Melbourne Music Week not only made every Australian music fan living outside the city incredibly jealous, but it also saw the genesis of an exciting and important new project for Australian music.

The Her Sound, Her Story exhibition was launched on the eve of MMW, a visual presentation which celebrated the efforts of female Australian musicians, who have found themselves under-represented for far too long.

The brainchild of photographer Michelle Grace Hunder and filmmaker Claudia Sangiorgi Dalimore, the project has combined music with the narrative of female musicians in an exhibition featuring portraits and interviews of over 40 Australian female musicians.

Now the project has continued online, with a 12-part video series of documentary-style episodes premiering on Rolling Stone. The videos feature in-depth interviews with their subjects, allowing them to tell their story in their own words. Read on for a brief look at who has been featured in the series so far.

 

Kasey Chambers

The country singer-songwriter reveals how her nomadic childhood shaped her love for music, as well as how she refused to let her circumstances dictate how she approach her career. “If you want your dream to happen, then you just fucking make it happen.”

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Sampa The Great

One of the breakout artists of last year explains how she came to Sydney, as well as what it was like to open the stage for Kendrick Lamar and how she overcame societal expectations of what women should do. “I’d like to see more openness to new things…music isn’t owned by one person.”

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Kate Ceberano

Kate recalls how the women surrounding her in the early moments of her career enabled her to push through the difficult aspects of the then patriarchal industry, as well as noting how she has found new freedom with her career. She also muses how “money can really spoil art.”

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Nai Palm

The unbelievably talented Hiatus Kaiyote frontwoman Nai talks about her own sense of value when sharing music with others, recalling how a woman wrote to her from Syria to tell her how her music helped her deal with the horrors at home. “It’s not for your validation, it’s for other people. It’s amazing to have a sense of purpose.”

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Julia Stone

Known for her work with brother Angus, Julia reveals how she faced insecurities about expressing herself earlier in her career, and how success made her realise that those feelings can only change when you become comfortable with who you are. “This is what I do and I can’t be anything else. It’s okay if you don’t like it and it’s okay if you do like it. It’s all okay.”

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Missy Higgins

Speaking against the idea of imagery in music, Higgins recalls how when she started in music she met record executives who wanted to dress her up. She goes on to note how from day one she wanted to be different from others, whether that be through cutting her hair off or choosing to wear jeans over a dress. “Don’t worry about trying to make people like you. It’s okay to be a strong woman.”

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Ella Hooper

Ella reveals how Killing Heidi began as a band playing at school events, which then accelerated to playing the main stage at Big Day Out. She also reveals how “pissed off” she was at the way women were treated in the music industry. “All it takes is popping your head out of the window to a different part of the industry and it’s like ‘oh, there’s that gender imbalance, alive and well.'”

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Simona Castricum

A major voice in the music industry for the LGBTQI community, Simona recalls how she was worried about being bullied for her identity when she was struggling with coming out, and how she dealt with executives wondering how to sell her as a ‘trans-artist.’ “In order for that entire system to… not be so dominated by misogynist ideas of desirability, there needs to be a structural change.”

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Mama Kin

The Fremantle-based artist shares her memories of starting a family band as a child, and how scared she was of judgment and rejection at the hands of the music industry. She goes on to recount the struggle of balancing her desire to create music and her expectations on herself being a mum. “It’s a good time to be a woman, full stop.”

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Mojo Juju

Speaking about her experiences within the industry as a queer woman of colour, Mojo voices her concerns over what is acceptable by industry standards when it comes to sexuality and art in general. “People are always trying to figure out who I am, what I am and what I do….and I find that a bit uncomfortable.”

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Emma Donovan

The Indigenous singer remembers how she began singing in church and how she developed her gift for singing in her teen years, as well as the influence of Ruby Hunter on her own career. She goes on to reflect on the increasing contribution of indigenous artists on the Australian music scene “There’s so much Aboriginal music from all over this place. The mob has just gotta learn how to tune in.”

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Tina Arena

For the final episode of the series, Tina Arena remembers how from an early age she was aware of the gender imbalance in the industry, as well as reminiscing on her own experiences of sexism throughout several decades in Australian music. “Are you going to tell a male, who’s at the top of his game in whatever domain, that he needs to step down and retire?… Ladies in the game, 40 and over, we’ll decide when it is time to retire.”

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To see all the videos in the series, head to the project’s official website.

Image: Rolling Stone Australia

Melbourne Music Week is in full swing, celebrating the diverse and rich musical culture that this country (and this city in particular) has to offer. One of the standout events of the entire week is the Her Sound, Her Story exhibition, a collection of portrait photographs and documentary footage of some of the country’s most celebrated female musicians, music journalists and beyond. 

As diverse and talented as this country’s music industry is, women have long been under-represented, and that diversity is rarely reflected to its full extent when it comes to festival line ups, award nominations, best-of shortlists, paid work and more. It’s this under-representation which photographer Michelle Grace Hunder found to be startlingly clear when she was working on her hip-hop photo-documentary, Rise, two years ago. The end result was an extensive photography book filled from cover to cover with Australian hip-hop artists and visionaries – but only a small handful of all the portraits featured in the book were of women. Enter the idea for her new collaboration with filmmaker and long-time friend, Claudia Sangiorgi Dalimore, the launch of which helped to kick off the Melbourne Music Week events.

Her Sound, Her Story is a celebration of women in the Australian music industry and features over 40 female musicians all in different stages in their careers. A visual representation of the very diversity we need to continue to nurture, support and celebrate, the photographic exhibition features women of colour, of various sexual orientations and from a wide range of musical and cultural backgrounds and manifests. What connects them is their love for music, their support for one another (and other women in the industry) and the stunning portraits that light up Melbourne’s Emporium shopping centre.

Walking into Emporium though the side entrance to the official launch of the exhibition, there is an undeniable, palpable excitement in the atmosphere. Rounding the bend, the exhibition space, Emporium’s main entrance, is completely transformed. While it does often house art installations and sets, this one seems different. More special somehow in that it is placing some of Australia’s finest female musicians right in one of the busiest CBD locations. It is bold and unabashed; the lightboxes displaying the vibrant photographs at the front and centre of the room. The series features over 40 of the country’s most revered and renowned artists, from Kate Ceberano and Tina Arena, Missy Higgins and Julia Stone, Montaigne and Ecca Vandal, Sampa The Great and Mojo Juju.

In addition to hosting many of the faces immortalised in the portraits, the intimate launch event featured an introduction from the National Treasure and one of the featured portrait subjects, Ella Hooper. Having stressed once more the significance of the project, not to mention the fact that following the launch, it would launch Melbourne Music Week at the State Library the following night. Speeches from the creators made it very clear that from concept to conclusion, Her Sound, Her Story focused on not simply photographic the subjects, but getting to know them – quite literally, it marries music with narrative effortlessly. Ahead of the MMW launch event, guests were treated to the frankly (fittingly) surreal experience of a brief but no less soulful live performance by Nai Palm right in the middle of the Emporium Entrance. The Hiatus Kaiyote singer’s incomparable vocals filled the entire space accompanied only by her guitar as she closed the event out to awe and applause.

Her Sound, Her Story is not simply a reminder that we, as a community, need to focus on bringing greater diversity to the forefront. It is all well and good to have the conversation, but this exhibition, which features over 40 artists and tells their stories through their photo concepts and documented interviews, is action being taken. A testament to art, music, film, story-telling and sheer passion for all four, Her Sound, Her Story goes further than simply acknowledging the problem – contributes to the solution in a most bold and beautiful fashion.  

Her Sound, Her Story is showing at the Emporium Shopping Centre in Melbourne until Sunday, November 19th. More details can be found at the official website.

Melbourne Music Week is coming up from November 11-19, and a very, very special project will be launching during the week.

Her Sound, Her Story is a tremendous new project championing Australian women in music. It’s taken close to two years for photographer Michelle Grace Hunder and filmmaker Claudia Sangiorgi Dalimore to put it all together, throughout which they have documented more than 40 outstanding females in Australian music. From singers and rappers to journalists and radio personalities, the project explores outstanding females who are making a name for themselves today, along with trailblazers of previous decades.

The project features the following, and more: Airling, Alphamama, Clare Bowditch, Dawn Laird, Ecca Vandal, Ella Hooper, Jen Cloher, Jo Syme, Julia Stone, Kate Cebrano, Kathy McCabe, Nai Palm, Ngaiire, Nina Las Vegas, Sarah Connor, Sampa The Great, Tina Arena, Thelma Plum, Vera Blue and Zan Rowe.

Yeah. That’s pretty outstanding. And that’s only half of the names.

Claudia and Michelle. Photo: Seshanka Samarajiwa

Claudia and Michelle. Photo: Seshanka Samarajiwa

The project is split into several components; a photographic portrait series will be showing from November 9 – 23 at Emporium Melbourne (287 Lonsdale St) and a documentary series, which features video footage of each woman sharing their own journey and story, will also be aired throughout the week.

The project itself will be officially opened at a concert on the opening night of Melbourne Music Week, featuring a stellar lineup of some of the most incredible names in Australian music, including Ella Hooper, Montaigne, Ecca Vandal, Airling, Julia Stone, Mojo Juju and more – with a few as-yet-unannounced surprise guests too.

The show kicks off on Friday November 11 at 7:30 pm, at the State Library Victoria and tickets can be purchased here for $41.70.

The project puts the spotlight on remarkable individuality, strength and ambition on women in music. Not only does the project aim to collect these incredible stories as a way to celebrate these women, but to inspire future generations destined for greatness.

Read more: Queens of the Crossfade: Australia’s Female Hip-Hop & Urban DJs

Read more: The New Wave of Feminism in Australian Punk Rock

Image: MMW