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“Rarely does a new voice of such originality and unusual approach appear.” 

John McBeath – The Australian

“Nadene Pita is a rare bird – a creature seemingly free of artistic hesitation and a blissfully unusual composer, she possesses a plaintive and free-flowing alto which catches the ear immediately.” – Aidan Roberts, City News

"Nadene Pita has assembled a veritable who’s who of appropriate collaborators for her debut album, Turning Arrows Into Flowers. Between the recordings and her live sets some of Australia’s best in the fields of jazz (Chris Abrahams, Hamish Stuart), electro-acoustic (Abel Cross) and electronic improv (Claire Herbert), not to mention eclectic producer Tony Dupe, have lent their collective expertise. The album takes in all these points, harnessing them into a laid back, at times abstract, and ever engaging whole...subtle electronic molecular processing hinting at the fullness of the album’s scope. ‘Red Shoes’ ...Pita ironically states ‘Why don’t you straighten your hair?/Why don’t you fit in?/Why don’t you straighten your clothes and your attitude?/’Cause it’s what you’re supposed to do” with all the throaty growl of a diva. ‘Newborn’ is mostly layers of Pita’s own voice and gives an idea of the range of sounds she can utilize, from regular singing to operatic choir to gutteral groans, and brief sample snatches of baby laughter.

‘Fire’ heads into abstract jazz territory and is where the album really gets interesting. Pita’s wailing, wordless vocals (both forwards and played backwards) are interspersed with drum shuffles, sax blurts and cello groans. Gentle but erratic it sets up the final half of the album which steers away from the straightforward to more improvised, psychedelic terrain. ‘Revolution’ is joyous polyrhythm under Polynesian chants and ‘Parachute Man’ finishes the album with a 7 minute summary of electro-acoustic improv, glitchy processing and vocal swoon... when Pita and her assorted musicians really let fly, can head off into the stratosphere."

Adrian Elmer, Cyclic Defrost

© 2026 Nadene Pita

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