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Australian-born guitarist and singer Orianthi Panagaris, aka Orianthi, is a virtuoso performer whose sound is steeped in hard rock traditions. She first began wowing audiences in her teens, opening for <a href="spotify:artist:32Jb1X3wSmmoHj2epZReZA">Steve Vai</a> and jamming with <a href="spotify:artist:7yGQgQiiKpg2k00JXf8hJk">Carlos Santana</a>. After issuing her debut long-player Violet Journey in 2005, Orianthi relocated to Los Angeles where she performed on national television with <a href="spotify:artist:4xFUf1FHVy696Q1JQZMTRj">Carrie Underwood</a> and was part of <a href="spotify:artist:3fMbdgg4jU18AjLCKBhRSm">Michael Jackson</a>'s planned This Is It tour. She broke through to a wider audience with 2009's Believe, netting the international hit single "According to You." Along with her own albums, like 2013's Heaven in This Hell, she has continued to earn respect from veteran rock icons, including forming the group <a href="spotify:artist:2itH5qLUHBDktwRBLySnCY">RSO</a> with <a href="spotify:artist:6uNjT2PKDfR7t48JKhajkh">Richie Sambora</a>, with whom she released Radio Free America in 2018. Through it all, Orianthi's searing fretboard skills and passion for anthemic rock remain her focus, as evidenced by 2020's O and 2022's Rock Candy.

Born in 1985 in Adelaide, Australia, Orianthi Panagaris was only six when she fell in love with the electric guitar, thanks to her dad's record collection. Legendary names like <a href="spotify:artist:6PAt558ZEZl0DmdXlnjMgD">Clapton</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:776Uo845nYHJpNaStv1Ds4">Hendrix</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:7yGQgQiiKpg2k00JXf8hJk">Santana</a> influenced decision to take lessons. She spent five years learning the acoustic guitar before switching to the electric at the age 11. Playing in bands since she was 14, she performed in her first stage show for <a href="spotify:artist:32Jb1X3wSmmoHj2epZReZA">Steve Vai</a> at the age 15. Subsequently, she left school, turned her focus to songwriting, and began her professional career. Three years later, at 18, while working as a studio and utility player, Orianthi met and jammed with <a href="spotify:artist:7yGQgQiiKpg2k00JXf8hJk">Carlos Santana</a> in Adelaide. He invited her on-stage to play during his soundcheck and was so impressed he asked her to perform with him that night. The single-song guest spot evolved into a 30-minute jam. With <a href="spotify:artist:7yGQgQiiKpg2k00JXf8hJk">Santana</a>'s enthusiastic endorsement, she went on to share stages with <a href="spotify:artist:5a2EaR3hamoenG9rDuVn8j">Prince</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2AM4ilv6UzW0uMRuqKtDgN">ZZ Top</a>, and others. In 2006 she independently released her debut album Violet Journey. Not only did it receive enthusiastic press response, it won her a record deal with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Geffen%22">Geffen</a>. The album was reissued a year later by <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Universal%22">Universal</a>, while she played as an opener for guitarist <a href="spotify:artist:32Jb1X3wSmmoHj2epZReZA">Steve Vai</a> on a world tour.

Upon her return, Orianthi emigrated to Los Angeles. While working on her sophomore album she played extensively as a session and touring musician. Her abilities were noted by millions of television viewers when she joined <a href="spotify:artist:4xFUf1FHVy696Q1JQZMTRj">Carrie Underwood</a>'s band for a 2009 Grammy Awards performance. That same year, an email invitation arrived asking her to audition for <a href="spotify:artist:3fMbdgg4jU18AjLCKBhRSm">Michael Jackson</a>, who was assembling a band for a 50-date residency at London's O2 Arena. One blistering rendition of the "Beat It" solo was enough to land the gig, but the King of Pop unexpectedly passed in June of that same year. Orianthi sang at the memorial service, and rehearsal footage of the guitarist backing <a href="spotify:artist:3fMbdgg4jU18AjLCKBhRSm">Jackson</a> was featured in the popular film Michael Jackson's This Is It.

Her second long-player, Believe, arrived several days before the movie's release, featuring the Top 20 single "According to You." It was re-released in 2010 as Believe (II) with four different songs, including a cover of <a href="spotify:artist:2TPyCsRoh2tjeZLTQ2ojlj">John Waite</a>'s "Missing You." It also featured a guest spot from <a href="spotify:artist:32Jb1X3wSmmoHj2epZReZA">Vai</a> on the tune "Highly Strung." The set charted inside the top half of the Top 200. The following year, Orianthi released the digital EP Fire featuring production from the <a href="spotify:artist:0NKDgy9j66h3DLnN8qu1bB">Eurythmics</a>' <a href="spotify:artist:7gcCQIlkkfbul5Mt0jBQkg">Dave Stewart</a>. In 2013, Orianthi returned with her third full-length album, Heaven in This Hell. Also produced by <a href="spotify:artist:7gcCQIlkkfbul5Mt0jBQkg">Stewart</a>, it contained all five tracks from the EP and centered on modern country and blues. It charted inside the Top 40 on the Independent Albums chart. Orianthi also appeared during the Top Seven week on season 12 of American Idol to play guitar for each of the performances.

While working with <a href="spotify:artist:3EhbVgyfGd7HkpsagwL9GS">Cooper</a> in 2013, she met former <a href="spotify:artist:58lV9VcRSjABbAbfWS6skp">Bon Jovi</a> guitarist <a href="spotify:artist:6uNjT2PKDfR7t48JKhajkh">Richie Sambora</a> who was vacationing in Hawaii. <a href="spotify:artist:3EhbVgyfGd7HkpsagwL9GS">Cooper</a>, who was playing a benefit for the Maui Food Bank, invited <a href="spotify:artist:6uNjT2PKDfR7t48JKhajkh">Sambora</a> on-stage. He and Orianthi played <a href="spotify:artist:776Uo845nYHJpNaStv1Ds4">Hendrix</a>'s "Voodoo Child" and <a href="spotify:artist:0VdoLGGpWcDZnzep6SSTdP">Montrose</a>'s "Rock Candy" (the latter was sung by its original vocalist <a href="spotify:artist:1hXjTjJzZTXDZ75AclOo6N">Sammy Hagar</a>). The pair hit it off professionally and personally. A month later, <a href="spotify:artist:6uNjT2PKDfR7t48JKhajkh">Sambora</a> invited Orianthi to join him for a tour of Europe and Australia. By the time it ended, they were a romantic couple. After fulfilling her remaining commitments to <a href="spotify:artist:3EhbVgyfGd7HkpsagwL9GS">Cooper</a> (while fending off numerous invites from <a href="spotify:artist:5a2EaR3hamoenG9rDuVn8j">Prince</a> to join his band), Orianthi and <a href="spotify:artist:6uNjT2PKDfR7t48JKhajkh">Sambora</a> built a home studio while making plans for a recorded musical collaboration. It took two years, but by 2015, the pair's band, called <a href="spotify:artist:2itH5qLUHBDktwRBLySnCY">RSO</a> (after their respective initials) enlisted Bob Rock as producer and began tracking some of the 70-plus songs they had penned together. In 2017 they released the five-track EP Rise and followed it a year later with the album Radio Free America. In May of 2018, they performed during the 11th season of the PBS performance series Soundstage. Though they eventually split as a couple, <a href="spotify:artist:2itH5qLUHBDktwRBLySnCY">RSO</a> remained a going concern.

In November of 2020, Orianthi released her fourth solo album, O, produced by Marti Frederiksen on <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Frontiers+Records%22">Frontiers Records</a>. It was followed two years later by Live from Hollywood, a concert album recorded at L.A.'s Bourbon Room. On the heels of that release, she delivered her fifth studio album, 2022's Jacob Bunton-produced Rock Candy. ~ Matt Collar & Thom Jurek, Rovi

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