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AAP
AAP
Lifestyle
Alex Mitchell

Iconic Australian music acts inducted into Hall of Fame

Kate Ceberano is one of six enduring Australian artists inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame. (Sarah Wilson/AAP PHOTOS)

Australian music greats are reflecting on their journey to the top of the charts as they take in their immortality.

Six artists - Gurrumul, Jenny Morris, Kate Ceberano, Spiderbait, The Living End, and Vika and Linda Bull - were inducted into the Australian Recording Industry Association Hall of Fame on Thursday night.

ARIA, which typically inducts one artist a year, elevated six to top-tier status on Thursday night as part of its 40th anniversary celebrations.

Vika and Linda
Vocal duo Vika & Linda have joined the Hall of Fame as part of ARIA's 40th anniversary celebrations. (Sarah Wilson/AAP PHOTOS)

For Melbourne rockers The Living End, the honour signalled a rare moment to stop thinking about what's next and instead take stock of what the band had achieved in its decades-long career.

"We don't spend a lot of time in the rear view mirror, but this has forced us to do it," frontman Chris Cheney told AAP.

"It's a pretty amazing journey from when we were 15 years old.

"Being that 15-year-old was day-to-day ... let's start a band, let's write a song, let's get a gig, let's be inducted in the Hall of Fame - it's the logical step, I guess."

Renowned for the classic track Prisoner of Society, The Living End are viewed as Australia's biggest rockers of the 1990s and boast six ARIA awards.

The Living End
"It's a pretty amazing journey from when we were 15," The Living End's Chris Cheney (centre) says. (Sarah Wilson/AAP PHOTOS)

Singer-songwriter Kate Ceberano was similarly reflective.

Along with AC/DC, Midnight Oil and Kylie Minogue, Ceberano is one of just four Australian artists to have top 10 albums in five straight decades.

"It was a struggle ... every venue, RSL, pub, club, you had to travel from Sydney to Melbourne three times in a car in a month ... fuelled entirely on passion, your muse and the willingness to be amongst it," she told AAP.

"(Hall of Fame) places you in a small percentage of those who've worked really, really hard and have contributed a lot to culture.

"To link arms with all of those people is just phenomenal."

Thursday's honours included a posthumous gong for Indigenous icon Gurrumul, who died in 2017.

Credited with helping to take Indigenous music to the world, the legendary artist from the Gumatj clan of Elcho Island in Arnhem Land died aged 46 after a battle with kidney and liver disease.

The self-taught multi-instrumentalist, who was born blind, performed around the world including at New York's Carnegie Hall and the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Concert in London.

Spiderbait
Spiderbait started in the era of "Farnsey and Barnsey", bass player and singer Janet English says. (Sarah Wilson/AAP PHOTOS)

Spiderbait, who broke out in the 1990s but reached superstar status covering Black Betty in 2004, originated in rural NSW and took their hits to the world.

"When we started, it was 'Farnsey' and 'Barnsey' and these mega bands, but then there was this underground of punk," bass guitarist and singer Janet English told AAP.

"No one expected anything would ever happen, and then Nirvana happened, and then it went bonkers ... we never thought anything would ever really happen.

"It's a weird journey."

New Zealand-born, Australian-based singer-songwriter Jenny Morris and revered sibling vocal duo Vika and Linda were also inducted into the Hall of Fame.

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