BIO

Anousha Victoire is a weaver of everyday dreams, stitching folk/world influenced melodies with bell-over-water clarity of vocal tone. 

Her live performance combines the soaring vocal range of Kate Bush, the melodic pop folk feels of Beth Orton, the fearless feminist fire of Ani Difranco, and the haunting roots melodies of Gillian Welch. With her rotating band of highly accomplished strings and percussion, the introspective singer-songwriter blends delicate ideas with a heart-aching immediacy. 

Her trademark fingerpicking folk guitar and haunting vocal melodies are complemented by soaring, emotive strings and vocal harmonies, blending into folk storytelling timeless classics. 

After her first ABC Music Award (Folk) for one of the very first songs she wrote, she went on to build a loyal following with multiple songs gaining indie and ABC radio airplay. 

Festival credits over the years include the Woodford Folk Festival, National Folk Festival, Tamworth Country Music Festival, Cresfest, Bundanoon Folk Festival, Northern Beaches Music Festival, St Albans Folk Festival Planet Dungog, and Wollombi Festival. She has shared the stage with Judy Small, We Mavericks, Mic Conway, Rebecca Barnard, Isabel Rumble, Melanie Horsnell, Gleny Rae Virus, Felicity Dowd, Jhana Allan, Ember Swift and Penelope Swales.

Initial EP releases back in early 2000's won recognition, with another ABC Music Award (World Music) for anti-war song Her Love Will Not Return, and airplay of her song on the plight of the last asylum seeker on Nauru with Last Man Standing. She returned to the studio with 2020 full length album Precious Things, and the single Rather Be Your Lover (Than Your Wife) featuring guest bluegrass musicians Gleny Rae and Robbie Long, received airplay on Double J and independent radio. In 2023 she launched EP Embers of the Night produced by Gareth Hudson, with widespread acclaim and airplay on independent radio across Australia and in the UK. Single Mole Creek debuted at #4 on the AMRAP regional charts.

Stunned the room into silence”

— Newcastle Herald

I love it when I find a young singer-songwriter who understands the tradition from which their music grows. Anousha Victoire is one such performer. She knows where her songs come from, both in form and content, and her music is the more powerful for that knowledge.”

— Judy Small

Woodford Folk Festival 2024 
Photo credit: Kurt Peterson