Monkey Magic II, The Hot Grits, An Emerald City

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Monkey Magic II, The Hot Grits, An Emerald City

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When:

Fri 23 May ’08, 9:00pm

Where: Galatos, 17 Galatos St, Newton Show map

Ticket Information:

  • Presales: $15.00
  • Door Sales: $20.00
  • Booking fees may apply

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Monkey Magic II album launch feat. An Emerald City, The Hot Grits, The Benka Boradovsky Bordello Band, Káren Hunter and DJ Balkanetic.

Free ticket if you buy the compilation from Real Groovy.

Monkey Magic II is a CD and DVD showcasing contemporary independent New Zealand music to be released on the 19 May and to celebrate we’re going to be touring the country in May/June. The tour features several of the most exciting new acts in New Zealand who have all had critically acclaimed new releases over the last few weeks:

An Emerald City
Currently garnering unanimous praise for their self titled debut ep, Auckland band An Emerald City have strived for musical experimentation and liberation since their inception in late 2005. Organic instrumentation and sounds of the east meet psychedelia with guitars and violin are at the centre of this original and unique 6 piece. Already having performed at Rhythm and Vines, Soundsplash and WOMAD this summer, they will be recording their album over winter and are planning to base themselves in Berlin from April next year - catch them while you can.

The Hot Grits
What do you get if you mix a pound of Fela Kuti's Afrika 70, two cupfuls of The Meters, 250g of thinly sliced early James Brown and a level dessert spoon of psychedelic rock? -you get the heaving, convulsing powerhouse of soul music that is The Hot Grits. For over five years, 11 piece band The Hot Grits have been electrifying club dancefloors and festival stages around New Zealand with an eclectic, take no prisoners approach to soul and afrobeat music. When THG hit their stride, no-one in the room is immune from the power and sheer soulfulness of their groove, and band and audience become one in a giant, convulsing testament to the power of good music. Having just released their long awaited debut album ‘It’s too Drunk to be this Early’ you can expect to be hearing a lot more from this band in the next few months.

The Benka Boradovsky Bordello Band
Hailing from the slums and ghettos of Auckland (the Prague of the South), The Benka Boradovsky Bordello band is a highly theatrical musical group specialising in music of Eastern European, Gypsy and Jewish flavour, along with some Western European influences. With music ranging from old to new, originals to standards, vocal to instrumental; they are remarkable in their ability to get everyone up and dancing, regardless of age, musical taste, or level of drunkenness. Benka's globetrotting voice sings in a wide variety of languages, with lyrics in Russian, Greek, Serbian, Romani, Arabic, Hebrew, Spanish, English and more. If references are necessary, they sound like Tom Waits, Shane McGowan and Franz Kafka drunk too much vodka and thought they were in 1950's Yugoslavia. Having undertaken a highly successful Gypsy Fever tour over summer and performances at Prana, Jambalaya, Parihaka and Splore, the BBB Band are back to devastate dance floors and promote their new ep ‘Danse Macabre’.

DJ Balkanetic
DJ Balkanetic has been entertaining audiences at festivals, parties and weddings around New Zealand for the last couple of years with a highly infectious, uplifting blend of Balkan beats, Klezmer, Romani/Gypsy music and organic global grooves. He has also supported his good friends The Mamaku Project, The Benka Boradovsky Bordello Band and the Jews Brothers. Over summer he played at Prana, Jambalaya, Splore and Cross St Carnival and recently undertook a 20 date national ‘Gypsy Fever’ tour with the Benka Boradovsky Bordello Band. He has a world music radio show called Terra beats on KFM every Tuesday from 2-4pm.

THE COMPILATION
10 of the tracks on the CD are from artists signed to genre-defying indie record label Monkey Records including Tim Guy, The Hot Grits, An Emerald City, The Benka Boradovsky Bordello Band and Káren Hunter. Also featured are four unsigned or self-released artists who are friends of Monkey - Haunted Love, Steve Abel, The Mamaku Project and Ragamuffin Children.

Monkey TV is a DVD featuring all the music videos made by Monkey Records since the year 2000 featuring some of New Zealand’s most talented emerging filmmakers and animators.

While perhaps not considered that commercially viable by the powers that be, independent radio has embraced and supported many of these artists. The Hot Grits have enjoyed several weeks at no.1 on student radio bFM with their first single, The Ballad of Joe Stalin’. ‘Werewolf’ by Haunted Love was voted Radio One song of the Year on Radio One last year and Cinema 90 by Onelung (here remixed by Sola Rosa) was the most played tune across the bNet for several weeks upon its release in May 2006. As on the original critically acclaimed Monkey Magic compilation in 2004, this new selection continues to champion new and exciting music from Aotearoa and aims to introduce many of the artists featured to a wider audience In New Zealand and further afield. Many thanks to Creative New Zealand for their continuing support of Monkey Records which helped make this compilation and tour possible.

Monkey Magic II will be available at a special price and is being distributed by Rhythm Method.

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  • avatar

    magnet0 4 years ago

    New Zealand music rocks! Why wouldn't we support it. It is made by us, for us, about us, and carries the a uniqueness with it that can only be captured by New Zealanders. It's easy to support something that it just so bloody good.

  • avatar

    patagoniantoothfish 4 years ago

    We need to support NZ artists because... there but for the grace of god go we!!

  • avatar

    QueenRubyRules 4 years ago

    Because the music and the musicians deserve our support. Such talent. We do ourselves proud.

  • avatar

    meryl 4 years ago

    We need to keep NZ music alive and foster it because homegrown music is the heart and soul of who we are as Kiwis!

  • avatar

    Alan Hardy 4 years ago

    It is extremely important to support New Zealand musicians. We are a unique society and should respect and enjoy what we have. New Zealand musicians offer what overseas musicians can't, a unique New Zealand sound. But if they don't get air-time or CD sales the road is not easy for them. Buy (and listen to) New Zealand music and be proud of your country!

  • avatar

    BananaSmoothie 4 years ago

    Listening to and buying homegrown music out there is good for the musos and good for us because if we support them, they'll keep creating their excellent sounds.

  • avatar

    Tash Earley 4 years ago

    Because here in lil old Aotearoa we have some real talent that the rest of the world loves and we can be proud to be kiwis and say they are a part of us.

  • avatar

    lulu 4 years ago

    We may love our New Zealand musicians, but like the rest of us, they can't live on love alone. Go to their concerts, buy their music, promote good musicians to your friends. NZ bands and musicians are among the best in the world - let's help keep them there, it's to our benefit.

  • avatar

    cafegirl 4 years ago

    Because New Zealanders have something to say and music is an evocative way to express it

  • avatar

    jennmark 4 years ago

    We should support NZ music, simply because we're as good as any other country - if not better - in EVERY field. Be proud to be a Kiwi! Kiwi's Rock!

  • avatar

    azpen 4 years ago

    I'll support anyone who is good, and many Kiwi artists are great - simple as that.

  • avatar

    Jason 4 years ago

    Aunty Helen (Clark) takes so much credit for injecting life into NZ music and arts culture, but it's really in the hands of all of us out there. We are the ones that hold the power! Support Kiwi!

  • avatar

    Renee Raroa 4 years ago

    We MUST support our homegrown talent! It starts right here with us... we have the power to help them grow. What we put in to NZ music we get back (and usually ten-fold!). Kia kaha Monkey Magic II. P.S. Keep up the great poster art! x

  • avatar

    Richard 4 years ago

    Need to suppor trhe local, because if we don't who will!!! And the talent is excellent.

  • avatar

    Terryo 4 years ago

    Because if we don't support Kiwi music, these talented people will keep moving to Australia, and we all know what Australians do when kiwis with talent move across the ditch, they end up claiming them as their own. Stuff that!

  • avatar

    Bloopy 4 years ago

    supporting nz artists = nz makin its mark in the world!!

  • avatar

    mtbm 4 years ago

    It's vital to support NZ artists - we are now old enough a country to be developing our own culture, which should be reminiscent of the mix of races we have here. We are not America, nor Britain, and we should be looking at our own identity in the world.

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