Paul Kelly

Musician

Popular As Paul Kelly (Australian musician)

Birthday January 13, 1955

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

Age 69 years old

Nationality Australia

#43442 Most Popular

1852

He is the great-great-grandson of Jeremiah Kelly, who emigrated from Ireland in 1852 and settled in Clare, South Australia.

1914

Filippini was touring Australia in 1914 with a Spanish opera company when World War I broke out; Filippini stayed and later married Anne McPharland, one of his students.

As Countessa Anne Filippini, she was Australia's first female symphony orchestra conductor.

1917

His paternal grandfather, Francis Kelly, established a law firm in 1917, which his father, John, joined in 1937.

1920

Kelly's grandparents started the Italo-Australian Opera Company, which toured the country in the 1920s.

Josephine raised the younger children alone after John's death, but found time to assist others in need.

1928

She sang the role of Marguerite in Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Radio Perth's performance of Faust in 1928.

1955

Paul Maurice Kelly (born 13 January 1955) is an Australian rock music singer-songwriter and guitarist.

He has performed solo, and has led numerous groups, including the Dots, the Coloured Girls, and the Messengers.

He has worked with other artists and groups, including associated projects Professor Ratbaggy and Stardust Five.

Kelly's music style has ranged from bluegrass to studio-oriented dub reggae, but his core output straddles folk, rock and country.

His lyrics capture the vastness of the culture and landscape of Australia by chronicling life about him for over 30 years.

David Fricke from Rolling Stone calls Kelly "one of the finest songwriters I have ever heard, Australian or otherwise".

Kelly has said, "Song writing is mysterious to me. I still feel like a total beginner. I don't feel like I have got it nailed yet."

Paul Maurice Kelly was born on 13 January 1955 in Adelaide, to John Erwin Kelly, a lawyer, and Josephine (née Filippini), the sixth of eight surviving children.

According to Rip It Up magazine, "legend has it" that Kelly's mother gave birth to him "in a taxi outside North Adelaide's Calvary Hospital".

Although Kelly was raised as a Roman Catholic, he later described himself as a non-believer.

1968

John Kelly died in 1968 at the age of 52, after having been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease three years earlier.

Paul Kelly was thirteen years old when his father died.

Kelly described his father: "I have good memories, he was the kind of father that, well, I missed him when he died very much. The older children were growing into him at the time he died. He was not well enough to play sport with me."

Kelly's maternal grandfather was an Argentine-born, Italian-speaking opera singer, Count Ercole Filippini, a leading baritone for the La Scala Opera Company in Milan.

1976

After growing up in Adelaide, Kelly travelled around Australia before settling in Melbourne in 1976.

He became involved in the pub rock scene and drug culture and recorded two albums with the Dots.

1980

At the end of the 1980s, Kelly returned to Melbourne, and in 1991 he disbanded the Messengers.

1985

Kelly moved to Sydney by 1985, where he formed Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls.

The band was renamed Paul Kelly and the Messengers, initially only for international releases, to avoid possible racial interpretations of the word "coloured".

1987

Kelly's Top 40 singles include "Billy Baxter", "Before Too Long", "Darling It Hurts", "To Her Door" (his highest-charting local hit in 1987), "Dumb Things" (appeared on United States charts in 1988) and "Roll on Summer".

1997

Top-20 albums include Gossip, Under the Sun, Comedy, Songs from the South (1997 compilation), ...Nothing but a Dream, Stolen Apples, Spring and Fall, The Merri Soul Sessions, Seven Sonnets and a Song, Death's Dateless Night (with Charlie Owen), Life Is Fine (his first number-one album) and Nature.

Kelly has won 14 Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Music Awards, including his induction into their hall of fame in 1997.

Dan Kelly, his nephew, is a singer and guitarist in his own right.

Dan performed with Kelly on Ways and Means and Stolen Apples.

2001

In 2001, the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) listed the Top 30 Australian songs of all time, which included Kelly's To Her Door, and Treaty, written by Kelly and members of Yothu Yindi.

Aside from Treaty, Kelly wrote or co-wrote several songs on Indigenous Australian social issues and historical events.

He provided songs for many other artists, tailoring them to their particular vocal range.

2002

The album Women at the Well from 2002 had 14 female artists record his songs in tribute.

2006

Both were members of Stardust Five, which released a self-titled album in 2006.

2010

On 22 September 2010, Kelly released his memoir, How to Make Gravy, which he described as "it's not traditional; it's writing around the A–Z theme – I tell stories around the song lyrics in alphabetical order".

2012

His biographical film Paul Kelly: Stories of Me, directed by Ian Darling, was released to cinemas in October 2012.

2017

Kelly was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2017 for distinguished service to the performing arts and to the promotion of the national identity through contributions as a singer, songwriter and musician.

Kelly was married and divorced twice; he has three children and resides in St Kilda, a suburb of Melbourne.