Awards of Australia 170 In February in response to hearing about the devastation to the Yarra Valley region of Victoria in Australia Cohen and Kelly donated 200 000 to the Victorian Bushfire Appeal in support of those affected by the extensive Black Saturday bushfires that razed the area just weeks after their performance at the Rochford Winery for the A Day on the Green concert 171 Kelly performed at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 14 March for Sound Relief a multi venue rock music concert in support of victims of the bushfires 172 The event was held simultaneously with a concert at the Sydney Cricket Ground 172 All proceeds from the Melbourne concert went to the Red Cross Victorian Bushfire relief 172 Also performing at the Melbourne concert were Augie March Bliss n Eso with Paris Wells Gabriella Cilmi Hunters amp Collectors Jack Johnson Chambers and Shane Nicholson with Troy Cassar Daley Kings of Leon Jet Midnight Oil Liam Finn Split Enz and Wolfmother 173 On 13 and 14 November radio station Triple J presented a Kelly tribute concert marking his 30th anniversary as a solo artist at the Forum Theatre in Melbourne and highlighted his contribution to Australian music The line up included Missy Higgins John Butler Paul Dempsey Something for Kate Katy Steele Little Birdy Bob Evans Ozi Batla The Herd Dan Kelly Clare Bowditch Jae Laffer The Panics Adalita Srsen Magic Dirt Dan Sultan and Megan Washington interpreting Kelly s songs with members of Augie March as the backing band and Ashley Naylor as musical director 55 A recording of the concerts was released by ABC Music as a DVD and a double CD Before Too Long with a bonus CD featuring original songs by Kelly on 19 February 2010 174 Kelly s national More Songs from the South tour in December 2009 included band members Vika Bull on vocals Peter Luscombe on drums Bill McDonald on bass guitar and backing vocals Naylor on guitar and Cameron Bruce on keyboards 175 176 Kelly contributed to the national magazine The Monthly from 2009 to 2010 177 2010 2013 How to Make Gravy Stories of Me and Spring and Fall Edit Kelly performing The A Z Shows in New York City September 2011 The tour was in support of his memoir How to Make Gravy and the related 8 CD boxed set A Z Recordings both issued in September 2010 178 179 Paul Kelly published his memoir How to Make Gravy via Penguin Books Australia on 22 September 2010 178 It s a mongrel memoir It s a bit hard to describe at the moment It s not traditional it s writing around the A Z theme I tell stories around the song lyrics in alphabetical order It s slow so it will be a while coming but I ll get there 3 As a companion to his memoir he issued an 8 CD box set A Z Recordings with live performances from his A Z Tours from 2004 to 2010 143 The 105 tracks are listed alphabetically and were typically performed over four nights The set includes a booklet of photographs 179 The related audio book on 16 CDs has Kelly joined by Australian actors Cate Blanchett Russell Crowe Judy Davis Hugh Jackman and Ben Mendelsohn each reading a chosen chapter 180 Maurice Frawley a guitarist for Kelly in various groups who co wrote Look So Fine Feel So Low 1987 died of cancer in May 2009 181 Kelly worked with Charlie Owen and others to create a 3 CD tribute album Long Gone Whistle The Songs of Maurice Frawley which was released in August 2010 182 183 In July that year Kelly performed at Splendour in the Grass 184 On 15 December 2010 he was inducted into The Age EG Awards Hall of Fame 185 186 In April 2011 Kelly performed at the East Coast Blues amp Roots Music Festival Bluesfest which was followed by appearances as a special guest at Dylan s concerts in Sydney and Melbourne 187 188 Later that month Kelly co headlined a show with Neil Finn at Red Hill Auditorium in Perth it was the first music concert at the new venue 189 In May his memoir How to Make Gravy was short listed for the Prime Minister s Literary Award in the non fiction category while in July it was co winner of Biography of the Year at the Australian Book Industry Awards with Anh Do s The Happiest Refugee 190 191 On 29 September 2012 Kelly performed How to Make Gravy and Leaps and Bounds at the AFL Grand Final although most of the performance was not broadcast on Seven Network s pre game segment 192 Nui Te Koha of Sunday Herald Sun declared Kelly an integral part of Melbourne folklore and its music scene and a noted footy tragic deserved his place on the Grand Final stage which has been long overdue broadcaster Seven s refusal to show Kelly s performance except the last verse of Leaps and Bounds was no laughing matter 192 On 19 October that year Kelly issued a new studio album Spring and Fall which debuted at No 8 68 It was recorded with Dan Kelly and Machine Translations J Walker Guest musicians include former band members Peter and Dan Luscombe Vika and Linda Bull and new collaborator Laura Jean 193 194 Neil Finn left and Kelly In February and March 2013 the pair toured Australia which is recorded on a live album and related DVD Goin Your Way November 2013 195 196 Finn had earlier praised Kelly s song writing There is something unique and powerful about the way Kelly mixes up everyday detail with the big issues of life death love and struggle not a trace of pretence or fakery in there 19 Also in October a biographical film Paul Kelly Stories of Me directed by Ian Darling was released 197 Darling had worked on the project for two years and it included insights from family friends musicians and music journalists as well as Kelly himself 197 The Australian Financial Review s Katrina Strickland described the documentary as not a critique of his music nor an intrusive look at his personal life which uses a much less linear approach to the life of a musician whose career has spanned four decades 197 After it appeared on ABC TV in October of the following year Andrew P Street of The Guardian noted it brings an ambitious complex young Kelly to life making a relisten of his work essential 198 2013 2016 Collaborative albums Edit During February and March 2013 Kelly and Neil Finn undertook a collaborative tour of Australia 195 196 Their performance on 10 March at the Sydney Opera House was recorded for the live album Goin Your Way 8 November 2013 195 It was issued as a 2 CD which peaked at No 5 on the ARIA Albums Chart 199 and also as a DVD which peaked at No 1 on the related ARIA Music DVD Chart 200 Later in March Kelly toured New Zealand with Dan Kelly to promote Spring and Fall by playing in church venues 201 Goin Your Way was the first of several collaborative albums Kelly would release in the following years The Merri Soul Sessions was released December 2014 and features contributions from the Bull sisters Kira Puru Clairy Browne and Dan Sultan The ensemble would also tour together in late 2014 and early 2015 In 2016 Kelly would release two albums Seven Sonnets and a Song in April which was a musical recreation of selected works by William Shakespeare and Death s Dateless Night in October a covers album with Charlie Owen 2017 present Life Is Fine and Nature Edit Kelly coached Espy Rockdogs to victory at the 2011 Community Cup in Australian rules football Kelly an ardent supporter of the code performed at the 2019 AFL Grand Final He also wrote Every Step of the Way to honour indigenous player Eddie Betts is his struggle against racism in that sport in 2021 Kelly s first solo album in five years Life Is Fine was released in August 2017 68 The album became his first number one album and won him four ARIA Awards at that year s ceremony 68 202 In November and December 2017 Kelly and his band undertook a seventeen performance tour of thirteen metropolitan and regional Australian cities as well as four performances in three cities in New Zealand to promote the release of Life is Fine Supports on the tour included Steve Earle Middle Kids Busby Marou and The Eastern 203 204 Kelly was also a featured artist on the 2018 Groovin the Moo festival In August 2018 Kelly announced the release of a new album Nature in October The album s lead single With the One I Love was released on the same day 205 He released another compilation album in November 2019 covering 1985 2019 Songs from the South 1985 2019 In September 2019 he performed at the MCG in the pre game show at the 2019 AFL Grand Final Day 206 On 5 February 2020 Kelly released a single titled Sleep Australia Sleep The song addresses Australia s response to climate change 207 Before the release of the single the lyrics were published by The Sydney Morning Herald with Kelly describing the song as a lament in the form of a lullaby Paradoxically it can also be heard as a wake up call a critique of the widespread attitude amongst humans that we are the most important life form on the planet 208 In September 2021 Kelly released a song inspired by Australian Rules footballer Eddie Betts and his battle with racism titled Every Step of the Way On 19 November 2021 Kelly released his twenty eighth studio album Paul Kelly s Christmas Train 209 Musical style and songwriting Edit Kelly with a harmonica in a cradle Chill Island Festival Phillip Island November 2007 Paul Kelly has been acknowledged as one of Australia s best singer songwriters 210 His music style has ranged from bluegrass to studio oriented dub reggae but his core output comfortably straddles folk rock and country 51 211 His lyrics capture Australia s vastness both in culture and landscape he has chronicled life about him for over 30 years and is described as the poet laureate of Australia 14 30 According to music writer Glenn A Baker his Australian ness may be a reason Kelly has not achieved international success 19 David Fricke from Rolling Stone calls Kelly one of the finest songwriters I have ever heard Australian or otherwise 1 Fellow songwriter Neil Finn Crowded House has said There is something unique and powerful about the way Kelly mixes up everyday detail with the big issues of life death love and struggle not a trace of pretence or fakery in there 19 Ross Clelland writing for Rolling Stone described Kelly W hile he was rightly lauded for his ability to sing of injustice without ranting or deal with the darker sides of human nature non judgementally often overlooked was the fact he could write a damn fine melodic hook to go with those words 212 Tim Freedman The Whitlams acknowledges Kelly Peter Garrett Midnight Oil and John Schumann Redgum as inspiring him by furnishing our suburbs with our own myths and social history 213 However Kelly has been quoted as saying Song writing is mysterious to me I still feel like a total beginner I don t feel like I have got it nailed yet 2 214 In 2007 Kelly donated his Lee Oskar harmonica to the Sydney Powerhouse Museum The museum s statement of significance cites Kelly s talent as a songwriter his distinctive voice and his harmonica playing particularly on Live May 1992 210 Foggy Highway source source Paul Kelly recorded a version of Foggy Highway for Live May 1992 He re recorded it with lead vocals by Renee Geyer for the various artists soundtrack Seven Deadly Sins Music from the ABC TV Series in 1993 This sample is the Geyer 1993 version Problems playing this file See media help Kelly described his songwriting as a scavenging art a desperate act For me it s a bit from here a bit from there fumbling around never quite knowing what you re doing Song writing is like a way of feeling connected to mystery 33 He has resisted the label of storyteller and insists that his songs are not strictly autobiographical they come from imagining someone in a particular situation Sometimes a sequence of events happens which makes it more a story but other times it s just that situation 26 Sometimes the same character is found in different songs such as in To Her Door Love Never Runs on Time and How to Make Gravy 26 Kelly has also provided songs for many other artists tailoring them to their particular vocal range Women at the Well 2002 had 14 female artists record his songs in tribute 32 According to Kelly he adapted his song Foggy Highway for Renee Geyer because I admired her deep soul singing ferocious and vulnerable When I heard the finished version the hairs rose up on the back of my neck 215 Kelly and The Stormwater Boys recorded it in a bluegrass style as the title track for the 2005 album Foggy Highway 216 Divinyls lead singer Christina Amphlett recorded Before Too Long she was attracted by the lyrics she interpreted the song s narrator as being a stalker and provided a female perspective in a darkly menacing manner a la Fatal Attraction 128 Kelly has written songs with and for numerous artists including Mick Thomas Geyer Kate Ceberano Vika and Linda Bull Nick Cave Nick Barker Kasey Chambers Yothu Yindi Archie Roach Gyan Monique Brumby Kelly Willis Missy Higgins and Troy Cassar Daley 26 He has described how some songs he writes are suited to other vocal ranges Quite often I m trying to write a certain kind of song and it s more ambitious than what my voice will get to That s how I started writing songs with other people in mind 217 Kelly and Carmody s From Little Things Big Things Grow was analysed by Sydney University s Linguistics professor James R Martin They render the story as a narrative with the familiar Orientation Complication Evaluation Resolution and Coda staging Martin finds that Kelly and Carmody made the point that when people exert their rights with support from friends they may defeat those with prestige 218 Kelly understands that co writing with other songwriters lends power to his songs You often write songs with collaborators that you would never write by yourself It s a way of dragging a song out of you that you wouldn t have come up with 26 One of his collaborators Linda Bull described Kelly s process they would start with a simple chat We d just chuck ideas around and he d pick the best bits He d take all the bluntness and crudeness out of it and make it beautiful that s his magic It s conversations that you have everyday sic 19 Forster summarised his 2009 review of Kelly s compilation Songs from the South with his songs sound easy and approachable Then you think If the songs are so simple and the ideas behind them so clear why aren t more people writing like Paul Kelly and sounding as good as he does 63 In 2010 Carmody and Kelly s From Little Things Big Things Grow was added to the National Film and Sound Archive s Sounds of Australia Registry 219 Personal life EditKelly s first marriage 1980 84 was to Hilary Brown the couple had a son Declan who later worked as a radio presenter on 3RRR s Against the Arctic from 2006 15 19 As of 2007 he was a DJ around Melbourne and played the drums 220 For Paul Kelly Stories of Me Declan recalled his feelings whenever he hears When I First Met Your Ma which describes Kelly s courtship of Hilary Brown 198 Brown remembered songs written especially for and about her but also about other women she quipped There are too many girls out there One for every song 198 Kelly s second marriage 1993 2001 was to actress Kaarin Fairfax 72 The Monthly s Richard Guilliatt travelled with Kelly his band and his new love and future wife the diminutive Fairfax on a section of the group s US tour prior to the release of Under the Sun 37 The couple have two daughters Madeleine and Memphis 15 From 1989 to 1992 Fairfax supplied backing vocals on tracks by Paul Kelly and the Messengers In 1990 as Mary Jo Starr a country music artist Fairfax released three singles and an album called Too Many Movies Memphis Kelly starred alongside her parents in the Rachel Perkins short film One Night the Moon 2001 for which Paul Kelly composed the score 15 107 After the couple separated in 2001 Madeleine and Memphis stayed with Fairfax but Kelly maintained contact with his daughters 19 In 2010 Madeleine and Memphis formed a pop indie trio Wishful with Sam Humphrey they were later joined by Harley Hamer and Caleb Williams In March 2014 Wishful performed at the Port Fairy Folk Festival 221 Kelly was in a relationship with Sian Prior a journalist university lecturer and opera singer from 2002 11 19 138 They met when Kelly was interviewed on her Sunday Arts ABC radio program 19 Kelly wrote You re 39 You re Beautiful and You re Mine for Prior who was already 40 by the time he finished 19 Prior has played clarinet and provided backing vocals on some of Kelly s songs as well as with the Stardust Five 222 She has performed live with Kelly on several occasions including clarinet on six tracks of his A Z Recordings boxed set 223 224 225 In his memoir Kelly credited Prior with inspiring him to give up his long term heroin addiction I got lucky I met a woman who said It s me or it She gave me the number of a counsellor I thought about it every day for a long time Less now 226 The couple had separated during the making of Kelly s biopic however the separation is not mentioned and Prior is not interviewed in the film 197 198 According to Prior after a date in 2011 we came home He sat on the bed I ve decided I want to be single again he told her Yes I have been with other women 227 The split occurred after she had filmed her interview and after the breakup she requested the footage not be used Her presence in Kelly s life is as a footnote in the credits It s as if she was never there 227 Sian Darling became Kelly s partner They met in 2014 performing in a theatre show called Funeral The couple continue to live and work together from their St Kilda base Darling is an artist activist curator and producer and has been working on Kelly s professional management team since 2018 citation needed Her influence on Kelly s work is noted in the Stuart Coupe biography Darling is the subject of several songs and has produced and directed some of Kelly s music videos With the One I Love Sleep Australia Sleep and When We re Both Old and Mad Darling produced the 2020 re issue version of Carmody s album Cannot Buy My Soul 228 Paul Kelly at right and his nephew Dan Kelly performing at Rockwood Music Hall in September 2011 Kelly s brother Martin is the father of Dan Kelly a singer guitarist 229 Dan has performed with his uncle on several of Kelly s albums including Ways and Means as a member of Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions and on Stolen Apples Dan and Paul were both members of Stardust Five which released Stardust Five Paul Kelly s younger sister Mary Jo Kelly is a Melbourne based pianist who performed with him on the track South of Germany for Paul Kelly Live at the Athenaeum May 1992 1992 136 She has performed in Latin bands and worked as a music teacher at the Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School 19 20 Mary Jo provided piano on Archie Roach s album Charcoal Lane 1990 which was produced by Kelly and Connolly 230 231 Awards and recognition EditMain article List of awards and nominations received by Paul Kelly Paul Kelly has won several awards including 16 ARIA Awards from the Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA and three APRA Awards from either the Australasian Performing Right Association APRA alone or together with the Australian Guild of Screen Composers APRA named To Her Door solely written by Kelly 66 and Treaty written by Kelly and members of Yothu Yindi 81 in their Top 30 best Australian songs of all time in 2001 82 Kelly was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 1997 alongside the Bee Gees and Graeme Bell 70 98 He has won six Country Music Awards from the Country Music Association of Australia 232 233 and four Mo Awards Australian entertainment industry 234 235 Kelly was a Victorian State Finalist for the 2012 Australian of the Year Award 236 Kelly was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2017 for distinguished service to the performing arts and to the promotion of the national identity through contributions as a singer songwriter and musician 4 In August 2022 the City of Adelaide renamed a laneway in the city centre off Flinders Street Paul Kelly Lane Previously named Pilgrim Lane after the adjacent Pilgrim Uniting Church the lane is now called Paul Kelly Lane It is the fourth such renaming after musicians associated with the city the others being Sia Furler No Fixed Address and Cold Chisel 237 Bibliography EditPaul Kelly has written co written or edited the following 84 238 Kelly Paul Paine Richard 1990 Songs musical score Sydney Wise ISBN 978 0 949785 27 5 Kelly Paul Paine Richard 1993 Songs Book two musical score Sydney Wise ISBN 978 0 949785 31 2 Kelly Paul 29 September 1993 Lyrics Pymble New South Wales Angus amp Robertson ISBN 978 0 207 18221 1 Bennett Roger 1995 Funerals and circuses Songs by Paul Kelly Sydney Currency Press ISBN 978 0 86819 380 9 Kelly Paul 2004 1999 Don t start me talking lyrics 1984 2004 2nd ed St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 86508 105 2 Kelly Paul Judith Kate National Educational Advancement Programs 2005 Don t start me talking lyrics 1984 2004 Carlton Victoria National Educational Advancement Programs NEAP ISBN 978 1 86478 099 4 Kelly Paul Carmody Kev 1 December 2008 From Little Things Big Things Grow Illustrators Peter Hudson Kalkarinji School Children Northern Territory Camberwell East Victoria One Day Hill ISBN 978 0 9805643 1 0 Kelly Paul 21 September 2010 How to Make Gravy Camberwell Vic Penguin Books Australia ISBN 978 1 926428 22 2 Kelly Paul 19 November 2019 Love Is Strong As Death Poems Chosen by Paul Kelly Camberwell Vic Penguin Books Australia ISBN 978 1 760892 68 5 Discography EditMain article Paul Kelly discography Studio albums Talk with the Dots 1981 Manila with the Dots 1982 Post 1985 Gossip with the Coloured Girls 1986 Under the Sun with the Coloured Girls 1987 So Much Water So Close to Home with the Messengers 1989 Comedy with The Messengers 1991 Hidden Things with The Messengers 1992 Wanted Man 1994 Deeper Water 1995 Words and Music 1998 Smoke with Uncle Bill 1999 Professor Ratbaggy with Professor Ratbaggy 1999 Nothing but a Dream 2001 Ways amp Means 2004 Foggy Highway with The Stormwater Boys 2005 Stardust Five with Stardust Five 2006 Stolen Apples 2007 Spring and Fall 2012 The Merri Soul Sessions with Vika and Linda Bull Dan Sultan Kira Puru and Clairy Browne 2014 Seven Sonnets and a Song 2016 Death s Dateless Night with Charlie Owen 2016 Life Is Fine 2017 Nature 2018 Thirteen Ways to Look at Birds with James Ledger Alice Keath and Seraphim Trio 2019 Forty Days 2020 Please Leave Your Light On 239 with Paul Grabowsky 2020 Paul Kelly s Christmas Train 2021 Films EditPaul Kelly Stories of Me 1 October 2012 is an Australian documentary by Shark Island Productions 197 The film is an intimate portrait of Kelly that follows his 40 year career as Australia s foremost singer songwriter 197 The film won the Film Critics Circle Award in 2012 for Best Documentary and the ASE Award in 2013 for Best Documentary Editing Nominations include the ADG Award in 2013 for Best Documentary Feature and AACTA Award 2013 for Best Sound in a Documentary The film was part of the Official Selection at the Melbourne International Film Festival 2012 240 and the Canberra International Film Festival in that year 241 See also Edit Music portal Australia portalMusic of Australia Bands and accompanying musicians of Paul KellyNotes Edit Award wins mentioned here are Lantana award win for Best Original Soundtrack at the ARIA Music Awards of 2002 70 108 The award is shared with fellow composers and performers Stephen Hadley Bruce Haymes Peter Luscombe and Shane O Mara 109 All were members of Paul Kelly Band and except for O Mara were also members of Professor Ratbaggy 34 104 One Night the Moon award win for Open Craft Award at the Australian Film Institute AFI Awards in 2001 110 The award is shared with fellow composers and performers Mairead Hannan and Kev Carmody 110 One Night the Moon award win for Best Soundtrack Album at the APRA Awards of 2002 Screen Music Awards presented by Australasian Performing Right Association APRA and Australian Guild of Screen Composers 111 112 The award is shared with fellow composers and performers Mairead Hannan Carmody John Romeril Deirdre Hannan Alice Garner 111 113 One Night the Moon award win for Best Music Score at the Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards of 2002 The award is shared with Mairead Hannan and Carmody 114 115 Jindabyne award win for Best Music at Valladolid International Film Festival in 2006 116 The award is shared with composer and performer Dan Luscombe who was a member of Paul Kelly Band 116 117 References EditGeneralDoyle Brian 25 January 2004 Chapter Ten Deeper Water Spirited Men Story Soul amp Substance Cambridge Mass pp 113 127 ISBN 978 1 56101 258 9 Kelly Paul 21 September 2010 How to Make Gravy Camberwell Victoria Penguin Books Australia ISBN 978 1 926428 22 2 Leser David 1999 Paul Kelly June 1991 PDF The Whites of Their Eyes Profiles St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin pp 203 211 ISBN 978 1 86508 114 4 Retrieved 2 December 2017 Note Original profile was published as Paul Kelly in Good Weekend The Sydney Morning Herald on 2 June 1991 ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 McFarlane Ian 1999 Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop St Leonards NSW Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 86508 072 7 Archived from the original on 10 October 2004 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Note Archived copy at WHAMMO Worldwide Home of Australasian Music and More Online homepage of Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop Nimmervoll Ed Paul Kelly gt Biography AllMusic Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Spencer Chris Nowara Zbig McHenry Paul 2002 1987 The Who s Who of Australian Rock notes by Ed Nimmervoll Noble Park Victoria Five Mile Press ISBN 978 1 86503 891 9 242 Specific a b David Fricke 1997 Songs from the South Paul Kelly s Greatest Hits Media notes Paul Kelly Mushroom Records p 2 MUSH33009 2 a b Paul Kelly Biography Dumbthings Paul Kelly Official Website Eva Zsigri June 1997 Archived from the original on 14 April 1999 Retrieved 8 June 2011 a b Donovan Patrick 15 May 2009 Wanted Man The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2011 a b Officer AO in the General Division of the Order of Australia PDF Australia Day 2017 Honours List Governor General of Australia 26 January 2017 p 36 Archived from the original PDF on 25 November 2017 Retrieved 4 December 2017 Sargent S 2016 Indigenous Rights Changes and Challenges in the 21st Century Legend Press p 140 ISBN 978 1 78955 131 0 Retrieved 9 July 2022 Doyle p 115 Paul Kelly Biography Music Australia Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 Retrieved 8 May 2011 a b Paul Kelly Interview Rip It Up Magazine No 992 17 23 July 2006 Archived from the original on 19 July 2008 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Kelly 2010 pp 190 193 a b c McMahon Bruce 7 July 2007 Paul Kelly Has no Answers The Courier Mail ISSN 1322 5235 OCLC 223420922 Archived from the original on 4 September 2012 Retrieved 2 February 2012 a b Doyle p 116 Our History Kelly amp Co Lawyers Archived from the original on 19 July 2008 Retrieved 14 March 2010 Kelly 2010 p 223 a b c Denton Andrew 5 July 2004 Paul Kelly Transcripts Enough Rope with Andrew Denton Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Archived from the original on 22 August 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b c d e f g h i j Wilkie Meredith 25 April 2004 Lure of Hearth and Home The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Kelly 2010 p 10 a b Leser p 204 Italian Historical Society Fact Sheet The Arts PDF CO AS IT 2006 p 1 Archived from the original PDF on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Horsburgh Susan 4 June 2007 Song Lines The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b Music Curriculum VCASS Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School VCASS Archived from the original on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Higgins Devine Kelly Hayes Rita 10 June 2004 A Letter from Sister Rita Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Radio Queensland Archived from the original on 28 January 2005 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Edmund Rice Volunteer Scheme Edmund Rice Oceania Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Bunworth Mick 10 October 2001 Ballarat The Australian Political Barometer The 7 30 Report Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Television Archived from the original on 25 February 2006 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Greens Ballarat Candidate to Decide on Preferences The 7 30 Report Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Television 10 November 2003 Archived from the original on 1 January 2013 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Kelly 2010 pp 208 214 a b c d e f g Kruger Debbie December 2002 Paul Kelly Words Are Never Enough Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Archived from the original on 24 May 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b c d Blanda Eva June 1997 Paul Kelly Australian Singer songwriter White Records Release Other People s Houses Archived from the original on 2 March 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Magner Brigid Don t Start Me Talking Lyrics 1984 2004 PDF Insight Publications p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 28 August 2006 Doyle p 118 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad McFarlane Paul Kelly entry Archived from the original on 30 September 2004 Retrieved 25 March 2014 Kelly 2010 pp 16 18 a b c d e f Nimmervoll Ed Paul Kelly Howlspace White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd Tom Denison Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b c d Jenkins Jeff 8 November 2008 From Little Things Big Things Grow Drum Media Perth No 110 Craig Treweek Leigh Treweek pp 15 17 Libraries Australia ID 47647122 permanent dead link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Holmgren Magnus Paul Kelly Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Spencer et al 2002 High Rise Bombers entry Nimmervoll AllMusic a b Guilliatt Richard April 2013 Paul Kelly s Wild Years The Monthly Schwartz Publishing Black Inc 88 ISSN 1832 3421 OCLC 427307841 Archived from the original on 28 July 2014 Retrieved 27 March 2014 a b Kelly 2010 p 80 281 282 477 480 a b c Paul Kelly Reveals the Stories Behind the Songs The Sydney Morning Herald 24 September 2010 ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 27 September 2010 Retrieved 18 May 2011 Kelly 2010 p 206 Spencer et al 2002 Kelly Paul and the Dots entry a b c d e Kent David March 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 St Ives New South Wales Australian Chart Book Ltd ISBN 978 0 646 11917 5 Note Used for Australian Singles and Albums charting from 1974 until Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA created their own charts in mid 1988 In 1992 Kent back calculated chart positions for 1970 1974 Entries under Artist names Kelly Paul Kelly Paul and the Dots Kelly Paul and the Coloured Girls Kelly Paul and the Messengers Carney Shaun July 1994 Kelly Country Rolling Stone No 498 ACP Magazines OCLC 259372869 Archived from the original on 8 February 2004 Retrieved 25 March 2014 a b Leser p 206 Moore Susan 6 October 1982 Moore on Pop The Australian Women s Weekly National Library of Australia p 154 ISSN 0005 0458 Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 24 August 2011 a b c d e f g Jenkins Jeff Meldrum Ian 15 October 2007 31 Paul Kelly From Little Things Big Things Grow Molly Meldrum Presents 50 Years of Rock in Australia Melbourne Wilkinson Publishing pp 213 219 ISBN 978 1 921332 11 1 a b Starstruck Cast amp Details TV Guide OpenGate Capital ISSN 0039 8543 OCLC 10602653 Archived from the original on 10 August 2010 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b Nicholson Dennis Way 2007 1997 Star Struck Australian Soundtrack Recordings Sydney Australian Music Centre Nodette Enterprises Pty Ltd ISBN 978 0 646 31753 3 Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Spencer et al 2002 Kelly Paul Band entry Kelly 2010 p 35 a b Kelly Paul Judith Kate National Educational Advancement Programs 2005 Don t Start Me Talking Lyrics 1984 2004 Smartstudy English guide Carlton Victoria National Educational Advancement Programs NEAP pp 1 12 ISBN 978 1 86478 099 4 a b Kelly 2010 pp 182 184 Leser p 207 Holmgren Magnus The Zimmermen Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 a b c Sawrey Kaitlyn November 2009 Ausmusic Month 2009 Celebrating Australian Music All Through November 2009 Triple J Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Archived from the original on 6 April 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Nimmervoll Ed Dragon Howlspace White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 DeGagne Mike Post Paul Kelly amp The Messengers Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Spencer et al 2002 Kelly Paul and the Coloured Girls entry Songs from the South The Best of Paul Kelly Amazon 13 May 1997 Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 Everything to Live For The Rock Party AllMusic Archived from the original on 25 June 2010 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Holmgren Magnus Warnqvist Stefan The Rock Party Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 22 January 2010 Retrieved 12 May 2011 DeGagne Mike Gossip Paul Kelly amp The Messengers Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 25 June 2011 Retrieved 25 June 2011 a b c d e Forster Robert April 2009 Thoughts in the Middle of a Career Paul Kelly s Songs from the South The Monthly Schwartz Publishing Black Inc 44 62 64 ISSN 1832 3421 OCLC 427307841 Archived from the original on 1 March 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b Paul Kelly Charts amp Awards Billboard Singles AllMusic Archived from the original on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Pareles Jon 18 September 1988 Two Rock Storytellers Hit Their Stride The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 OCLC 1645522 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b c To Her Door at APRA Search Engine Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 DeGagne Mike Under the Sun Paul Kelly amp The Messengers Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Discography Paul Kelly Australian Charts Portal Hung Medien Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 Note based on information supplied by ARIA Holmgren Magnus Young Einstein Soundtrack Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b c d e f Winners by Year 27th ARIA Awards 2013 Search Results Paul Kelly Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA 2013 Archived from the original on 12 December 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2014 Winners by Year 1988 Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA 2011 Archived from the original on 26 September 2007 Retrieved 2 February 2012 a b Mordue Mark 12 January 1996 Poet of the Common Man The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 13 November 1999 Retrieved 14 September 2010 Holmgren Magnus Maurice Frawley Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Jindabyne Production Credits Bios Paul Kelly Composer Sony Films 27 April 2007 Archived from the original on 24 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 DeGagne Mike So Much Water So Close to Home Paul Kelly and The Messenger Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 DeGagne Mike Comedy Paul Kelly amp The Messengers Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 12 May 2010 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Negus George 5 July 2004 GNT History Transcripts The Gurindji Strike George Negus Tonight Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Television Archived from the original on 6 September 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Hung Steffen The GetUp Mob From Little Things Big Things Grow Song Australian Charts Portal Hung Medien Archived from the original on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Morgan Clare 29 April 2008 Rudd Keating and Crew Storm Pop Charts The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Hung Steffen Yothu Yindi Treaty Song Australian Charts Portal Hung Medien Archived from the original on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b ASCAP ACE Search Results for Kelly Paul Maurice American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers ASCAP Archived from the original on 23 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b Kruger Debbie 2 May 2001 The Songs that Resonate Through the Years Industry Votes for Top 30 Australian Songs PDF Australasian Performing Right Association APRA pp 1 2 Archived from the original PDF on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Blanda Eva October 2003 The Recordings of Paul Kelly as a Solo Artist Other People s Houses Australian Music Web Site Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Funerals and Circuses Catalogue National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Roger Bennett Playwright The Playwrights Database Julian Oddy Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Indigenous Theatre The Future in Black and White PDF Theatre Australia Council p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 29 March 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b Lavelle Cath ed November 2001 One Night the Moon Media Kit PDF Surry Hills New South Wales MusicArtsDance Films pp 1 4 5 7 10 13 14 Archived from the original PDF on 18 February 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Nicholson Dennis Way 2007 1997 Garbo The Soundtrack from the Movie Starring Los Trios Ringbarkus Australian Soundtrack Recordings Sydney Australian Music Centre Nodette Enterprises Pty Ltd ISBN 978 0 646 31753 3 Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Nicholson Dennis Way 2007 1997 Seven Deadly Sins Soundtrack Music from the ABC TV Series Australian Soundtrack Recordings Sydney Australian Music Centre Nodette Enterprises Pty Ltd ISBN 978 0 646 31753 3 Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Hartenbach Brett Live May 1992 Paul Kelly Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Kelly Paul 2004 1999 Don t Start Me Talking Lyrics 1984 2004 2nd ed St Leonards NSW Allen amp Unwin pp 103 10 ii ISBN 978 1 86508 105 2 Kelly 2010 p 465 Mooney Ray Tsilimidos Alkinos Kelly Paul O Mara Shane Field David Hunter Bill 1994 Everynight Everynight Libraries Australia National Library of Australia Archived from the original VHS on 27 November 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2011 Title Details Everynight Everynight National Film and Sound Archive NFSA Archived from the original on 11 June 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates March May 1995 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 1998 Music Awards Nominations Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Archived from the original on 8 March 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 ARIA Charts Accreditations 2006 Albums Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA Archived from the original on 5 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b ARIA 2008 Hall of Fame Inductees Listing Australian Recording Industry Association Archived from the original on 15 June 2008 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Ford Andrew May 1998 Paul Kelly The Music Show Radio National Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Archived from the original on 18 May 2006 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates June 1998 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Holmgren Magnus Where Joy Kills Sorrow Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Country Music Awards 2000 Not for Sale Archived from the original on 4 April 2003 Retrieved 17 March 2010 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates August September 1999 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 a b Professor Ratbaggy Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Kelly Paul February 2004 Don t Start Me Talking Lyrics 1984 2004 Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74114 317 1 Archived from the original on 7 March 2010 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Green Shane 14 November 2005 Paul Kelly Makes Grade in Exam List The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b c Search Results for Creator Kelly Paul 1955 Trove National Library of Australia Retrieved 10 April 2010 Winners by Year 2002 Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA Archived from the original on 11 December 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2011 Lantana Theme at APRA search engine Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2011 a b Non Feature Award Winners 1958 2010 Open Craft Award 2001 PDF Australian Film Institute AFI 2010 p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 19 March 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2011 a b 2002 Winners Screen Music Awards Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Australian Guild of Screen Composers AGSC Archived from the original on 8 March 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2011 2002 APRA AGSC Screen Music Awards Australian Television Information Archive Tony Zuk Archived from the original on 15 June 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2011 One Night the Moon at APRA search engine Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2011 Winners of the FCCA Awards from 1998 to 2012 Awards Archive Film Critics Circle of Australia 2014 Archived from the original on 25 January 2014 Retrieved 26 March 2014 Urban Andrew L 22 February 2002 FCCA Awards 2002 Winners Urban Cinefile Andrew L Urban ISSN 1328 6226 OCLC 222109172 Archived from the original on 28 November 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2011 a b Haggerty Elizabeth 27 April 2007 Jindabyne Murdoch University School of Media Communication amp Culture Archived from the original on 18 November 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Holmgren Magnus Dan Luscombe Australian Rock Database Passagen Archived from the original on 5 August 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2011 Search results for Kaarin Fairfax Trove National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a b Moreton Romaine One Night the Moon Clip 1 on ASO Australian Screen Online ASO National Film and Sound Archive NFSA Archived from the original on 4 April 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2010 ARIA Charts Accreditations 2001 Albums Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Search results for Nothing but a Dream Paul Kelly Trove National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 25 October 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2011 Bramwell Murray January 2002 New Words for New Audiences PDF Adelaide Review OCLC 222587119 Archived PDF from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates March 2001 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates August November 2001 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates March April 2002 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Jeckell Barry A 20 December 2001 Supersuckers Paul Kelly Ween Billboard ISSN 0006 2510 OCLC 421998067 Retrieved 30 June 2010 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates June 2002 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 a b Webb Carolyn 13 May 2002 Women Mess with Thrilled Kelly The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 27 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Donovan Patrick 13 November 2003 Drinking from the Kelly Well The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 26 October 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Bauder David 16 April 2002 Paul Kelly on the Road The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 23 January 2010 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates August 2003 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Wilson Sue 31 August 2003 Folk from Down Under all Over Sunday Herald Newsquest OCLC 44209320 Retrieved 18 March 2010 permanent dead link a b Bramwell Murray June 2004 Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions Adelaide Review Luke Stegemann OCLC 222587119 Archived from the original on 3 October 2009 Retrieved 20 June 2010 Fireflies Australian Television Information Archive Tony Zuk Archived from the original on 11 October 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Fireflies Songs of Paul Kelly sound recording album Music Australia National Library of Australian Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 a b Blanda Eva 2007 Paul Kelly Discography Australian Music Web Site Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 17 June 2011 Stardust Five Import by Stardust Five Amazon Archived from the original on 9 October 2007 Retrieved 13 May 2011 a b c Sian Prior Biography Up Close University of Melbourne Archived from the original on 6 July 2010 Retrieved 25 March 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates March April 2004 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates July September 2004 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Ziffer Daniel 8 December 2004 Paul Kelly The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 11 January 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Bonus Jade 9 October 2006 Learn Your ABC s with Paul Kelly thedwarf com au The Dwarf Matthew David Elmer Archived from the original on 8 October 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2011 a b c Kelly 2010 pp flyleaf 1 4 Foggy Highway Paul Kelly and the Stormwater Boys Credits AllMusic Archived from the original on 13 May 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Foggy Highway Paul Kelly and the Stormwater Boys Editorial Reviews 2005 Archived from the original on 30 October 2011 Retrieved 25 September 2013 Foster Simon 10 23 August 2005 Andrew P Street ed Various Artists Timor Leste Freedom Rising dB Magazine No 364 OCLC 32440342 Archived from the original on 6 April 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Stewart Paul 17 July 2005 In Tune with East Timor Herald Sun OCLC 221684014 Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 a b Paul Kelly and the Hoodoo Gurus Join Forces to Help Timor Leste thedwarf com au The Dwarf Matthew David Elmer 25 September 2006 Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Hogan Jesse 26 March 2006 Melbourne We Did It The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 4 April 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Gordon Michael 27 March 2006 Celebrations of Our City The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Timor Gathering The Electric Newspaper Glove Box 22 August 2006 Archived from the original on 8 October 2009 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Zuel Bernard 21 April 2006 Stardust Five The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Stardust Five musical recording Music Australia National Library of Australia 12 July 2006 Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Paul Kelly Past Tour Dates August 2006 Dumbthings Official Website of Paul Kelly Archived from the original on 29 July 2006 Retrieved 23 July 2011 The Waifs Australian Music Festivals New Realm Media 2007 Archived from the original on 4 September 2011 Retrieved 18 June 2011 Robson Jeff 10 13 August 2006 The Edmonton Folk Music Festival Tell the Band to Go Home CJUM 101 5 UMFM University of Manitoba Archived from the original on 25 March 2012 Retrieved 18 June 2011 A Z Shows Paul Kelly the Famous Spiegeltent at The Arts Centre LiveGuide com au Liveguide and Dload Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 23 July 2011 ARIA Charts Accreditations 2007 Albums Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA 31 December 2007 Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Sennet Sean April 2008 The Fruits of Our Labour Paul Kelly OurBrisbane Brisbane City Council Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Live Apples Paul Kelly Trove National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 18 May 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Official 1st Announcement Big Day Out 2008 Press release Big Day Out 2008 Archived from the original on 25 June 2008 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Murfett Andrew 3 February 2008 South by Southwest The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 10 November 2010 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Paul Kelly Stolen Apples Female First Celebrity Gossip amp Lifestyle Magazine First Active Media Ltd 22 July 2008 Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 The Top 50 Australian Albums of all Time The Age June 2008 ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 28 April 2009 Retrieved 20 June 2010 Donovan Patrick Murfett Andrew 27 June 2008 Best of the Best The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 a b Cashmere Paul 23 September 2008 Paul Kelly Gets Back His Catalogue Undercover Undercover Network Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Music Australia ID 21743578 a b New Australasian Releases November 2008 Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA Archived from the original on 11 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Carr Matthew 16 December 2008 Paul Kelly The Video Collection 1985 2008 DVD FasterLouder Archived from the original on 4 April 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Adams Cameron 29 October 2008 Leonard Cohen to Tour Australia in the New Year Herald Sun OCLC 225384928 Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 CMAA Country Music Awards of Australia 2009 CMAA Awards Winners Archive Country Music Association of Australia CMAA Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Pepper Daile 11 February 2009 Cohen and Kelly Pledge 200 000 for Bushfire Victims WAToday Archived from the original on 7 April 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2011 a b c Sound Relief Hits Sydney and Melbourne Nine News 14 March 2009 Archived from the original on 13 April 2010 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Sound Relief Raises More Than 8 Million for Charity Latest News Sound Relief Archived from the original on 31 March 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Before Too Long Paul Kelly 3 CD set ABC Shop Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Archived from the original on 4 March 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Mikolai March 2009 Paul Kelly More Songs from the South Tour CitySearch Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 18 June 2011 Bahbah Sandra 5 December 2009 Escape to the Park a Hit PerthNow The Sunday Times ISSN 1442 9527 OCLC 215100529 Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Contributors Paul Kelly The Monthly Morry Schwartz Black Inc ISSN 1832 3421 OCLC 427307841 Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Note The two SlowTV contributions listed belong to Australian political journalist Paul Kelly a b How to Make Gravy by Paul Kelly Books Non Fiction Biography Biography amp Autobiography Borders Books Borders Group RedGroup Retail 22 September 2010 Archived from the original on 26 January 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 a b A Z Recordings 8CD Box Set by Paul Kelly Borders Books Borders Group RedGroup Retail 27 September 2010 Archived from the original on 10 April 2011 Retrieved 18 May 2011 How to Make Gravy Audio CD Readings Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 17 April 2012 Retrieved 1 April 2012 Vale Russell Dunlop Ian Miller and Maurice Frawley Australian Performing Rights Association APRA 18 May 2009 Archived from the original on 26 February 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Donovan Patrick 1 April 2010 From Friends of Frawley The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 15 June 2010 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Mathieson Craig 13 August 2010 Whisltin Along with a Legend The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 6 November 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Splendour in the Grass 2010 Line Up Revealed Triple J Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC 15 April 2010 Archived from the original on 17 May 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Previous Winners Music Victoria Retrieved 13 August 2020 EG Awards 2010 Dig Music Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC 1 November 2010 Archived from the original on 6 November 2010 Retrieved 17 May 2011 Smith Peter Bluesfest Media Release 22 April 2011 Dylan Costello and Paul Kelly at Byron Bay Blues Festival Tamborine Mountain Daily Star Archived from the original on 3 May 2011 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Wilson Richard 8 March 2011 Paul Kelly to support Dylan tour Soulshine Australian Independent Music Ross Donnan OCLC 703144483 Archived from the original on 11 March 2011 Retrieved 18 June 2011 Coetsee Alexa 20 January 2011 New Concert Venue for Perth PerthNow The Sunday Times ISSN 1442 9527 OCLC 215100529 Archived from the original on 22 January 2011 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Paul Kelly Gleitzman Make PM s Literary Awards List ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC 27 May 2011 Archived from the original on 14 August 2011 Retrieved 14 September 2011 McDonald Andrew 26 July 2011 Winners of the Australian Book Industry Awards for 2011 Announced Readings Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 8 October 2012 Retrieved 14 September 2011 a b Te Koha Nui 30 September 2012 Tim Rogers Paul Kelly and Temper Trap Owned the Stage for AFL Grand Final Entertainment Herald Sun OCLC 221684014 Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 1 October 2012 Semo Esther 20 September 2012 Paul Kelly Announces New Studio Album Spring and Fall Tone Deaf Tone Deaf Network Nicholas Jones Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 24 September 2012 Middlemast Anne Marie 22 October 2012 Paul Kelly Spring and Fall 105 7 ABC Darwin Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Archived from the original on 2 July 2018 Retrieved 22 October 2012 a b c Shedden Iain 16 November 2013 Goin Your Way Neil Finn and Paul Kelly The Australian Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 16 December 2013 a b Neil Finn Paul Kelly Australian Tour Latest Dates Neil Finn Official Website 25 January 2013 Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 16 December 2013 a b c d e f Strickland Katrina 23 September 2012 Paul Kelly Seeing Is Believing The Australian Financial Review ISSN 0404 2018 OCLC 5988245 Archived from the original on 28 October 2012 Retrieved 25 March 2014 a b c d Street Andrew P 28 October 2013 Paul Kelly Stories of Me TV Review The Guardian Archived from the original on 30 October 2013 Retrieved 27 March 2014 Neil Finn amp Paul Kelly Goin Your Way Australian Charts Portal Hung Medien Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2013 The ARIA Report PDF Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA 18 November 2013 p 24 Archived from the original on 23 November 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2013 ter Ellen Janika 25 March 2013 Paul Kelly Happy in His Skin 3 News TV3 Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2013 Cockburn Paige 28 November 2017 ARIA Awards 2017 Gang of Youths Paul Kelly A B Original big victors at Australian music s night of nights ABC News Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 McDiarmid Kiera 21 August 2017 Life is more than Fine Paul Kelly announces huge Australian tour Music Insight Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 2 December 2017 Fitzsimmons Caitlin 20 November 2017 Paul Kelly Review Poet Prince Reigns in the Rain The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 21 November 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 Paul Kelly to release new album Nature in October Double J Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 9 August 2018 Retrieved 9 August 2018 Grand Final Entertainment afl com au Archived from the original on 28 September 2019 Retrieved 28 September 2019 Rose Anna 5 February 2020 Paul Kelly addresses climate change inaction on brand new song NME Retrieved 19 February 2020 Kelly Paul 30 January 2020 Paul Kelly s lament for the fate of our sleeping nation The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 19 February 2020 Paul Kelly Gathers His Friendly Elves for a Christmas Album noise11 15 October 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 a b 20067 216 1 Harmonica Lee Oskar Stainless Steel Brass Plastic Made by Tombo Japan Used by Paul Kelly Australia 2000 2001 Powerhouse Museum Government of New South Wales 2007 Archived from the original on 23 April 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Attfield Sarah 2007 8 Different Directions Working Class Expression Through Music The Working Class Experience in Contemporary Australian Poetry PhD thesis University of Technology Sydney UTS pp 236 238 Archived from the original PDF on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Note File is 289 pages Clelland Ross July 1994 Paul Kelly Reviews Wanted Man Rolling Stone No 498 Australia OCLC 259372869 Archived from the original on 14 April 1999 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Mordue Mark 28 December 2004 Oz Rock s Hard Place The Sydney Morning Herald ISSN 0312 6315 OCLC 226369741 Archived from the original on 8 November 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Civics Paul Kelly 1955 Australian Government Department of Education Employment and Workplace Relations Civics and Citizenship Education Archived from the original on 2 June 2011 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Kelly 2010 p 94 Kelly 2010 p 166 Hillman Bob 17 March 2008 A Voice for the Voiceless The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Martin James R 2004 Positive Discourse Analysis Solidarity and Change dissertation Sydney University of Sydney pp 18 22 Archived from the original doc on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 26 October 2011 The Complete List Sounds of Australia National Film and Sound Archive NFSA Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Note This version of From Little Things Big Things Grow is from Kev Carmody s 1993 album Bloodlines which has Kelly on guitar and co lead vocals Hargreaves Wendy 20 December 2007 Son Shines in the Kelly Gang The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Wishful Port Fairy Folk Festival 7 10 March 2014 Archived from the original on 27 March 2014 Retrieved 27 March 2014 Artist Roster Stardust Five The Harbour Agency Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 20 July 2008 Retrieved 29 March 2010 Roberts Jo 8 December 2006 Kelly Stands and Delivers The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 1 March 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Collins Simon 4 November 2008 Paul Kelly A Z The West Australian ISSN 0312 6323 OCLC 60621434 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Shedden Iain 18 September 2010 The True History of Paul Kelly The Australian ISSN 1038 8761 OCLC 226361936 Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2012 Kelly 2010 pp 79 82 a b Wood Stephanie 17 May 2014 Woman on the Edge The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 18 December 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Phillips Greg Musicians in Isolation Kev Carmody Cannot Buy My Soul Re Issue Interview Australian Musician Archived from the original on 27 August 2022 Retrieved 7 February 2023 The album has now been refreshed with a 2020 edition produced by Sian Darling with the original 32 tracks plus an additional six new versions Donovan Patrick 11 March 2004 Paul s Your Uncle The Age ISSN 0312 6307 OCLC 224060909 Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Charcoal Lane sound recording Archie Roach Music Australia National Library of Australian Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Charcoal Lane Archie Roach Credits AllMusic Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2011 CMAA Country Music Awards of Australia 1990 1999 Country Music Association of Australia CMAA Archived from the original on 19 July 2008 Retrieved 21 June 2010 CMAA Country Music Awards of Australia 2000 2008 Country Music Association of Australia CMAA Archived from the original on 18 July 2008 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Winners 14th Mo Awards 1989 Mo Awards Australian Entertainment Mo Awards Inc Archived from the original on 19 August 2006 Retrieved 2 December 2017 Winners 15th Mo Awards 1990 Mo Awards Australian Entertainment Mo Awards Inc Archived from the original on 19 August 2006 Retrieved 2 December 2017 Australian of the Year Awards Victorian State Finalists Paul Kelly Australian of the Year National Australia Day Council 2012 Archived from the original on 16 March 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2012 Davies Richard 4 August 2022 Adelaide City Council renames laneway in honour of musician Paul Kelly ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 5 August 2022 Search Results for Kelly Paul 1955 Books Texts etc Only Music Australia National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Paul Kelly and Paul Grabowsky announce new collaborative album NME 17 June 2020 Retrieved 18 June 2020 Buckeridge Julian 5 June 2012 MIFF Announces First Glance Titles At the Cinema Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 4 December 2017 Turn up the Music Canberra International Film Festival Archived from the original on 10 April 2013 Who s Who of Australian Rock Compiled by Chris Spencer Zbig Nowara amp Paul McHenry Catalogue National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Kelly Official website From Little Things Big Things Grow Audio sample and description at Australian Screen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul Kelly Australian musician amp oldid 1140883392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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