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    • Jen Cloher Releases Stunning New Album 'I Am The River, The River Is Me' + Announces NZ Tour Dates

Gig & Concert News - Jen Cloher Releases Stunning New Album 'I Am The River, The River Is Me' + Announces NZ Tour Dates

Jen Cloher Releases Stunning New Album 'I Am The River, The River Is Me' + Announces NZ Tour Dates

03 March 2023 - 0 Comments

Today multi-award-winning artist and Milk! Records co-founder Jen Cloher (Ngāpuhi & Ngāti Kahu) releases their fifth album I Am The River, The River Is Me via Milk! Records / Marathon Artists.

On their first album in five years, Cloher finally breathes out. I Am The River, The River Is Me, their fifth album, is verdant and rich; it luxuriates in stillness, and carries itself with cool, unfussy confidence. It suggests that home is not found in a place or a politic, but in the community you keep: Inspired by Cloher’s powerful matrilineal line of wāhine Māori, I Am The River, The River Is Me is not urgent, or hurried, but it is vital, made with the care and ease of someone who knows that their past began before birth, and will continue long after they’re gone.

To support the album release, Jen Cloher also announces their first ever headline shows in Aotearoa. Cloher will perform two special shows on Friday 28th July at Meow in Wellington and Saturday 29th July at Whammy Auckland. Tickets go on sale from Friday 4 March, 9am.

“It’s fitting that my first ever headline shows in Aotearoa will be in support of my fifth album, Ko au the awa, Ko te awa ko au. The album is a homecoming. An honouring of my powerful matrilineal line of wāhine Māori and the first time I have had the confidence to write and perform in my reo” shares Cloher. “ The album was recorded in Naarm (Melbourne) and Tāmaki Makaurau over the lockdown. Recordings were sent across the Tasman arriving each morning with little Easter eggs of new ideas. On the Aotearoa side I had the great pleasure of collaborating with Te Kaahu (Waikato-Tainui, Ngaati Tiipaa), Ruby Solly (Kāi Tahu, Waitaha, Kāti Māmoe) as well as Tom Healy and Cass Basil of Tiny Ruins.”

Finding yourself, finding your home, is an unruly, never-ending process; I Am The River, The River Is Meis not a perfect self-portrait, and it possesses no universal truth about what it means to be Māori, or to be wahine toa (a strong woman), or to be takatāpui, or even to be Jen Cloher. Instead, it captures something else — a picture of humanity and community as a gorgeous, unfathomable mess. The joy of life, Cloher seems to say, is in forgiving your moments of weakness with grace, and embracing the parts of you that are unfinished. On Aroha Mai, Aroha Atu, they put it simply, and perfectly: “ I may have come late, but better late than never.”


Cloher shares “the album cover photo was taken in my awa (river), Te Touwai in Matangirau, Te Tai Tokerau (Northland) Aotearoa (New Zealand). It is the river that my mother, grandmother and great grandmother bathed in, watered their gardens from and cared for. The day my dear friend Hera Tautoko-Orme took the photo was as freezing as the photo looks. We waded out in our bathing suits and stood in the middle of the river while it rained. When I finally surrendered to the cold something shifted and I felt that feeling of coming home—the presence of the wāhine Māori that I have come through and my connection and kinship with Te Touwai Awa. The whakataukī hit different now - I am the river, the river is me

Harakeke is the focus track released today. “The clip for my new song Harakeke stars two extremely talented wāhine Māori who are also based in Naarm, Melbourne. Fallon Te Paa (iwi coming) and Breanne Peters (iwi coming) are members of T’HONI Kapa Haka, who you might remember from the Being Human video. Fallon’s five year old daughter Iranui makes an appearance in the clip, bringing four generations onto the screen. It echoes the themes of the song, remembering my māmā Dorothy Urlich-Cloher and her scholarly contribution to Iwi Muriwhenua in the Far North.

Patti Smith once said “The dead speak. We have forgotten how to listen." Te Ao Māori (the Māori worldview) tends to agree” says Cloher “We know there is a thin veil between the living and the dead and that our Tūpuna (Ancestors) are right there with us. This is the spirit I felt close when I was writing and recording the album. I am not doing this alone and it's not just for me.

Harakeke (or the flax plant) has been used by Māori for whāriki (weaving) for hundreds of years. Before this song had lyrics I named the demo Wild Grass. As I started to write the lyrics I saw that it was a communication, I was being told the things I needed to hear and it was being woven into a song. I think because of how mysterious this song is to me, it’s my favourite on the album.”

Harakeke follows the release of impactful singles Mana Takatāpui , Being Human and My Witch . These are fiercely political songs that never feel heavy: They are energetic and full-blooded, alive with the knowledge that to simply exist — to scream and laugh and sing and make art — is as much a form of resistance as to fight.

Cloher says “One in five Māori live in Te Whenua Moemoea, Australia. That’s about 200,000 of us! Even though we have grown up on the other side of the ditch, we can feel the fruits of our Kaumātua’s hard work through movements like Kohanga Reo. The album cover was photographed in my awa, Te Touwai in Matangirau, Te Tai Tokerau (Northland). It is the awa my mother, grandmother and great grandmother bathed in, gathered kai and watered their gardens from. It is a remembrance that regardless of how far we may travel from our home, it is always there, calling us back when we are ready.”

I Am The River, The River Is Me is an album of remarkable generosity and grace. Recorded between Aotearoa (NZ) and Naarm (Melbourne) with producers Tom Healy (Tiny Ruins, Marlon Williams), Anika Ostendorf (Hachiku) and Cloher’s longtime drummer Jen Sholakis; the album brings in trailblazing artists including Emma Donovan (Gumbaynggirr, Yamatji), Kylie Auldist, Liz Stringer, Te Kaahu (Waikato-Tainui/Ngāti Tīpā), Ruby Solly (Kai Tahu, Waitaha, Kāti Māmoe) and members of the Naarm-based Kapa Haka, Te Hononga o ngā Iwi. The entire record feels communal — a celebration not just of Cloher, but of the rich, life-filled communities that surround them.

I Am The River, The River Is Me is out now

https://jen-cloher.lnk.to/iamtheriver

Photo Credit: Marcelle Bradbeer


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