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Black Arm Band

Black Arm Band is a former Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander music theatre company. Founded in 2006, it mounted large productions in many major festivals and showcased the talents of many Indigenous Australians over the years, until its closure in December 2018.

The organisation was founded in 2006 by Steven Richardson, who was then artistic director of Arts House in Melbourne. The organisation's name comes from a speech by former Australian prime minister John Howard, who referred to a "black armband view of history".

Their first show, murundak (meaning "alive" in Woiwurrung), debuted in the Hamer Hall at the October 2006 Melbourne International Arts Festival and afterwards played around Australia and internationally in London. Their second show, Hidden Republic, debuted at the 2008 Melbourne International Arts Festival. Black Arm Band continued to mount productions at many major festivals in the following years.

In 2009 the new artistic director of the renamed Melbourne Festival, Brett Sheehy, continued the relationship with Black Arm Band.[citation needed] This saw the commissioning and presentation of the world premiere of Dirtsong, a piece of musical theatre conceived and directed by Steven Richardson, in 2009. With words written by Miles Franklin Award-winner Alexis Wright, Dirtsong, included both contemporary and traditional songs, and was a celebration of preservation of Indigenous languages. The show was reprised for the 2014 Adelaide Festival, with performers including Trevor Jamieson (who was not in the 2009 version), Archie Roach, Lou Bennett, Emma Donovan, Paul Dempsey, and many other singers and musicians. Some of the songs were sung in Aboriginal languages.

Seven Songs to Leave Behind (2010) was also conceived and directed by Richardson. Seven Songs was an international collaboration by contemporary Indigenous singers and musicians, including Gurrumul Yunupingu, joined by Sinéad O'Connor, John Cale, Rickie Lee Jones, and Meshell Ndegeocello.[citation needed] In 2010, Black Arm Band appeared at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London and at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada.

Notes From the Hard Road And Beyond (2011, also by Richardson) saw Mavis Staples, Joss Stone, Emmanuel Jal and Paul Dempsey join Black Arm Band to celebrate protest music from the 1960s through to contemporary Indigenous songs of activism.[citation needed]

In 2017, Black Arm Band celebrated its 10th anniversary with a concert at the City Recital Hall in Sydney.

Steven Richardson was the founding chair or director. For several years the organisation's affairs were handled by Melbourne consultants Auspicious Arts, but in 2011 it became an autonomous company. Funding initially came from the Australia Council, but after the funding cuts in 2015, it received funding from Creative Victoria and some private foundations, corporate sponsors, and philanthropists. In 2016, the Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations found housekeeping problems and other irregularities in the organisation's governance, record-keeping, and financial management.

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