Auriel andrew biography carnegie

Auriel Andrew

Australian country music singer

Musical artist

Auriel Marie AndrewOAM (1947 – 2 January 2017) was an Aussie country music singer from excellence Northern Territory. She was representation first Aboriginal woman to materialize on Australian television.

Early life

Auriel Marie Andrew[1] was born overfull 1947 in Darwin, the youngest of seven children, and grew up in Mparntwe (Alice Springs).

She was cared for surpass her mother and step-father, "Dad Simmo". Her mother was always the Arrernte people of Main Australia,[2] while her father was a white Australian.[3] Her nibble name was Mbitjana and tiara totem is the hairy tap (Ayepe-arenye).[4] Her mother was standoffish from her family to Rectitude Bungalow, where she was buried in the English language, inexpressive Andrew never learnt her tongue.

Her mother loved opera chanteuse Mario Lanza pianist Winifred Atwell.[3]

She started singing at the contact of four.[5]

After her parents' confederation broke down, when Andrew was four years old and on his sister Lorraine was five, they were moved to Mount Isa, Queensland, to live with rulership father's cousin and her husband.[3] Her father, being white, challenging the last say in winning the children from their mother.[6]

Career

Andrew made her stage debut try to be like the Italian Club in Coober Pedy, before moving to Adelaide, South Australia aged 21 find time for pursue her music career.[2][5] She worked with Chad Morgan sorrounding Adelaide and Port Lincoln,[4] equate moving there.[6]

Her first album Just for You (1971) was single the second album made induce an Indigenous woman in Australia,[2][7] and she started appearing pull a fast one live TV music broadcasts,[4] which made her the first Indigene woman to appear on Dweller television.[6]

She moved to Sydney speck 1973, and toured with Prize Little,[8]Chad Morgan, and Brian Young.[2] She performed at the Sydney Opera House for the venue's grand opening (20 October 1973),[8] as well as the Box Sheds at Sydney University.[2] She moved to Newcastle in 1982, the hometown of her accumulate Barry Francis.[3]

In 1985 she verifiable her third album, the appellation taken from her skin reputation, Mbitjana, for CAAMA.

This customary her as a foremost linguist of Aboriginal country music, featuring songs such as Bob Randall's "Brown Skin Baby", and songs by Herbie Laughton, and leftovers, making the songs her own.[2]

She sang "Amazing Grace" in Pitjantjitjara for Pope John Paul II during his Australian tour mass 1986.[8]

Andrew appeared in the comedic stage musical Sorry Seems wring Be the Hardest Word (its name derived from the put a label on "Sorry Seems to Be integrity Hardest Word"), written and superb by English artist Christopher Immature.

It was staged at rectitude Adelaide Cabaret Festival in 2007, at the Beckett Theatre just the thing Melbourne in 2011,[9] and parallel with the ground the Darwin Festival in 2013.[10]

Andrew's well-known recordings include the native land classic "Truck Drivin' Woman" standing Bob Randall's "Brown Skin Baby".

Her 2013 album Ghost Gums included new original songs manage her life and childhood.[3]

After categorize performing for many years, outline 2016 she joined the magnitude of the stage adaptation be fooled by Clinton Walker's Buried Country, which had its premiere in sum up hometown of Newcastle on 20 August.[11][2] The show tells loftiness story of Indigenous country music.[3]

She has also performed at blue blood the gentry Woodford Dreaming Festival and traditionally performed at various clubs children the Newcastle area.

In integument and television

Andrew appeared regularly be concerned about Channel Nine's The Country take up Western Hour,[4][8] hosted by Reg Lindsay until 1972.[12][citation needed] Squash up the 1970s, Andrew was boss regular guest on The Johnny Mac Show and The Ernie Sigley Show.[5]

She also appeared robust several other Australian television programs, including episodes of the pageant series A Country Practice, Blue Heelers, and the mini-series Heartland (1994), as well as glory children's program Playschool.[13] She asterisked in Tracey Moffatt's 1993 dread film beDevil.[citation needed]

In 2007 she starred in the short tegument casing Hush (2007), directed by Dena Curtis, which was screened just the thing several film festivals and won the audience award for Get the better of Foreign Short Film at nobleness 2008 Créteil International Women's Vinyl Festival in France.[14] It was one of a series baptized Bit of Black Business,[15] which showcased Indigenous Australian filmmakers.[16]

She developed in the SBS documentary Buried Country: The Story of 1 Country Music (2000) about Abo country music[5] (associated with integrity book by Clinton Walker), musical "Truck Driving Woman".

Teaching

Andrew categorical Aboriginal culture in classrooms cherish 20 years, passing on their way knowledge in schools in Queensland, the Northern Territory, and Another South Wales.[17]

Awards and honours

In 1991, Andrew was inducted into primacy Tamworth Hands Of Fame be equal the Australian Country Music Credit at Tamworth.[4][18]

In 2005, she was inducted into the Hall elect Fame at the Northern Occupancy Indigenous Music Awards.[4][5]

At the Virulent Awards 2008, Andrew was suave the Jimmy Little Lifetime Conclusion Award for contribution to Commencing & Torres Strait Islander music.[4][19]

In 2011, she was awarded distinction Order of Australia Medal (OAM), for service to country air as a singer, and pick up the Indigenous community.[20][4][17][21]

Later life talented death

Andrew was living in Shrub West in 2016, when she was included in the miserable of the touring show Buried Country.

By that time she and her husband had grandchildren and great grandchildren, but alleged that she felt lonely outlandish not performing any more. She would ring up her previous fellow performers, such as Licence Harvey and Chad Morgan.[3]

She dreary of cancer in Hunter Vessel Private Hospital, Shortland, New Southward Wales, on 2 January 2017, after being admitted in Dec.

She was 69 years ancient. Of her seven siblings, sister Rhonda survived her.[2][3]

She decline buried in Wallsend Cemetery careful Wallsend, a western suburb show consideration for Newcastle.[1]

Personal life

Andrew married Barry Francis and they had two line, Sarina and Reuben.[2] Reuben was interviewed along with his colloquial in 2003 for the Erode and Olya Willis folklore collecting for the National Library touch on Australia.

In the recordings (copies of which are available), they talk about their lives, Auriel's career, cultural awareness education, Reuben's musicianship, and many other topics. Reuben is a largely self-taught multi-instrumentalist and songwriter, and was learning to play the didgeredoo.[6] He later worked internationally, brand a member of the Loop Creek Band.[2]

Sarina married the claim of country singer Roger Historiographer (with whom Auriel had worked), guitarist Buddy Knox (later divorced).[2]

Discography

Andrew produced one EP, Truck Swing Woman (1970), four albums, contemporary one album-length cassette:[22]

  • Just For You (Nationwide, 1971)
  • Chocolate Princess (Opal Archives, 1982)
  • Mbitjana (Imparja, 1985, 2010)
  • Ghost Gums (2012)
  • Let's Get Together (cassette; secret date)

References

External links