Description
Col Hardy is an Indigenousl man from the Kamilaroi tribe, who was born and raised in Brewarrina NSW.
As a young man he became interested in music listening to the wireless of an evening. He taught himself to play guitar, and he was a winner at a talent quest in Walgett, run by the late Willie Fennell. Col toured with âThe Willie Fennell Travelling Showâ. He moved to Sydney in 1962 to further his music career.
Col has sung in hotels and clubs in NSW, QLD, VIC and TAS. He performed on TVs Bandstand, The Midday Show etc. and more recently on Living Black. He also performed with âThe All Coloured Showâ with other talented entertainers, such as the late Jimmy Little, Freddy Little, Betty Fisher, Candy Williams and many other great indigenous artists. Col also toured with âThe Brian Young Showâ to remote Aboriginal missions in QLD, NT, WA and Islands off the top of Australia.
In 1972 while performing in Tamworth he was approached by Opal Records to record an EP, named âProtest Protestâ which won him a Golden Guitar in 1973 at the Australasian Country Music Awards in Tamworth. He was the first Aboriginal to receive a Golden Guitar and it helped pave the way for many other indigenous artists. Four albums later he was inducted into the âCountry Music Hands of Fameâ in Tamworth.
Col was proud and honoured to be recognized by his own people during NAIDOC Week 1990, when he was voted âAboriginal Artist of the Year for NSWâ. He now performs with his own band, and also at numerous Country Music Festivals.
For the past 20 years Col has worked with Taronga Park Zoo Education Unit, which takes the Zoomobile with a workshop called âAnimals of the Dreamingâ out to schools all over NSW, teaching children about protecting native animals and the environment. The children get to see and touch the native animals. Col sings and tells dreamtime stories and shows them Aboriginal artifacts.
Col received an OAM in the Queenâs Birthday Honours list in 2007, for his services to the country music industry as a singer and recording artist, and to the community through the delivery of outreach zoological education programs in regional areas.
In 2011, Col was presented with a âDeadly Awardâ at the national Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islands Awards. He received the Jimmy Little Award for lifetime achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait music.
2013 â Col was awarded âAustralian Country Music Living Legend Awardâ at Kempsey.
2014 â After over 25 years Col recorded an album entitled âI Am Meâ.
2016 – Received a âMO Awardâ for Country Male Performer of the Year.
2018 â Received a Cook Award, Recorded Gospel album âIt Is No Secretâ.