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In 2009, Walker won the seventh season of Australian Idol, and signed a recording contract with Sony Music Australia. [1] Walker's debut studio album Introducing Stan Walker , which contained selected songs he performed on Australian Idol , was released on 11 December 2009.
Stan Walker, was released on 8 December 2009, three days ahead of its original release date. [22] The album featured the selected songs Walker had performed as part of the top twelve on Australian Idol, as well the two original songs, "Black Box" and "Think of Me", which was produced by the first Australian Idol winner, Guy Sebastian. [23]
Impossible (Music by the Book) is a compilation album by New Zealand-Australian singer Stan Walker, released on 25 September 2020 to coincide with the release of his first memoir, Impossible. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The album compiles tracks from four of five of Walker's studio albums, one of two EPs and numerous non-album singles and guest appearances.
It should only contain pages that are Stan Walker songs or lists of Stan Walker songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Stan Walker songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Let the Music Play is the third studio album by Australian-New Zealand recording artist Stan Walker, released through Sony Music Australia on 18 November 2011. Walker worked with several record producers on the album, including Richard Vission, Chico Bennett, Nicholas "RAS" Furlong and Static Revenger, among others.
A music video for the song was released on 28 November 2023, shot in different locations around New Zealand. [7] Walker co-directed the video alongside music video director Shae Sterling. [6] "I Am" is planned to be the leading single from an extended play to be released by Walker in early 2024. [6]
Te Arohanui is the sixth studio album by New Zealand recording artist Stan Walker.It is Walker's first in te reo Māori and released on 17 September 2021 by Sony Music New Zealand and features a combination of Walker's greatest hits re-recorded in te reo Māori and several new tracks. [4]
Jade from MusicFix compared the song to all other Australian Idol winners' singles and wrote that the "black box" metaphor differentiates it from the others. She called the sound a "generic R&B beat" and continued by comparing Walker's voice to fellow Australian Idol winner Guy Sebastian, saying that Australian Idol voters "decided one Sebastian just wasn't enough."