Songwriter, composer and
performer Rob Ruha will reveal the fruits of his new project - Rob Ruha and The Witch Dr. - with the
release of the 12-track album
Survivance this Friday, December 1.
One of Aotearoa’s foremost producers of powerful kapa haka traditions of song
and indigeneity, Ruhalaunched his solo career in 2014 and gained international recognition for his
unique style of music, which became known as ‘haka soul’.
He went on to win countless awards, including ‘Best Māori Album’ (Vodafone New Zealand
Music Awards 2014 and 2016), ‘Best
Songwriter’, ‘Best
Māori Song’, ‘Best
Male Solo Artist’ (Waiata Māori Music Awards) and the
prestigious APRA Maioha
Award in 2014 and 2016 for his waiata
Kariri and
Tiki Tapu.
This year, Ruha received the honour of being named as one of five Laureate Award recipients in the Arts
Foundation Awards.
Now the esteemed artist from New Zealand’s East Coast has embarked on a
collaborative project with some of the country’s finest musicians (Darren Mathiassen from
Shapeshifter, James Illingworth from Bliss n Eso, Tyna Keelan from The Nok and Johnny Lawrence from
Electric Wire Hustle)
AKA The Witch Dr.
The results are a stunning 12-track album, which shows a new side to the
multi-talented Ruha and delivers a powerful message with an uplifting blend of festival soul and
R’n’B, promoting the Māori nation as relevant, spirited, capable, connected,
prophetic, morally courageous and unrelenting in their pursuit of self
determination.
“The album stems from a discussion I had in the back of a taxi with friends
about this academic term called ‘survivance’. It reflects how I feel about that
word, what it elicits from me as a First Nations person of Aotearoa, how we
address and face issues that impact us as indigenous peoples here in this
country and what that means in a global context,” says Ruha.
“Musically, I wanted the album to position that discourse in a current but
familiar sonic landscape to attract major ‘click traffic’ to not only the tunes
but the messages in the songs. It was important also that the music was warm,
offered multiple opportunities for the listener to engage with those messages
and not be too intellectually heavy and uninviting.”
The tracks that make up
Survivance are heavily influenced by the music that Ruha grew up on - killer grooves, strong melodies, A-rotate listen-ability with
strong R’n’B foundations.
“R’n’B was birthed out of a section of society that wanted a voice and strove
to create a vehicle to amplify it and normalize its place. It is in this
knowledge that we created musical beds that are fresh with exciting twists,
spirited and a bit edgy, powerfully grounded and at times venerable and
lamenting. It is a journey of sound that is as diverse and exciting as my Māori
nation today,” he explains.
This is evident in the album’s lead single
Kalega - the perfect summer jam, which
takes the listener on a journey to Ruha’s
home. "Picture glistening coastal views, fresh fish and chips after a
swim, ice cream stops and BBQs on the beach while your favorite jams ring out
the car window and you have
Kalega- an upbeat waiata that celebrates a unique slice of Aotearoa heaven, the East
Coast, where the word
Kalega is as legendary as a kina tongue on bread!”
The song debuted in the Top
5 NZ Heatseeker Chart, quickly becoming a radio favourite and
receiving great traction online after its accompanying video, directed and
produced by the award-winning Shae Sterling - debuted on The Spinoff.
Survivance is out on December 1.
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