![Long a star in Australia, musician Delta Goodrem is on a 'mission' to entertain us all](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6513812.1657224735!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/delta-goodrem-napa.jpg)
Long a star in Australia, musician Delta Goodrem is on a 'mission' to entertain us all
CBC
Delta Goodrem says she always promised fans a return to North America — it just took her a little longer than expected.
"I'm amazed when someone shares with me, you know, 'I've been a part of this journey [with you] from afar,'" the Australian singer-songwriter said in an interview, following her Canada Day-weekend gig opening for the Backstreet Boys in Toronto.
Despite previous album releases in Canada and the United States, Goodrem's music has largely flown under the radar in North America. But back home, she is a bona fide star.
Her 2003 debut, Innocent Eyes, which she recorded and largely co-wrote as a teenager, remains the highest-selling album of all time by an Australian female artist.
Since then, she's had four more No. 1 albums, made her mark on the small screen as a judge and mentor of The Voice Australia for eight seasons, and starred on the theatre stage.
She's performed with the likes of Andrea Bocelli and Olivia Newton-John, and written for Canadian songstress Céline Dion. In January, she was named a Member of the Order of Australia.
Now, in the wake of two "resets" — first, a paralysis that left her unable to sing, and second, a pandemic that both kept her away from the stage and helped her connect with international fans online — Goodrem, 37, said she feels ready to spread her wings beyond Oz.
"It was always the plan to take the show that we had just finished in Australia on the road," said Goodrem, referring to her recent headlining tour. "I feel like I couldn't imagine being anywhere else right now."
When Goodrem began her career 20 years ago, the music industry looked quite different. Physical CD sales triumphed and legal music downloads were only beginning to gain popularity.
While she has performed on tours with other artists and made promotional visits in Canada and the U.S. in the years since, her headlining tours have been limited to Australia.
In a "new world," where musicians can perform live online for fans at the tap of a button, or release their music globally via music-streaming services, she says the way she connects with fans has changed.
"I kind of look at it like there's a new freedom of, if you want to have someone's music a part of your life, there's an easier way to do that. So I think that's very different to when I started," Goodrem said.
During the strict pandemic lockdowns in Australia, Goodrem produced dozens of weekly concerts on Instagram, known affectionately as the Bunkerdown Sessions, performing songs from her own catalogue and covers of songs by fellow artists. The videos garnered hundreds of thousands of views.
"I started to realize how connected we all were around the world," she said. "That was the start of realizing that there were so many people out there who were taking [in] my music again."