Tony Dupé

(Redirected from Tony Dupe)

Tony Dupé is an Australian music producer and musician.[1] He has also performed and released music under the name of Saddleback.[2][3] Dupé has released four solo albums: Margaret Hammett Lived, Assembly, Everything's a Love Letter and Night Maps.[4] In 2020 he released a collaborative album, the old capital with his partner, Claire Deak, on American label Lost Tribe Sound.

Tony Dupé
OccupationMusician
Websitewww.tonydupé.com

Known for his work with Holly Throsby, who he produced three albums for, Dupé has also worked with Grand Salvo, Piers Twomey, Jamie Hutchings,[5] Bluebottle Kiss, Jack Ladder,[4] SeaLifePark,[6] Glovebox,[7] Fergus Brown,[8] The Woods,[9] Grand Salvo,[10] and many others[vague].

Dupé composed the score to the ABC animated series The Gradual Demise of Phillipa Finch [11] and the 2020 feature film Disclosure.

Until recently, Tony Dupé completed much of his recording work in a studio based on a rural property in the NSW Southern Highlands.[12] The studio was a weatherboard cottage on located on Saddleback Mountain.[13] He is now based in Melbourne after working in Berlin for a number of years.

Dupé is also an internationally recognised academic in songwriting and music production.

Discography

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  • Everything's a Love Letter 2004 - Preservation/Inertia[14]
  • Night Maps 2007 - Preservation[15]

References

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  1. ^ Rule, Dan (1 June 2007), "Sounds of seclusion", The Age
  2. ^ Bernard Zuel (26 November 2004). "Kids in the kitchen". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
  3. ^ Zuel, Bernard (28 July 2007), "Out of the darkness, the kookaburras call", The Sydney Morning Herald
  4. ^ a b "Saddleback SOUNDS", Illawarra Mercury, 9 January 2010
  5. ^ "Where there's a Will there's a Dash to tour Australia-wide", The West Australian, 15 May 2009
  6. ^ Molitorisz, Sacha (31 March 2000), "SeaLifePark review", The Sydney Morning Herald
  7. ^ Molitorisz, Sacha (7 November 1997), "The Hand in Glovebox", The Sydney Morning Herald
  8. ^ Lau, Kristie (23 November 2008), "Idol's idle moments", Sun Herald
  9. ^ Hewitt, Rachel (2 October 2008), "Out of the Woods", MX (Australia)
  10. ^ Mathieson, Craig (10 May 2008), "Mann and Super-Mann", The Sydney Morning Herald
  11. ^ "The Gradual Demise of Phillipa Finch". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 5 February 2011.
  12. ^ Rule, Dan (1 June 2007). "Sounds of seclusion". The Melbourne Age. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
  13. ^ Verity, William (22 March 2005), "How a musical genius emerged from a rusty shack atop Saddleback", Illawarra Mercury
  14. ^ Zuel, Bernard (22 October 2004), "Everything's a Love Letter review", The Sydney Morning Herald
  15. ^ Zuel, Bernard (9 June 2007), "Night Maps review", The Sydney Morning Herald