This will be music to your ears: John Farnham, Olivia Newton-John and Savage Garden are the latest artists to be added to the National Film and Sound Archive's selection of recordings.

Each year a panel selects 10 recordings from a list of public nominations to add to the official Sounds of Australia archive, which has been operational since 2007.

Designed to provide a snapshot of Australian life, the selection of recordings on this year's list have "cultural, historical and aesthetic significance and relevance" — and a number of pop music bangers made the cut.

You're The One That I Want by Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta, Truly Madly Deeply by Savage Garden, and Up There, Cazaly by The Two-Man Band all feature on the list, with curator Thorsten Kaeding promising there was "something for absolutely everyone in there".

"Truly Madly Deeply was such a huge hit around the world. Number one in the US, I think people forget just how big that song was," he told ABC Radio Canberra.

The iconic 90s duo, Savage Garden's Daniel Jones and Darren Hayes. ( Supplied: National Film and Sound Archive )

And after years of social media campaigning, You're The Voice by John Farnham has finally made the cut.

"You're The Voice is one that, for years now, we've been hearing, 'Why isn't that on sounds of Australia yet?'" Mr Kaeding said.

"Well, now it is!"

Mr Kaeding's favourite item on this year's list was a song by harmony duo and cousins, Olive and Eva.

"Olive and Eva are two Indigenous women from country New South Wales. This is the first commercially released disc by Indigenous artists in Australia, from 1955, and it's written by an Irish woman living in Sydney," he said.

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Alongside songs, this year's list includes Indigenous recordings from Central Australia, recorded in the early 1900s; Banjo Patterson's famous poem The Man from Snowy River, read by Leonard Teale; and a "beautiful classical piece" by composer Elena Kats-Chernin and the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra.

"We don't have quotas as such, but we do like to get a good spread across the eras," Mr Kaeding said of the final 10 choices.

"We get the [public] nominations and give them to an expert panel of academics, artist, industry professionals, and they come up with the 10 each year that get inducted.

"The earliest sounds start at 1896, the latest ones have to be at least 10 years old. "

Mr Kaeding said Sounds of Australia also reflected a mix of genres.

"It's not just the popular songs of the last 30-odd years. We've got speeches, we've got experimental music, we've got wildlife recordings."

Wild Swans, performed by the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, is based on a fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen. ( Supplied: National Film and Sound Archive )

This year's recordings join 145 other official Sounds of Australia, including audio of Cyclone Tracy, the 1972 smash hit I Am Woman by Helen Reddy, and, of course, music by Australia's pop queen, Kylie Minogue.

The 2019 Sounds of Australia are: 1. Cylinder recordings from Central Australia, Spencer and Gillen, and Aboriginal communities, 1901-1902 2. Twilight of the Gods / Die Gotterdammerungm Florence Austral, 1928 3. I'm the Sheik of Scrubby Creek, Chad Morgan, 1952 4. Prestophone Mastertape, Olive and Eva, 1955 5. The Man From Snowy River, Leonard Teale, 1956 6. You're The One That I Want, Olivia Newton John and John Travolta (John Farrer, composer), 1978 7. Up There, Cazaly, The Two-Man Band, 1979 8. You're The Voice, John Farnham, 1986 9. Truly Madly Deeply, Savage Garden, 1997 10. Wild Swans, Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra (Elena Kats-Chernin, composer), 2004

You can listen to all the recordings on the National Film and Sound Archive's website.