NZ Music Hall of Fame to induct pop/rock icon Sharon O’Neill
NZ Music Hall of Fame to induct pop/rock icon Sharon O’Neill
‘Maxine’ singer-songwriter to be honoured at the 52nd Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards
Teased hair and rockstar flair defined a generation. But no-one pulled off the quintessentially 80’s look like Sharon O’Neill, who carved out a colourful and very successful musical career.
And now she can add the Legacy Award to her many accolades, with Sharon being inducted into the New Zealand Music Hall of Fame and presented with the Legacy Award at the 2017 Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards.
The Nelson-born songstress is no stranger to music awards and recognition. Throughout her career, she’s won Top Female Vocalist at the New Zealand Music Awards three times (1978, 1979, 1980) and is the only artist in awards history to have won a Tui in 3 consecutive years.
Her debut album also picked up awards for Best Producer and Best Engineer, and the album’s lead track won the 1979 APRA Silver Scroll. Her ground-breaking self-titled second album won Album of the Year in 1980, and in 1983, Sharon also won Best Soundtrack for Smash Palace.
Her 1983 song ‘Maxine’ won the hearts and minds of music lovers here and in Australia alike. It was the second single from her fourth albumForeign Affairs and chronicles the life of a Kings Cross prostitute. Such is the iconic nature of this song and video, the costume worn by the actress in the video was featured in the landmark music exhibition Volume: Making Music in Aotearoa (2016) at Auckland Museum.
Recorded Music NZ CEO Damian Vaughan says Sharon O’Neill’s seminal style and powerful pop-rock albums are a staple of both New Zealand and Australia’s musical legacy.
“Sharon’s songs are an iconic part of an era when New Zealand music really started to come of age. From her early days as a folk singer to sweeping the charts and winning awards both here and in Australia – Sharon blazed a trail for women in rock, and it’s only right we take the time to celebrate her career and the impact she had on Kiwi music.”
Sharon started her career as a folk artist in
Nelson before briefly joining Christchurch rock band Chapta
in 1972. A move to Wellington saw her work as a session
vocalist at the legendary EMI Studios in Lower
Hutt.
However, it was her 1978 performance of her song
“Luck’s On Your Table” on the New Zealand TV show "The
Entertainers" which caught the ears of the newly-established
local office of CBS Records. CBS promptly made Sharon their
first local signing, and the track became the lead single
off her debut album This Heart This Song
(1979).
Her second album Sharon O'Neill (1980) was
a breakout success reaching #3 on The Official New Zealand
Music Charts and featuring the hits “Words” and “Asian
Paradise”. She followed this in quick succession with the
album Maybe (1981) and the soundtrack to Roger
Donaldson’s iconic film Smash Palace
(1982).
However, it was Sharon’s fourth studio album
Foreign Affairs (1983) which marked her out as a
major star on both sides of the Tasman. Recorded in Los
Angeles, the album featured classics such as “Maxine”,
“Losing You” and “Danger”.
With striking videos,
numerous TV appearances and a national tour of Australia
supporting Boz Scaggs (with 2013 Inductee Dave Dobbyn
playing guitar in her band), Sharon won over the Aussies. At
the Australian Countdown Awards, Sharon won Best Female
Performance in a Video twice (1984 & 1985) and Most Popular
Female Performer four times (1980, 1981, 1983 and 1984). She
was also a two-time ARIA Awards nominee for Best Female
Artist.
Sharon next returned in 1987 with her fifth album
Danced In The Fire, followed by 1990’s Edge of
Winter. In the interim, Sharon and her partner Alan
Mansfield (a 2011 Inductee with Dragon) co-wrote the 1989
hit single “Young Years” for Dragon. The 90’s also saw
Sharon co-write and provide vocals for the late British
superstar Robert Palmer, with Sharon and Alan co-writing
Palmer’s final studio single, “True Love”
(1999).
In 2001 Sharon returned to New Zealand to join
When The Cat’s Away on their Live In Paradise tour,
with the subsequent live recording going Top Ten and
platinum. More recently, The Church Tour in September 2016
saw Sharon tour the country with fellow legends Debbie
Harwood, Hammond Gamble and 2013 Inductee Shona Laing.
Sharon continues to entertain fans to this day with two sold
out shows in Nelson last month.
Sharon’s contribution
to New Zealand music will be acknowledged 16 November at the
2017 Vodafone New Zealand Music
Awards.
“Words: The Very Best Of Sharon
O’Neill” is out now on Sony Music
NZ.
Key dates for 2017 Vodafone New
Zealand Music Awards:
• Thursday, 19
October
Māori finalist announcement
•
Wednesday, 25 October
Artisan
awards
• Thursday, 16
November
Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards
ceremony (Spark Arena)
Tickets are on sale now, $25
general admission + booking fee, available from
Ticketmaster.
The Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards will
be broadcast live on Three on 16 November from
8.30pm.