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Members
Amiel
Latest Release
Audio Out
Albums
/ Lp's
Audio Out
Website
www.amiel.com.au/
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She was the girl (& voice) the Josh
Abrahams hit “Addicted
To Bass”; and now, she has gone out on her own. She’s
under her own name, Amiel & when you hear how she sings
and what she sings of - you’ll never forget it. ON
the verge of releasing her debut album ‘Audio Out’ Amiel
says, “Audio Out is my weird take on the world. It
all comes from how I see the world”.
The ‘Amiel
story’ begins with her parents. Her
father plays piano, sings and writes. Her mother loves to
sing as well, “…she used to play guitar and write
songs with her sister. I remember being about four and listening
to her Janis Ian records and singing along and learning all
the words.” The first three records Amiel bought were
John Lennon, De La Soul and Mariah Carey. Not bad choices
for a young thing. She realised that the Mariah Carey record
was overproduced, but at least it taught her a lesson or
two about singing. Amiel then wrote her first song at age
nine! When she was sixteen, Amiel was hired to do backing
vocals on a track Josh Abrahams was producing. But instead
of merely singing it, she provided melodies, harmonies and
lyrics as well. The pair soon recorded “Addicted to
Bass” - the drum‘n’bass pop monster that
would become a hit in Australia, Britain and also top the
dance charts in America. Amiel then finished school whilst
Abrahams moved to Sydney and began working on Moulin Rouge.
By 1999, the song had gone ballistic and Amiel, still a teenager,
had relocated to Sydney to work further with Abrahams and
Festival Records. To support herself initially, she worked
day-jobs in department stores and duty free shops. People
started recognising her from the “Addicted to Bass” video.
Amiel knew something was happening, that her dream was coming
true, but she also knew it had to be on her own terms and
that she must write and record the songs that were building
in her head. These heady days were when the seeds of “Audio
Out” were sown.
And so the hard work began. The first songs to emerge were
the single “Lovesong”, “Side by Side” and “Claire
De Lune”. Amiel travelled to the US and met pop songwriters
The Matrix and together they came up with “Obsession
(I Love You)” and “All Of Me”. She also
wrote with Krish Sharma, who previously had worked with Perry
Farrell and the Supreme Beings of Leisure. Back in Melbourne,
Josh Abrahams had set up an old 1970s house full of studio
gear and recording began in earnest. Lending a hand at various
stages of the process were Ryan Freeland, who has produced
Aimee Mann and assisted Bob Clearmountain; Justin Tressidor
who has worked with george; and Brad Haehnel, who has mixed
albums for Nelly Furtado and also been assistant to Dr Dre.
But despite the big names, Amiel’s album is all her.
She says there was never any compromise. She did exactly
as she pleased. Even with all the pressures of the music
industry and image and marketing and the constant pop spectre
of style over substance, her strong will prevailed.
“
The album says what I wanted it to say. Every step along
the way, everything, it all has a specific signature of me
on it.” Amiel says this is because her extraordinary
music defies the usual stereotypes. “People say ‘where
do we put you? You're obviously pop but are you country,
are you dance, are you R‘n’b?’ I'm all
those things. It's a fusion, a hybrid, and a mish-mash
of all these different influences coming together. So I
had
to learn to say my piece and stick up for myself. I realised
that if the audience was going to believe it, it had to
be real and if it was going to be real it had to come from
me.”
The key to the album is the personal nature of the songs.
They seem to come from right inside Amiel. They seem to
be the very notes that emanate from her heartstrings. She
says
she does bare her soul, but only sometimes. The rest of
the time she makes it all up. A song doesn’t have to be
true, after all. A song, well, a song is just a song. There
is, however, always a grain of truth in her words.
“
A lot of it is character play,” she says, “I
like singing in the first person so I can act it. A lot
of the time it might be a story I've concocted but that said,
everything has to come from personal experience, so I
have
to totally admit that it is me deep down. I create storylines
to help me say what I want to say, whether that's an
emotion of fear or longing or love or whatever. Being sick
with love,
being rejected, I've been there, totally. I feel things
intensely. People get right into me.”
“
Audio Out” is Amiel. It is her love of so many different
kinds of music. It’s her love of hip hop and breaks,
her love of folk, her love of pop. It’s her tender
heart. It’s her searching lyrics. These songs were
always inside her, waiting to come out. She just needed the
time and the place.
IMC welcomes the wonderfully talented AMIEL to our family.
Stay tuned as this most talented performer makes her mark
on musical history!
Tourdates
| Date |
Venue |
| Thu 25th Sep |
Beachroad Hotel, Bondi, NSW
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| Fri 26th Sep |
The Hopetoun, Surry Hills, NSW
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| Sat 27th Sep |
The Zoo, Brisbane, QLD
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| Sun 28th Sep |
The Great Northern, Byron Bay, NSW
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| Thu 2nd 0ct |
The Evelyn, Melbourne, VIC
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| Fri 3rd Oct |
The Minke Bar, Adelaide, SA
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| Sat 4th Oct |
Amplifier, Perth, WA |
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