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Moana in concert at Tumbach Castle, Coburg, Germany

Moana in concert in Bern, Switzerland, 2003.
Photo by Stuart Page

Moana Maniapoto

Ngāti Tuwharetoa / Tuhourangi / Ngāti Pikiao

2007 Laureate
Musician

Described in the US magazine The Beat (2006) as a ‘truly inspiring performing and recording artist’, singer/songwriter Moana has been credited by Songlines (2006) with ‘laying the foundations for the recent international exposure of N.Z acts like Te Vaka, Fat Freddy’s Drop and Wai.’

Admitting she gets more nervous singing in front of her aunties at Waitetoko marae, Moana Maniapoto says her father and his brothers provided early inspiration with their legendary combination of live performance and hospitality at the marae.

She credits her time at St Josephs Māori Girls College for honing her love of vocal harmony and performance. Moana paid her way through law school by singing covers in the highly competitive Auckland club circuit. In 1990, Moana & the Moahunters released the feminist anthem Black Pearl which shot to No. 2 on the national charts, earning Moana her first gold. Since then, she has released albums Tahi, Rua, Toru (which reached No.17 on the European World Music Charts) and the DVD Live & Proud. Moana and the tribe released their album Wha in May 2008.

Moana has consistently pushed the boundaries of Māori music in both her recordings and live performances, fusing taonga puoro, haka, and chants, with soul, reggae and classical ‘to produce her own blend of traditional and contemporary styles without compromising either.’ (N.Z Herald, 2003). In 2004, Moana became the first non-American to win a major U.S.A based songwriting contest with her song Moko. Moana beat over 11,000 compositions to win the Grand Jury Prize of the International Songwriting Competition.

Formed in 2002, Moana & the tribe have played nearly 150 international concerts, most recently from Kanak villages in the islands of New Caledonia to sell out concerts in the former Soviet Union. She cites meeting and singing for Nelson Mandela during his Auckland visit as a personal highlight. Moana is a recipient of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM), a Life Time Recipient of the Toi Iho Māori Made Mark and received the 2005 Te Tohu Mahi Hou a Te Waka Toi Award from Te Waka Toi (Creative N.Z), in recognition of outstanding leadership and contribution to the development of new directions in Māori art.

Offstage, Moana is one half of an award-winning documentary team led by her partner, producer/director Toby Mills. Their documentaries (including NZ Up for Grabs about intellectual and cultural property issues) have screened in festivals and theatres in Toronto, Hong Kong, London and Honolulu.

A former television and radio presenter, actor, artist and law graduate, Moana is a mother, writer, advocate and mentor. In 2005 and 2006, she managed a national project mentoring 25 whanau to capture their unique family stories through creative genre such as writing books, producing CDs and documentaries, websites and short film scripts.

Moana credits manager Sol de Sully, partner Toby, and the Maniapoto and Jackson families for ongoing whanau support.

My best friend, sister and partner are all in my band and the rest are great mates. When we aren’t singing, we are usually laughing our heads off, and that is a great space to be in.

View Moana's website

I grew up around haka, moteatea and waiata. My father, uncles and others of their generation performed these art forms with absolute passion. I enjoy pulling together creative elements from the past and mixing them with contemporary artistic styles. So I surround myself with musicians and performers who can move me towards that vision. When it works, it’s like being at the centre of a creative vortex. It’s moments like that when I love what I do and who I do it with.

Every song I write or perform has to resonate with me at an emotional level. Sometimes when we’re singing, we get emotional and then we see people in our audience in tears. To connect with a stranger in that way is almost a spiritual experience and I guess that’s one part of music making that I’m addicted to.
Forsyth Barr.