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Keith Lamb
Keith migrated from England to Australia in 1970 and formed the
successful, multi-cultural glam-rock band Hush.
As lead singer and co-writer for
much of Hush’s material, he lead the band to great national success, with many
top ten hits such as Glad All Over and Boney Maronie.
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Keith toured Australia and New Zealand almost continuously for almost a decade
and was a regular compere on the music shows such as Countdown, Sounds
Unlimited, Hey Hey It’s Saturday, GTK and more. After Hush, Keith performed in
the first Australian production of Jesus Christ, Superstar, He produced many
successful albums e.g. Pioneers (the poetry of Banjo Patterson set to music)
which went triple platinum. Keith co-wrote many songs for Status Quo, including
several top 10 hits such as Ol’ Rag Blues and Over the Edge.
The ABC’s
Australian Story made a documentary, narrated by Louise, tracing some of Keith’s
life, from the Hush days to the present. Hush starred in the recent Countdown
Spectacular Tour of Australia in 2006 to high acclaim.
Keith is the Creative Director for Rajmahal and TAOC®, The Art of Conversation. |
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Louise Howland
Louise is an Australian who has traveled widely and worked in many fields,
including as a psychiatric nurse and music teacher. Amongst her loves are
nature, books, writing, music, art and travel. Louise has a natural gift for
lateral thinking. Louise formed the company Rajmahal in 1986. Rajmahal
(www.rajmahal.com.au) manufactures and wholesales unique embroidery designs and
materials, exporting to the USA, Canada, UK, South Africa, Turkey and various
countries in Europe. She is a monthly columnist for Embroidery & Cross Stitch.
TAOC is being successfully exported to the USA, UK, Canada, New Zealand and
elsewhere through book, game and education channels.
Translations into French
and German are complete, with more translations in progress. |
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Louise and Keith are passionate about conversation and its benefits. They have
researched and developed TAOC® as a labour of love over many years.
“The time has come”, the Walrus said, “to talk of many things”. Lewis
Carroll. |
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