• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 15, Monday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

5 New Zealand music acts keeping te reo Māori alive and rocking

Story Center by Story Center
February 10, 2026
Reading Time: 6 mins read
0
5 New Zealand music acts keeping te reo Māori alive and rocking

RELATED POSTS

Alicia Keys & Nas Celebrate Knicks Championship With New York City Songs At Tribeca Fest

Inara George Returns to Music With a New Album of Old Songs and a Tour She’s Looking Forward To

Olivia Rodrigo talks new music, hidden secrets, and loving the UK

Looking back over 2025, one of the most powerful events for New Zealanders was the reclaiming of the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest haka at Eden Park.

The crowd was diverse. Some were deeply committed, while others were simply excited to dance. Either way, footage from the day clearly signals a growing engagement with te reo Māori (the Māori language) within mainstream Aotearoa New Zealand.

The mass haka was championed by Hinewehi Mohi, who famously sang the national anthem in te reo and led the Waiata Anthems project) – and was supported by New Zealand’s most-streamed band Six60, whose song Pepeha is often sung in school assemblies.

The event also reflected a broader trend identified in the 2023 census, wherein the number of people who speak te reo Māori grew 15% since 2018. This trend is changing the music landscape of Aotearoa.

Sounds that reshape the nation

Music offers us a window into societal thoughts about politics, identity and power. Sounds, lyrics and genres can reflect public tensions, hopes and debates that might not always surface in more formal settings.

In recent years, a number of Aotearoa’s musical artists have used language to build on and reshape our national identity. At the forefront of this cultural shift are two well-loved acts: genre-bending singer-songwriter Marlon Williams and heavy metal export Alien Weaponry.

ADVERTISEMENT

Both have been reconnecting with te reo in a big way, with documentaries charting their journeys (see Ngā Ao E Rua – Two Worlds and Kua Tupu Te Ara).

But there are many other exceptional artists also playing their part. And since Spotify Wrapped didn’t quite do our local acts justice, we thought we’d provide our personal pick of five musicians doing remarkable mahi (work).

Mokotron

Hailing from Ngati Hine “down North”, Mokotron is the musical project of long-time Tāmaki Makaurau-based producer and University of Auckland academic Tiopira McDowell.

His Taite Music Prize-winning album Waerea (2024) brings reo Māori and taonga pūoro (Māori musical instruments) into what he describes as “dark, problematic, trauma-driven Māori electro bass”.

The track Ko Wai Koe?, which grew out of McDowell’s involvement in Treaty settlement negotiations, is built around the repeated questioning of authority and the legitimacy of colonial power.

The visuals for the track combine hulking Māori carvings with colonial-themed Space Invaders imagery, reflecting what McDowell describes as his approach to “ancient futurism”. It goes off live too – such as at Glastonbury and in this Boiler Room set with TeKuraHuia.

Theia/Te Kaahu

Theia, and her folk leaning alter-ego Te Kaahu, are the stage names of Em-Haley Walker, from the iwi (tribes) Waikato-Tainui and Ngaati Tiipaa.

Theia is a fierce proponent of Māori language revitalisation – and was number five on politician and iwi leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer’s end-of-year Spotify Wrapped.

Signed back in 2016 to Warner Music, Theia’s breakout pop track Roam (2016) feels worlds away from her sharp, confrontational 2025 single BALDH3AD!, which addresses colonial violence and culminates in the refrain “Ka whawahi to, tonu mātou, ake ake” (“we will fight on forever and ever”, referencing Ngāti Maniapoto leader Rewi Maniapoto).

Theia’s strong visual aesthetic is highlighted through the Edwardian-esque visuals of her new album Girl, In A Savage World (2025) – a subversive approach that takes colonial era garb and artfully reclaims it, akin to Dam Native’s 1997 track Behold My Kool Style.

GreatSouth

GreatSouth (from the iwi of Ngāti Kahungunu ki Wairarapa and Te Rarawa), formerly Fable, is a grounded and humble emerging indie-rock artist blending sharp musicality with strong urban foundations.

Driven by today’s social and political climate, he speaks openly about Māori inequities both in his music and on social media.

This tāne (man) crafts his guitar music with taonga puoro, weaving te reo where it feels natural, and “sharing his slice of Māori being” one indie-rock waiata at a time.

Geneva AM

Geneva AM (from the iwi of Ngāti Ruapani mai Waikaremoana, Ngāti Kahungunu ki Wairoa, Aitutaki, and from Palmerston) is multi-talented.

She is a producer, former indie-electronica band SoccerPractice vocalist, former radio DJ and visual artist. In 2025, she released her debut album Pikipiki – a joyful bilingual project about rising up and moving forward.

Original tracks sit alongside reimagined Aotearoa favourites such as Tūtira Mai Ngā Iwi and Pūrea Nei, and blend a ton of unexpected genres including classical, drum and bass, and emo rock.

The track Toitū Te Tiriti champions the 1840 treaty, with strings so emotive they could stir the hearts of anyone – even if they didn’t attend the nation’s largest march in support of the treaty.

Mokomokai

Mokomokai – a playful hip-hop collective featuring Dirty (aka Manu Walters), Dusty and Ghos – is a great microcosm of the changing way te reo Māori sits within music.

On their 2023 album Whakarehu, the track Kupe (featuring Melodownz) name-checks legendary Polynesian explorer Kupe and well-loved singer-songwriter Che Fu – situating the act within an expanding New Zealand hip-hop genealogy.

At the back-end of Melodownz’ verse, his pepeha (tribal saying used to introduce oneself) slots in comfortably. He speaks to his journey as an artist embracing his Māori identity (as shown in the Waiata Anthems documentary series, in which everything is linked back to Hinewehi Mohi).

Tātou tātou e (all of us, all of us)

There are many more extraordinary musicians championing te reo, including MĀ, Anna Coddington, Rei with his Māori language degree, and L.A.B. (who recorded their first song Maumahara Noa Ahau in te reo).

As a nation, we’re getting there, and we can count on our musicians to lead the way. Let’s not forget, tōku reo tōku ohooho (“our language is our awakening”).

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source theconversation.com ’

Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Stereogum home
Music

Alicia Keys & Nas Celebrate Knicks Championship With New York City Songs At Tribeca Fest

June 15, 2026
(Credit: Laura Heffington)
Music

Inara George Returns to Music With a New Album of Old Songs and a Tour She’s Looking Forward To

June 15, 2026
Olivia Rodrigo talks new music, hidden secrets, and loving the UK
Music

Olivia Rodrigo talks new music, hidden secrets, and loving the UK

June 15, 2026
Screenshot of Spotify's New Music Friday editor-led video
Music

Spotify adds editor-led videos to New Music Friday so you can meet the people picking your music

June 15, 2026
Father Dionysios Tabakis’s Drone Metal Debut
Music

Father Dionysios Tabakis’s Drone Metal Debut

June 15, 2026
New lights under the viaduct at Sloss Furnaces. (Nathan Watson / Bham Now)
Music

New electronic dance music festival coming to Sloss: get tickets now

June 15, 2026
Next Post
Bang Showbiz NZ

Megan Thee Stallion Surprises Klay Thompson With Bone Thugs-N-Harmony Performance at His Birthday Party

CRASH TEST #art #dessin #dessinateur #sketch #aquarelle #drawing #artist #action #crashtest

CRASH TEST #art #dessin #dessinateur #sketch #aquarelle #drawing #artist #action #crashtest

Recommended Stories

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor feels 'completely misunderstood' | Royal | News

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor feels ‘completely misunderstood’ | Royal | News

May 17, 2026
Underdog to offer Missouri sports betting by partnering with Royals

Underdog to offer Missouri sports betting by partnering with Royals

October 6, 2025
elle fanning wears a sequined top and skirt

MoMa’s Annual Film Benefit Celebrated Sofia Coppola

November 14, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Sarah Pidgeon and Joe Alwyn on June 13, 2026Credit: TheImageDirect.com

“Love Story” Star Sarah Pidgeon Kisses Joe Alwyn During Cozy Night Out in N.Y.C.

June 15, 2026
pt. 1146 | Indila – Dernière Danse (Slowed Reverb) [Edit Audio] #music #indila #tiktok

pt. 1146 | Indila – Dernière Danse (Slowed Reverb) [Edit Audio] #music #indila #tiktok

June 15, 2026
Tiger Woods Leaves Recovery Facility After 3 Months | News

Tiger Woods Leaves Recovery Facility After 3 Months | News

June 15, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land