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Kate Ceberano
After the demise
of hit pop group I'm Talking, Kate Ceberano revealed herself as
one of the most versatile and durable female singers in Australian
music.
She was born
in 1967, the youngest of four children of a Filipino father and
an Australian mother. She sees herself as the arch typical Australian,
a creature of many cultures. Part of that background was music -
growing up, the Ceberanos were encouraged to sing and play instruments
- but for Kate the turning point would be a Commodores concert in
Melbourne, when the young girl was pulled up on stage. From that
moment on she wanted to get back up on that strage.
Kate gave her
first professional performance at 14, on TV's 'Search For The Star'.
It was her aunt's idea. Kate lied and said she was 16 to get on
the show and won. Problem was that her prize was a two week residency
at a hotel she was too young to be allowed in. At 15 she fronted
her first band, Expose, with a group of local Balwyn boys. They
entered and won a Battle Of The Bands contest. From Expose she went
to The Hoagie Cats. They kicked her out when she got a Mohican haircut,
so she went solo. While performing on Melbourne's club circuit an
ex-boyfriend introduced her one of the musicians with whom she would
form the funk pop group I'm Talking in 1983.
After I'm Talking
folded in 1987, Kate didn't go straight back to pop. Her first 'solo'
album, was a live jazz flavoured record performed by Kate Ceberano
And Her Septet. That same year she shared with Wendy Matthews the
soundtrack to the ABC-TV drama series, 'Stringer' with the album
'You've Always Got The Blues', a combination of classic torch songs
and new songs in the same style. And only then, having shown her
versatility, did Kate Ceberano return to 'pop'.
The 'Brave'
album had a difficult birth. After attempting to record the album
in London, Kate scrapped the sessions and returned to Australia
to start over. It was worth the trouble. 'Brave' gave rise to four
hit singles, went three times platinum, was the first album by an
Australian female to reach the national No.1 spot, and won Kate
Best Female Artist at the ARIA Awards. 'Brave' was released in the
UK and US. The follow-up album 'Like Now' perversely returned her
to sophisticated jazz, the group now, minus one member, the Sextet
instead of the Septet.
In 1991 Kate
moved to New York to record her fourth album, 'Think About It' with
celebrated hip hop remixer Arthur Baker. On her return to Australia
she took the role of Mary Magdelene alongside John Farnham in the
concert version of Jesus Christ Superstar in a sell-out run which
ended up playing in front of a million Australians and resulted
in another No.1 album. Kate was offered her own ABC-TV show, performances
from which comprised her next album 'Kate Ceberano And Friends'.
At the end of 1993 she returned to New York to record a cutting
edge pop record with Scitti Politti member Fred Maher producing.
A week after the album's planned release in the US she was dropped
by her American record company. The album was remixed and partly
re-recorded and was released in Australia under the title 'Blue
Box'. Originally it was called 'Globe'.
In February
1996 Kate married film producer/director Lee Rogers. took the lead
role in his film 'Dust Off The Wings' and then took time out to
enjoy her new married life before returning as a brassy pop diva
with the single and album 'Pash'.
The years that
followed were representative of a performer of diverse talents as
Kate's - appearances in film, a brief stint with Los Angeles improv
group group the Really Spontaneous Theatre, and television as a
judge in the Australian version of X-Factor and winning Dancing
With The Stars. The latter propelled Kate's covers album 'Nine Lime
Avenue' into the top ten. The susequent tour saw her feature her
Dancin g With The Stars dance partner.2008's 'So Much Beauty' offered
more covers, plus three new songs, recorded in an intimate setting.
2009's 'Bittersweet' teamed Kate with US trumpter Mark Isham and
a jazz quartet performing "broken-hearted love songs" from the 30s,
40s and 50s.
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