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Writer's pictureThe Sound Cafe

Tasmania’s Multi Award-Winning Country Rock-Duo, The Wolfe Brothers, To Open Day Two of Ashes Test


Photo Credit: Slaidings Photography.



Tasmania’s multi-award winning country rock duo The Wolfe Brothers have been given the honour of performing live to open Day Two of the first ever Ashes Test held in Tasmania on Saturday at Hobart’s Blundstone Arena. Their pre-game performance at 2.30pm AEDT will be followed by a second innings where the band will perform two of their biggest hits during the Tea Break at 7.40pm AEDT. The Test is a Day-Night game and will be telecast live around the world.


Lead singer and guitarist Nick Wolfe is a massive cricket fan. “After the disappointment of the Tamworth Country Music Festival and Golden Guitar Awards being postponed until April, to get the news that we will be playing at this historic event for Tassie has certainly lifted our spirits,” he says. “We may never get another Ashes Test down here again, so to be actually involved on Day Two is a real honour. I have a guitar that is actually made from a cricket bat that was a gift from my wife Tani in recognition of my love of cricket and music. I think it will have to make its first public performance on Saturday as there will never be a more fitting occasion to do so.”


Under normal circumstances The Wolfe Brothers would be attending the Country Music Awards of Australia in Tamworth on Saturday where they have been nominated for an incredible seven Golden Guitar Awards – their highest nomination tally to date. The duo have released five studio albums and have achieved a staggering 16 consecutive Number One National Country Music Chart singles since capturing the hearts of the nation when they came in as runners-up on the 2012 series of Australia’s Got Talent (AGT). From their electrified live performances on AGT, they were invited to audition for Lee Kernaghan who was looking for a new backing band at the time. A strong connection was made, and The Wolfe Brothers have been touring with Lee and opening all of his concerts for the last 9 years. The duo have also been headlining their own sold-out tours and festivals around Australia and have performed at festivals in the USA and Canada.


The Wolfe Brothers current album, Kids On Cassette, was released last year and entered the ARIA charts at #1. Today it was confirmed by ARIA as the third highest selling Australian Country Music album for 2021. No Brakes was the first single released from the album on April 17 2021, and from then to now, The Wolfe Brothers can claim the title of the most played artist on Australian Country Radio.


For bass guitarist Tom Wolfe, the performance at the Ashes Test is a great restart for 2022. “We started the year being informed all of our January and early February shows have been postponed due to Covid-19,” he says. “The news that we are playing at the Ashes Test is just what we needed as a boost before we start recording our next album on Monday next week. To go into the studio on a high is the perfect scenario and we are grateful to Cricket Australia for the opportunity.”


Any history of The Wolfe Brothers that doesn't begin four generations ago isn't quite complete. The revered country duo, comprised of brothers Nick and Tom Wolfe, have become renowned over the past few years for their jaw-dropping live shows and steady ascent to Australian country music's upper echelon. Part of their rise has been due to talent, and a lot of it due to hard work. But the truth is that music is in The Wolfe Brothers' blood. "We come from four generations of farmers and musicians," Nick explains. Their father, the man who encouraged them to start playing and helped facilitate their first shows in their early teens, was a rock drummer. His father played saxophone, touring around the brothers' home state of Tasmania with a family band. And his father — Nick and Tom's great-grandfather — was a fiddle player.

If the musical gene was already in Nick and Tom's DNA, it was their parents who brought it to full bloom. Their father guided Nick to the guitar and Tom to the piano, perhaps with "the intention of starting a band with us," as Tom says. And their mother filled the family home with music, exposing her children to 90s country staples like Garth Brooks and Billy Ray Cyrus. It was almost an inevitability that the Wolfe family home would produce two of Australia's finest country musicians.

The abundance of musical influences throughout the brothers' youth, combined with an innate musicality, have resulted in the development of a unique yet embracingly familiar sound embedded in nostalgia yet curious and innovative. If their first three albums were steps towards the rarefied space The Wolfe Brothers occupy now, it was 2018's Country Heart that gave them the final push. "Country Heart was the first time we've talked about our lives," Tom says of their 2018 triumph. A heartfelt and occasionally melancholic portrait of a tumultuous period in Nick and Tom's lives, Country Heart found The Wolfe Brothers pushing themselves emotionally and musically more than they ever had. "That album has given us so much confidence to go into the next one," he says. "We pushed ourselves last time, and now we're wondering, where can we go this time?"

The answer to that question is "Kids on Cassette" the most conceptually and musically bold record The Wolfe Brothers have ever put to tape. A joyful fusion of country, rock, and pop, "Kids on Cassette" like Country Heart, is a portrait of where the brothers are at this point in time — only this time, it shows them going full speed ahead, pushing forward with no cares in the world. "We're drawing from pub rock, from old country, from new country," Nick explains. "Maybe it's a bit confusing, but we do what we do and write what we love."

"Kids on Cassette" also works as an accurate metaphor for where The Wolfe Brothers are in their career. "This represents the last few years of our journey," Tom says. It also represents where he and his brother want to go. "It's been quite a long time since there's been an Australian country act who's been a huge, huge crossover," adds Nick, signaling, in part, where he and Tom's ambitions lie. Humility is as baked into The Wolfe Brothers' DNA as music is, but it's clear that, at this point in their career, it's time for something bigger: radio crossover, stardom, the massive American market. Tom and Nick Wolfe will always remember where they came from, but "Kids on Cassette" feels like it could take them a step further. It may be far cry from their roots, but as Tom says: "We've never been the kind of band that stays in one lane.".








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