Nature | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Paul Kelly |
Cover: | File:Nature_by_Paul_Kelly.jpg |
Label: | EMI Music Australia |
Prev Title: | Life Is Fine |
Prev Year: | 2017 |
Next Title: | Live in at the Sydney Opera House |
Next Year: | 2019 |
Nature is the 24th studio album by Australian musician Paul Kelly, released on 12 October 2018.[1]
At the ARIA Music Awards of 2019, the album won Best Adult Contemporary Album.
In August 2017, Paul Kelly released his 23rd studio album Life Is Fine. The album was a success, giving Kelly his first ever ARIA number-one album, and winning four ARIA Music Awards at the ARIA Music Awards of 2017.
With most of the songs written over the course of several years and dating back to the recording sessions for albums such as The Merri Soul Sessions, Seven Sonnets & a Song and Life Is Fine, Nature focuses on human nature's small place in the natural world. Kelly said: "I didn't realise I had the makings of another album until I put the songs in a folder and saw the titles staring me in the face. Sometimes you don't know what you're doing until you look back. I think of Nature as a companion piece to Life Is Fine, itself full of moons, rain, rocks, rivers, seas, smells and lovers."[2] [3]
"A bastard like me" was written to honour Aboriginal activist Charlie Perkins. The title of the song is taken from Perkins' autobiography, and the video features footage from his life.[4]
Mikey Cahill from the Herald Sun described how Kelly in Nature is "staying relevant and relishing the opportunity to pump out another 12 mostly great songs." PopMatters Steve Horowitz opined, "[he] put five classic poems by major writers on his latest album of a dozen songs... While it's wonderful that Kelly brings these words to life for non-poetry readers to enjoy, there is something tawdry about the whole affair."[5]
Brian Parker from Your Music Radar indicated, "Conceptually this album works, where there is something otherworldly about it. It seems to question the existence of nature and the forces of nature, the human soul, the cycle of birth and death, and of the beauty of being alive, in love, but also the gravity of the inevitable."[6]
All music written by Paul Kelly and Bill McDonald.
Chart (2018) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
Australian Albums (ARIA)[7] | 1 | |
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[8] | 40 |