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Home / Northern Advocate

Taipa students represent Tai Tokerau in national waiata competition

Northern Advocate
19 Aug, 2020 12:00 AM3 mins to read

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Taipa Area School students Waimarino Tait (left) and Tiare Lanigan, Te Tai Tokerau's finalists in the waiata composition competition Korihi - A quest for the best.

Taipa Area School students Waimarino Tait (left) and Tiare Lanigan, Te Tai Tokerau's finalists in the waiata composition competition Korihi - A quest for the best.

Taipa Area School students Tiare Lanigan and Waimarino Tai will represent Te Tai Tokerau in the final of the inaugural waiata composition competition Korihi (Morning Chorus of Birds) - A quest for the best.

The competition will screen on Māori TV on Saturday, August 29.

It was launched on Facebook last month, in collaboration with the National Urban Māori Authority, Whānau Ora, Te Whakaruruhau o Nga Reo Irirangi and Māori TV to give budding Māori songwriters the chance to articulate their experiences of the global Covid-19 pandemic.

"As New Zealand entered level 4 lockdown at midnight on March 25, people across the country began to adapt to the response and use their time grounded at home to create what would become a collective archive of its impact on daily life," Micah Tawhara said.

"For the nation's musical artists, lockdown resulted in opportunities to compose waiata that reflected the mood of the country, from whanau to hapu to iwi and to the world."

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The final would showcase 14 waiata from the seven Māori electorates.

In Te Tai Tokerau, contestants and voting support were sought by the Taitokerau Whanau Ora Collective and iwi radio stations Te Hiku Media, Tautoko FM and Ngati Hine FM, with Herekino singer/songwriter/current affairs presenter and entertainer Pere Wihongi, who was named best Māori solo artist in the 2019 Waiata Maori Music Awards, as the resident judge.

Each of the seven regions was allocated two judges, from well-known musicians such as Katchafire's lead singer Logan Bell, Maimoa's Tawaroa Kawana and Rob Ruha to Te Tai Tokerau's very own Whaea Mere Taylor-Tuilomo.

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Tawhara said providing opportunities for established Māori artists to provide feedback and awhi aspiring Māori composers towards a possible career in music had been an extraordinary experience for Tiare and Waimarino.

They "wowed" the online audience with Tiare's original waiata Waimarie, as did a talented Hokianga trio who sang Hine Papata, composed by Whaea Mina Pomare, each winning $2500.

The winners of $500 people's choice prizes included Te Kao's Jackson Taylor (Ratu Murray), Kaitaia music producer/musician Derek Ashley, student Camden Rutene, from Whatuwhiwhi, Selena Gerbic, Sherry Pomare and rappers the Pikaahu brothers from Taipa Area School.

Tiare hadn't been especially keen on entering a national talent quest.

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"I instantly thought I'd have no chance, considering all the talented songwriters around the motu," she said.

"My waiata is about looking after our whenua that provides for us. The lockdown gave us no choice but to live similar to our tūpuna. We grew maara kai and lived off the land. I'm so grateful we made it through to the finals for Te Tai Tokerau and am super-excited."

Both finalists are being mentored by seasoned musicians Troy Kingi, Laughton Kora, Bella Kalolo and Whirimako Black in the lead-up to the final, where the winner will receive $5000 (plus $50,000 for a charity of their choice), second $3000 and third $2000.

The judging process will include viewer texting.

"We are in for an exceptionally exciting event that we've never experienced before, and we're extremely proud of our representatives," Tawhara said.

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