This Record Changed My Life: Conrad Sewell
Image: Conrad Sewell performing at Nova s Red Room at Paddington Uniting Church last night Michael JacksonOff The Wall My mum played it non-stop, particularly She s Out Of My Life and Girlfriend. For…

Image: Conrad Sewell performing at Nova’s Red Room at Paddington Uniting Church last night
Michael Jackson
Off The Wall
My mum played it non-stop, particularly She’s Out Of My Life and Girlfriend. For me, it was the perfect mixture of R&B and groove. As I grew up I started to listen to a lot of other music but his timbre in his voice is what I fell I love with; that made me go out and search for a lot of other singers that had unique tones.
Mum played a lot of stuff, she was into pop and Motown, she’s was a big Michael Jackson fan and listened to The Temptations, Stevie Wonder… That soul, whenever I write music, whenever I sit down at the piano and play gospel, soul chords, those are the chords that resonate with my ear first.
I grew up in the ‘90s so pop music very much affected me; anything from the Backstreet Boys to Train and early R&B like Usher and Craig David… For a white kid in Australia, I didn’t know what to do with that. I knew I loved it, I knew I could sing it - well I was the closest thing to any white boy that I’d heard in Australia sing it.
When I heard [Jackson’s] She’s Out Of My Life – you can hear him cry at the end of that record – mum pointed it out to me but that stayed with me, that quiver in his voice. It amazed me that he could be that emotional on record and I didn’t understand why other singers didn’t do that.
I think that [emotional element of my music] is naturally built into me because I grew up listening to singers like him and Simply Red and Stevie Wonder who evoke emotion with their voice without even trying. So when I grew up mimicking those people, I learned to do that, [to offer] an emotional vocal and a sense of rhythm within your mouth. Michael didn’t need a band to keep time because he was constantly being rhythmic with his mouth. I didn’t even think of that but I naturally picked that up as well. When I’m explaining a beat to someone I naturally make it with my mouth.


Reporting from inside the Australian music business since '94.
I have to pull back from [the influences I’ve picked up]. There’ll never ever be another Michael Jackson and I don’t want to try to be. Because I listen to him so much, I can get in a booth and I can mimic him, I can sing a song and people would be like, ‘Oh that sounds like Michael.’ But I can’t do that, I also have a tone myself, I sound like Conrad. Why would I try and imitate one of the greatest artists in the world when I can sound like myself? It’s been hard because everyone wants to hear someone that sounds like Michael; so when I get in the studio and that little [influence] comes in I have to pull back and make sure it’s sounding like me.
Off The Wall was the most, and still is the most, influential album that I’ve ever listened to.
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Reporting from inside the Australian music business since '94.
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