Queensland singer-songwriter Kalesti Butler has a wonderful new album, Airborne. While she spent her childhood performing, however, there wasn't a straight line from that to her career now - as I found out when we spoke recently.
Your first stage
appearance was at age three – do you remember how you felt?
I’m not sure that I remember how I felt but I must have been
pretty excited because my dad used to tell me this story about it. I walked on
stage and I had a little red beanie on, so it must have been really cold, and
they announced my name and I walked out in between my mum’s legs and started
singing – and the band had to catch up after.
Had you been
practising that number to sing?
I’d say so. When I think back, my mum used to make me
practise and practise and practise loads [laughs]. I’d say I was very well
prepared.
You’re from a musical
family. At age nine you won a prize as well, so clearly from the age of three
you kept going, so do you remember much about your childhood and what sort of
musical involvement you had?
I remember going to a lot of festivals and my mum and a
couple of my aunties and cousins would be singing as well, and my grandmother,
and we always toured around north Queensland, mainly, doing all the festivals.
Music was really a big part of the family, so whenever we had a gathering – a
barbecue or someone’s party – everyone would bring a guitar, and I remember
sitting – we’d all form a kind of circle where we’d all just be sitting there
playing guitar, and that’s how I learnt to play guitar, by watching them and
teaching myself.
I’d written down a
question saying, ‘What lit the spark of music within you?’ but it sounds like
it’s just always been there.
I think I was born into it. But I went to boarding school for twelve years and
when I was in high school I didn’t sing at all, and then I went to uni and I
think I was working in Mackay in about 2005 and I saw a sign about a local
country music festival. I thought, I might go and have a look. I checked
it out and I was really inspired by it, so I decided to start singing again,
but I had to learn all over again. There was one girl who was singing there who
really inspired me to do singing again because I’d actually forgotten that I
used to be – I think I used to be really good when I was a kid but I’d
forgotten that. So I learnt to sing again and I was really bad. I have video
and I watch it and I think, Oh my god,
that was terrible – why didn’t anyone say anything?
I’m really interested
in the fact that you didn’t sing at school – do you think it was because you
were out of that environment you’d been in with your family and it just wasn’t
something you did? Or it didn’t seem like a thing that the school wouldn’t
support? Because that’s a big change: to be so musical and then not have it for
your teenage years.
My parents separated when I was ten so that’s probably what
affected it. But I wasn’t ever forced or pushed into it, maybe because I did so
much of it as a kid. I can’t even remember why I didn’t sing at school. I did
it at primary school – we had a little band – but in high school maybe it was
more about getting a really good education, maybe singing and music weren’t
part of that plan [laughs]. I don’t know what happened, but for some reason it
just came back to me and I took it up on my own, which I think is probably a
better option anyway, because then it’s something that you choose to do
yourself, it’s not something that was forced upon you by your parents, so to
speak.
And when you were
learning to sing again, was there a point at which you thought, Right, I’m back.
[Laughs] Yeah, I was doing through a few talent quests and
singing at a few places that were hosting some really bad karaoke [laughs] and
then I went to Tamworth in 2011. I wanted something to take me there because
I’d never been, and my mum had been because she was a Toyota StarMaker top 5
finalist the year Gina Jeffreys won. So she’d been and recorded with Lindsay
Butler Studio, she’d been in the scene in the early ’90s. So she knew all about
it but she’d never taken me. I entered this bush ballad star quest competition
and they said I was a finalist, and so I went and I won it. I was totally
shocked because I didn’t think I would win any award at Tamworth ever [laughs].
So that was kind of the moment when I thought, Maybe I can sing. Maybe I am good enough to be a professional. And from then I built on that. The
competition really did open doors for me. I got gigs at really cool festivals
like Gympie Muster and Caboolture Urban, when that was on, and Mildura Country
Music Festival. And when I was singing at those places and people would come up
to me and say, ‘You’re really good – do you have a CD?’ that was the moment for
me during that twelve months: ‘I’ve got to do a CD.’ So I did and I’ve just
been going on since then.
What was the first
song you ever wrote?
It was ‘She’s a River’, which was on my first album and I
co-wrote that with Gretta Ziller at the Academy of Country Music. We won the
TSA/APRA New Songwriter of the Year award with that song as well.
I love that song –
I’ve heard it on ABC digital country radio, where it’s on high rotation. I kept
wondering what you were doing so it was great to see that you have a new album.
It was so long in between. I didn’t know what direction to
take. I knew I started with the bush ballad stuff but that wasn’t really all
that I was ever about, so I wanted to start showcasing some of my other
material and showing people that I’m not just a bush balladeer.
It’s possibly also where
your voice leads you. The material on your new album really suits your voice
and it seems like you’ve let yourself go in the direction you’re meant to head
in.
I haven’t really forced anything upon myself – it’s kind of
just happened naturally that way. It’s better because it’s more real and it’s
more true to what I’m about.
You also write with
your mum, Val. When did that co-writing arrangement start?
It kind of started when she realised that I was getting
serious about my music. With the first album, I didn’t realise but she had
written thousands of songs and she gave them to me and said, ‘Here – see if
there’s anything that you can use.’ And then I thought, There’s some there that are cool but I’ve got ideas for songs and maybe
she can help me write these songs. So that’s where it started. Sometimes I
just come up with a title for a song and then we write the song, or sometimes I
come up with an idea, sometimes Mum comes up with the idea and I’ll say, ‘Okay,
let’s write that song.’ Sometimes it’s over the phone, sometimes it’s while
we’re driving or when she visits or if we’re at a festival. She lives fourteen
hours’ drive away from me, so I only really see her a couple of times a year.
So there’s not a great deal of songwriting but when we do get together at least
half a dozen songs will be written, for sure.
Where do you live now?
I’m in Emerald, in Central Queensland. She’s north of me, up
in the Gulf of Carpentaria still.
That’s where you grew
up, in the Gulf Country, isn’t it?
Yes, I grew up on a cattle property. A lot of my aunties and
uncles are still up there on cattle properties but most of them are spread
across the Atherton Tablelands – Innisfail, Cairns, all that area.
Having grown up on
the land, what in particular about that lifestyle stays with you?
I really like telling people how cool it was growing up on
the property and the fact that we had four-wheelers and motorbikes and we used
to just on weekends have free rein to cruise around and make some dust. We had
our own helicopter and helicopter pilot, so if we were mustering and we got
tired we could just get a free ride home and the horse would go with the mob.
When we were little we’d fall asleep on the horse and our horse would be in
with the mob and hopefully we wouldn’t fall off [laughs]. Maybe as a kid, or
any kid, you don’t have any worries in the world but we seemed to not have any.
It was so cool. Even today I like visiting cities but I prefer to be in a
country town. I just like the whole … everyone’s kind of family and friendly,
and even now if I got stuck I could call my auntie or my uncle and they would
take me in and I could stay and eat all their food, and they wouldn’t even
care, it’s just how they are.
Country music isn’t
just for country people, but what do you think it offers country people in
particular, in terms of storytelling? And in your album I’m thinking of that
sense of place and community that comes through.
It makes you feel real. The storytelling – I don’t like
singing a song that I can’t connect to, and telling a story in a song has to be
real and truthful to some extent. I’m a bit of a realist as well. I don’t know.
It just makes you feel good.
I think that’s the
best answer, and that’s what country music performers do so well here –
Australian country music artists really get that balance of entertainment and
connection, and meaning. A lot of Australian country music really demonstrates
that you can have songs that mean a lot but also make people feel good, and
that they can tap their toes to.
Yes – I think my dad was always about, ‘It’s got to have a
good tune, it’s got to have a good beat’. He was always about the toe-tapping
thing. And even my mum, when she writes a song, she says if you can’t dance to
it, it’s not really a good song. If we’re working on a song and we have a
break, I might be in the kitchen getting a drink or something and she’s dancing
around. She’s moving to the songs as she works [laughs].
You have a really
solid lineage, then, for your own songs. And you’ve played a lot of festivals –
what has been the highlight so far?
Probably the opening concert for the Tamworth Country Music
Festival, I think in 2013. Also working with some band members at the Mildura
Country Music Festival – the Toombs brothers and Jayne Denham’s band, it makes
you feel cool as an artist. You feel really special.
The new album, Airborne, is out. It sounds like you and
your mum write together regularly and I know you did some other collaborations
for these songs. How did you end up choosing what was going on that album?
I didn’t really know what was going on that album until I
sat down with Robert Mackay and nutted it out. I am really bad at that part of
it. Especially if you write a song, you get so connected to something that’s
your own that you can’t see if it’s good or bad [laughs] – you’re just, like,
‘Yes, it’s going on the album!’ But when we worked out what I was trying to
achieve with the album, all the songs had to connect and Rob was really good at
helping choose the songs and saying, ‘Yes, that’s good’ or ‘Mmm – maybe we
could think about another song’. It was more about whether the song was really
good. And whether it was me as well – when I was singing the song, ‘Yeah, that
song’s Kalesti’ or ‘I don’t really think that song’s you’, even if I did write it,
or it was a great song but it wasn’t really a Kalesti song.
Those can be tough
decisions, can’t they – having the strength to let the song go for someone else
to have, it’s a tricky thing.
There’s a few songs on the album that I hadn’t even heard of
before – some songs were choices that Rob said, ‘Have a listen to this song and
see if you like it’, then I decided yes or no. Like ‘Airborne’ and ‘Dead Man’s
Shirt’, they’re songs that I didn’t know about previously.
www.kalestibutler.com
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