Following a pair of early self-released EPs in 2003 and 2005, Laura Jean issued her debut album in 2006. The lush chamber folk of Our Swan Song fared well, receiving airplay on Triple J radio, and was reissued the following year on the Scotland Yard label. She began to support larger touring indie acts across the country and even joined Irish rock band Snow Patrol on-stage during two of their Australian tours. Her second album, a conceptual piece about self-discovery called Eden Land, arrived in 2009 and ended up on many critics' Top Ten lists for the year. She did a tour supporting Bon Iver and even appeared on the popular Australian quiz show Rockwiz.
After several long international tours, she retreated to the country to write material for her third album, 2011's heavier, electric guitar-based A Fool Who'll. That same year she joined frequent collaborators Biddy Connor and Jen Sholakis, and the trio released an album under the name Sailor Days. For her fourth album, Laura Jean traveled to Bristol, England to record with producer John Parish (PJ Harvey, Goldfrapp). The resulting self-titled release was issued in 2014 and again saw a sonic shift for the singer as she turned in an intimate, spare, largely acoustic set that was shortlisted for an Australian Music Prize and led to Australian and New Zealand tours with Aldous Harding and Marlon Williams. Following a 2016 vinyl reissue of her debut and subsequent acoustic tour, Laura Jean again changed directions, parlaying her newfound fascination with an old '90s Kawai keyboard into a bright, synth-led dream pop-type sound on her fifth album, 2018's Devotion.
By the next decade, Laura Jean had again altered her approach, this time blending lush string sections and other orchestrations with a sophisticated hybrid of acoustic and synth-based arrangements. Released in November 2022, her sixth album, Amateurs, examined with a mix of humor and poignant observation concepts of anti-art and anti-intellectualism in the modern world. Produced by Tim Bruniges and with string arrangements by Erkki Veltheim, it also featured guest vocals by Aldous Harding and Marlon Williams. ~ Timothy Monger, Rovi