Over the course of Sebastian's career, he has achieved great success in both the music industry and as an ambassador for The Red Cross and World Vision. He is one of Australia's most accomplished artist and is ranked 3rd for all Australian acts with a total of 1,150,00 career album sales, 2,550,00 single sales and a total of 3,700,000 units sold with only Kylie Minogue and Delta Goodrem having achieved more.He has been able to help the world on a larger scale, through his popularity in music he has gained great attention which he has used to speak out about a variety of issue and problem the world faces as an ambassador for The Red Cross and World Vision.Himself and his wife have also established a foundation dedicated to help the less fortunate and make a lasting change in the world. In terms of music award, he has received 22 ARIA Award Nominations winning For the Highest Selling Single for Angels Brought Me Here and Who’s That Girl. 11 top ten singles with Six of those singles achieving multi-platinum certification, including the 9x platinum Battle Scars. Overall he has been able to achieve 42 platinum, three gold certifications and combined album and single sales over 3 million in Australia …show more content…
He has used these different varieties of influence to successfully cross genres such as pop, soul, gospel, jazz, rock and even electro dance.He has a great love for soul music and on his Memphis Album released in 2007, he collaborated with great musicians such as Steve Cropper and Donald “Duck”
As a co-writer and producer, Brown has worked to develop many of the artists we have come to know today. Performers such as, Rick Barry, Status Green, Corey Wagar, Jerzy Jung, Natalie Stovall, Alex Brumel, and Andrew Holtz have all come to know his commitment to songwriting quite well, with some gaining major momentum because of it. His long career has seen him go thru several major label recording deals and at least three distinct publishing deals. He has achieved song placements in TV and film, and working with great producers and mentors like Danny Kortchmar (Don Henley, James Taylor, Rod Stewart), Peter Collins (Jewel, Rush, Indigo Girls), Monty Powell (Keith Urban, Lady A, Diamond Rio) and others that he’s no doubt picked up a few tricks from over the years.
Southern heritage as he was born in Georgia, a child of a previous slave. Even though he has resided and taught in New York. I think his images and print continue to reveal his practice and memories of growing up in the South. Not only his subject matter is about African American people, but more universally, people of all kinds - black, white, wealthy, poor, religious, northern or southern.
Memphis is considered to be a dangerous city by many around the country with not many attractions besides Martin Luther king, jr. What they do not know is that Memphis is full of rich music and history. Various genres have made an impact on people’s daily lives such as gospel, soul, funk, blues, jazz, R&B, pop, country, and rap. Stax records were found in in 1957 which was known as satellite radio at the time. Stax has made a major impact on helping the lives of people in Memphis. Stax has overlooked the obstacles of color and racism by giving many artists of different races the opportunity they dreamed of. Stax has made a major impact by helping the lives of people in Memphis, breaking color and racism barriers, and most importantly by making music. (Stax Museaum)
He left a rich Jazz heritage for people around the world. People can appreciate the excellence of a grand master from the following classic singles, West End Blues, Savoy Blues, Potato Head Blues, Weather Bird, I 'm Not Rough and Heebie Jeebies and so on. Not a jazz musician could be known to and win support from every family like him. His works has been reprinted several times in the past thirty years (Gourse and Louis 342). He had a large collection of his own and other recordings. He enjoyed listening to his own recordings, and comparing his performances musically.
Although folk music played a big role in most of these artists’ performances, folk links back to the blues, and is similar...
In January of 1939, a man was born by the name of Bruce Tressler in Connersville, Indiana. His parents came from Cincinnati on his father’s side and his mother came from Shelby county, Indiana. At the time, Connersville was a very big industrial town. Connersville was also known as Little Detroit in the 1920s because there were factories in Connersville that made cars. Then when war came upon the United States, all of the factories turned to something in the war production. Bruce’s early years were remembered with sights of war and victory and news of the atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. During that time, rationing was a big memory for the time period. Meat and butter were highly rationed in Bruce’s childhood. Growing up in this tie proved to be on of the best experiences for Bruce. He was always outside and acting like a kid should. Him and his friends used their imaginations a lot as was the trend at the time. After the war was over, Bruce attended grade school at Maplewood School. His junior high school and high school days were largely influenced by the great economic boom of the 50s.
His varied music background came from the many people he studied under and his own studies which allowed him to mix and blend styles together seamlessly. I’m going to look at Summertime from Porgy and Bess and I’ve Got Rhythm from the Girl Crazy.
One of the many adversities he had to adapt to was the feuds of the East and West Coast. This influenced his songs and the way his fans depicted the East Coast, Bad Boys. He also had to deal with the way blacks were treated and looked at by the white community. Although his music brings up many controversy, he is undoubtedly a big part of the way African Americans are being depicted today. He reached the people not just through his music but by the constant protests for equality also while striving for the betterment of his the African American community. The way that society and media looks at African American people and hip hop music are all rooted from
Miles Davis’ music was incredibly diverse and influenced all types of music that followed. He was beloved by traditional fans, but was also adored by young jazz musicians willing to push the boundaries of traditional jazz. His traditional fans did not welcome his change of style, but it shows Davis's ability to experiment and push the boundaries. Miles excelled at every style that he tried from bebop, to hard bop, to modal jazz, to his jazz fusion
His last 2 have been nominated for an ARIA award with the 3rd “Bring It Back” won. His single “Papercuts” currently sits at 2nd on the ARIA urban single charts.
He had exposure to several different genres growing up in his St. Louis, MO hometown. He heard country from the whites, rhythm & blues (R&B) from mostly blacks, even Latin music. His family environment set him up well for future success while growing up in a middle class home in the middle of the Great Depression of the 1930s. His parents sun...
Louis Jordan was a saxophonist that jumped started the genre of rhythm and blues. He was very popular during world war two.From 1942 to 1951, Jordan scored an astonishing 57 R&B chart hits , beginning with the blues entertaining "I'm Gonna Leave You on the Outskirts of Town" and finishing with "Weak Minded Blues." Louis Jordan started all just to make a way for someone like Ray Charles. Ray Charles dominated the 1950s, he was a man who went blind at the age of seven. He was born and raised in Albany Ga, he has won 17 Grammys and many more awards. He's music style wasn't just r&b but also jazz and blues. In 1960 The temptations came to play, an all male group that contained 5 very powerful singers. Apart of Motown records the temptation has established a list of great hits, 37 top hits at that. There are many know songs of their like my girl, papa was a rolling stone and many more.
Paul, Minnesota University, Banfield informs students of Rhythm and Blues' history and how it came to be from unsung musicians who innovated the sound during the end of World War II to its involvement with Hip-Hop. Its sub-genres include Doo-Wop, Soul, Funk, Dance and Disco that are credited for evolving the music's five decade reign on the charts. Along with artists such as The Temptations, Sam Cooke, James Brown, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye, Al Green, Bobby Womack and Isaac Hayes who gave this music its raw energy and prowess to define an era of racial tension and the need for change. From the late 60's to the early 70's, Rhythm and Blues brought out a gritty sound to shout for a need to change by giving a voice to those who want change to happen. According to his book, Representing Black Music Culture: Then, Now, and When Again? Banfield talks about the “the rise and (he argues) the fall of black music from the early 1960s to the present. However, Banfield paints a vivid picture of the development of and trends in the music that have led up to the current rap scene and pressure on artists to become publicity. Sensations rather than bona fide
Unquestionably one of the most influential musical pioneers of the last half-century, James Brown, often known as “The Godfather of Soul”, laid a musical foundation that many artists were influenced by. Ranging from Mick Jagger to Afrika Bambaataa to Jay Z, Brown’s musical characteristics can be seen in various artists. How did the music of Michael Jackson demonstrate the influence of James Brown?
Sufjan Stevens has become known for his eclectic musical style over the course of his 15-years in the recording industry, bouncing from genre to genre with each new album. Releasing more than seven studio albums in that time, his sound has encompassed everything from electronica to lo-fi folk, pulling inspiration from everywhere. Read on to find out more about Sufjan Stevens, and look out for part two of our list, coming soon.