
By Suzanna Mcloughlin
Local blues musician Zed Charles has rocked the CD category of the Memphis Blues Challenge with his debut album, Hear My Word. His submission rose through the ranks, making it into the third round of the competition and finishing in joint sixth, over a vast number of applicants from all over the world.
Hear My Word had already achieved Aussie acclaim, holding the no. 2 spot on the ABRAC charts for three months, and remarkably, the album was entirely self-produced. Zed performed each component, from percussion, to bass and rhythm guitar to vocals, even writing his own lyrics.
Describing his sound, Zed says “There’s traditional blues, and people who want to take the genre and evolve it a little more. I’d say I’m probably in the second category. It’s a tricky sort of thing to keep those traditional sounds and styles but also maybe add something, evolve it, or push it in a new direction. Put your stamp on it. I think that’s, believe it or not, the reason why my album did so well in the competition.”
Zed grew up in Bowen, gaining his early musical training at the conservatorium in Mackay before going to jazz school in Brisbane, staying there for most of his early career. Eventually, he joined the heavy rock band, The Royal Artillery, before Covid-19 provided a pause in which he moved back home to the Whitsundays. Here, in paradise, Zed stripped back to his roots, and dipped back into the blues.
Having played gigs across Australia (including the Airlie Beach Music Festival), and internationally, solo, in bands, and alongside names like Mungo Jerry, Zed Charles is now looking to bring his focus back home.
He is currently working on launching a Whitsundays Blues Association, working with Mackay Blues Club to “nuture a bigger blues network in Australia… but also nurture the people who play blues, give them a platform.”
Zed’s goal is to help more people fall in love with blues music, whilst creating pathways and opportunities that show young people that they can find their success and launch their music careers right here, in the Whitsundays. He highlights Airlie Beach as a hub of live music and artistry, with its density of venues and music-lovers, that can have the potential to launch musicians just as equally as the big cities usually associated with the gig scene. “Watch this space,” he says.
With projects planned with Seth Enslow from the Crusty Demons, sponsorship from local business Poschelk Guitars, and sights set on playing stateside in Texas, Zed Charles has a big year ahead. Catch him next hosting the Porch Blues Festival in Caboolture, on 2 May.
Zed Charles by Summer Rain Photography