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Explore powerful stories at the intersection of history, culture, and music—from Aboriginal cricket pioneers and war heroes to legendary albums by Hendrix, Miles Davis, and Gurrumul. This blog dives deep into First Nations resilience, iconic protest music, and untold truths that shaped Australia and the world. Engaging, thoughtful, and unapologetically real—where powerful voices from the past meet today's social conversation.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this page contains images and names of deceased persons.
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![Mitch Tambo - Guurrama-Li [2018]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/4c5356_21e15455f8364fdf9aefc27509c800b3~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_333,h_250,fp_0.50_0.50,q_35,blur_30,enc_avif,quality_auto/4c5356_21e15455f8364fdf9aefc27509c800b3~mv2.webp)
![Mitch Tambo - Guurrama-Li [2018]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/4c5356_21e15455f8364fdf9aefc27509c800b3~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_454,h_341,fp_0.50_0.50,q_95,enc_avif,quality_auto/4c5356_21e15455f8364fdf9aefc27509c800b3~mv2.webp)
Mitch Tambo - Guurrama-Li [2018]
Mitch Tambo’s debut album Guurrama-Li [2018] arrived with the confidence and clarity of an artist who knows exactly who he is and exactly what he wants to say. A proud Gamilaraay man with a voice built for both ceremony and stadiums, Tambo has created a project that is as much a cultural declaration as it is a musical statement — a fusion of pop ambition, traditional language, and deep-rooted storytelling that feels both celebratory and necessary. From the outset, Guurrama-Li

Groote Broadcasting
Dec 13, 20252 min read


Barkaa - The New Matriarch of Australian Rap.
Barkaa — the stage name of Chloe Quayle, a Malyangapa, Barkindji woman from western New South Wales — has become one of the most commanding and necessary voices in Australian music. In just a few short years, she’s transformed from an emerging rapper with raw, uncompromising bars to a national force: a storyteller, a truth-teller, and a cultural firebrand whose voice carries the weight of generations. Her rise has been nothing short of remarkable. Barkaa’s music arrived not a

Groote Broadcasting
Dec 8, 20252 min read
![Georgia Lee Sings the Blues Down Under [1962]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/4c5356_cd1791d8301e4a9cbd39bfdeef272ad1~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_333,h_250,fp_0.50_0.50,q_35,blur_30,enc_avif,quality_auto/4c5356_cd1791d8301e4a9cbd39bfdeef272ad1~mv2.webp)
![Georgia Lee Sings the Blues Down Under [1962]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/4c5356_cd1791d8301e4a9cbd39bfdeef272ad1~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_454,h_341,fp_0.50_0.50,q_95,enc_avif,quality_auto/4c5356_cd1791d8301e4a9cbd39bfdeef272ad1~mv2.webp)
Georgia Lee Sings the Blues Down Under [1962]
Georgia Lee — born Ramer Lyra “Dulcie” Pitt in Cairns in 1921 — occupies a singular place in Australian music history: a trailblazer whose artistry broke barriers long before the industry was ready to acknowledge them. A proud woman of Torres Strait Islander, Jamaican and Scottish heritage, Lee grew up in a musical family and began her career in the dance halls, clubs, and hotel circuits of North Queensland, singing jazz and blues with a voice that could shift from velvety wa

Groote Broadcasting
Dec 6, 20252 min read


Oral tradition sits at the heart of First Nations cultures in Australia.
Oral tradition sits at the heart of First Nations cultures in Australia—an intellectual, spiritual, and cultural archive maintained not on paper, but in memory, voice, and lived practice. For tens of thousands of years, long before written language was introduced to the continent, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples preserved vast bodies of knowledge through spoken word, song, dance, story, ceremony, art, and Country itself. These traditions are not simply stories;

Groote Broadcasting
Nov 26, 20252 min read


World Toilet Day: Not a joke, a lifeline.
Every year on 19 November, the world pauses for World Toilet Day—a date that might invite easy jokes, but in reality demands sober attention. There is nothing humorous about the global sanitation crisis. It is one of the most persistent, deadly, and underreported humanitarian emergencies on the planet. Today, over 3.5 billion people live without safe sanitation. Nearly 500 million still defecate in the open—behind bushes, in rivers, on roadsides. In crowded slums, families sh

Groote Broadcasting
Nov 19, 20251 min read


Remembrance Day: Honouring All Who Served — Including Those Who Fought for a Country That Denied Them.
Each year, on the 11th of November, Australians pause for one minute’s silence at 11 a.m. to remember those who have died in war and conflict. Remembrance Day marks the end of the First World War in 1918 — the moment the guns fell silent on the Western Front. It is a day to honour courage, sacrifice, and the price of peace. Yet woven into this solemn reflection is a story that has too often gone untold — the story of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men and women who

Groote Broadcasting
Nov 11, 20252 min read


Gary Foley: The Firebrand of Aboriginal Activism.
Dr. Gary Foley (born 1950) is one of the most influential and outspoken figures in the history of Aboriginal activism in Australia — a man whose life’s work has challenged the nation to confront its deepest injustices. Born in Grafton, New South Wales, and a proud Gumbaynggirr man, Foley came of age during an era of immense social upheaval. His voice would soon become one of the defining ones in the modern Aboriginal rights movement. Foley moved to Sydney in the late 1960s, w

Groote Broadcasting
Oct 13, 20252 min read


Blak History Month 🎙Oodgeroo Noonuccal (1920–1993): Poet, Activist, Educator, Trailblazer.
Born Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska at Bulimba, Brisbane in 1920, her home was on North Stradbroke Island (Minjerribah). Oodgeroo Noonuccal was...

Groote Broadcasting
Jul 18, 20252 min read
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