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LION REZZ | ‘Lion Speak, Waikato, Release Me’ | Live on TONES. - episode 15
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- čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
- NZ MUSIC MONTH VIDEO OF THE DAY
EPISODE 15 | LION REZZ | TONES.
It’s a privilege to celebrate our season one finale of TONES with an artist who’s undeniably talented, respected and down to earth.
How do we think Lion Rezz sets the TONE? His confidence! Lion Rezz commands the stage, mic and room without even trying. He owns the reggae genre flawlessly in true Rasta style with brilliant tracks, inspiring lyrics and catchy instrumentals that all tell a share a strong story.
From laid-back Roots Reggae to high-energy vibes, Lion Rezz isn't afraid to mix things up. He's all about pushing boundaries and keeping things fresh. He draws inspiration from legends like Stephen Marley and J Boog, but he's got his own unique style embedded in Aotearoa Reggae.
Known both as a solo artist and a key member of the Runtingz Family crew, Lion Rezz has topped charts, amassed high streamings across all platforms and brought audiences to life with fiery gigs.
Make room for Lion Rezz in this magical solo performance live at Big Fan. Lion Rezz takes the throne and performs three stellar originals.
00:00 SONG #1 - Lion Speak
02:30 SONG #2 - Waikato
05:32 SONG #3 - Release Me
* MUSICIANS
Lion Rezz - @lion_rezz
* TONES TEAM
Creators in partnership with BIG FAN: Marlan Prabahar & Laila Ben-Brahim
Producers: Marlan Prabahar, Jake Nuualiitia, Laila Ben-Brahim
Editors: Marlan Prabahar, Jake Nuualiitia,
Audio Engineers: Grady Gotler, Finn Mcclellan
Videographers: Jake Nuualiitia, Marlan Prabahar, Martin Bahmani
TONES TEAM: Laila Ben-Brahim, Marlan Prabahar, Savina Fountain, Jacinda Walker, Sasha Te Whare, Noema Te Hau, Martin Bahmani, Jake Nuualiitia, Finn Mcclellan
SPECIAL THANKS to New Zealand Music Month, the BIG FAN Whanau and the vibrant music community.
* ABOUT TONES
This fortnightly series flows right from the heart of BIG FAN to provide music content for kiwis by kiwis. Every episode highlights a unique, emerging or established kiwi artist or band to perform live and be authentic in reimagined versions of their original songs.
TONES is all about Aotearoa’s music community and a place for musicians to represent themselves, showcase their remarkable talent, pay tribute to their roots, and share their stories with you. We believe that every artist has a unique narrative to tell, and we're here to amplify their voices so they can continue to set their tone.
Subscribe to our CZcams page and follow us on social media to follow the journey and find artist interviews, behind the scenes footage, and more! Take it one step further and support your favourite artists live in BIG FAN.
#TONESNZ #BIGFAN #reggae #roots #lionrezz #waikato #rasta #Kiwimusic #Liveperformance #NewZealand #musicstudio #musicseries #nzmusic #stuido performance
What did I just stumble across on.
Heat 🔥, that's for sure.
Awesome my Bro.. Well done..Get 'YOU' out there !!
Churr bratha rezz still slaying chur chur
This hits like uncle bobs music hits you like you feel no pain ❤
Work ethic second to none! the 🦁 of Aotearoa
Ahakoa! Ahakoa! Ahakoa! 💓💓
sounds phat brother ♥♥
Pure talent brother 💯
Māori Jah 🔥👆🏽
#HAWKESBAY
🔥🔥🔥 ❤️💛💚Jah live & love I & I Maori Lion 😍 LOVe IT!! 💚💛❤️🔥🔥🔥
DONT FEED THE LION!all respect 💯
Maori power
MADD MADD MADD bruzz....
Word,em up G,,,
Bigg luv from
Niue island
More bruzz more
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥😎😎😎😎😎😎🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Surely release “Waikato”
The one dem call Lion! 🔥🔥
Yeah mannn🎉
Love it bro, I bounce to this with my blunt, woot woot
Love it brv ❤❤
Ok wow now we blazing the fire leash gooooo ☝️👐💨💨ka pai to waiata lion rezz
Mad love, this is spicy!! I need my throne for I be a lioness 😉😉
BIG FAN
waiting for waikato 🍻
My sta 🙌🏾🔥🔥🔥
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🤙🏽
Straight up fire homie AO
🇺🇲 Phoenix Arizona cheeeeehooohooooo umu tagata my BLOOD-TYPE 🆎😂😂😂🇼🇸🇦🇸🇹🇴💯🥥🔥👌
❤❤❤❤
❤🫶🇦🇺 Stunning
steezy g!
🔥🔥🔥
🔥🔥🔥🔥
❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥
Waikato 🔥💯
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
#LETTHEUCECOOK
🔥
Mean dub chur my Maori 🎶
Yooooooo Brother I love that Lion speaks All day thank you for that lil inspiration. Oh apparently you gotta accent or sumin when you sing unreal
Waikato 🔥🔥🔥🔥
🔥🔥💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽
Fire Lion Jah
Dammmmn maaori this is banging
Timon eta my pup
If you're a lion then come sit on your throne. Daais koelkoel
Hopefully u got Yr chasey fixed our star
jah blood, when this going to be up on spotify? Espesh the lion speak killer!!??
Yo lionrezz I got your cd g 💯🇳🇿🔥
Blaze up❤️💛💚🔥🔥✊️✊️🤙🤙big up🫡🫡Solomon Island 🇸🇧
Churr
🫡 Salute 🇻🇺 🔊🎶🎵
Meke
👆💚💛❤️💯💯💯
Love from Otablu gunsta man!
OtaFufu 😂
🎼🔥❤️🔥💛🔥💚🔥🎶🫡
Fkn ire barras
Churmon! But use a maori accent instead
Shutup appreciate whats here now fooo😂😂😂😂
@@rexsgardavesta408 Micropepe e'noho cupcake and appreciate the Hori accent cause this ain't it🤣
@@TuffStallyonie does it really matter dude? Does he have the same impact on nz reggae if he just uses a regular singing voice? Being unique isn't always a bad thing dude
What do you mean brother ? You want him to rap in a kiwi accent ?🤣
@@saveit4lastnahh that accent is too paru
Release me wasn't it cuhhi
Et be a Maori egg
Are you aware of how this brother was raised brother?
Maybe a more useful question, would be to ask how Jamaican and Rastafarianism influenced him growing up.
This is art my guy. Expression.
You gonna tell people who break dance around the world to stop looking like American popping and locking style?
Oh snap, then you realise American popping and locking was influenced by young people from the United Kingdom who imitated mechanical manufacturing movements.
Oh snap and they were influenced by indigenous Australian movements mimicking animal movements to collaborative rhythmic movements.
I know it can be very strange to see someone singing or rapping or dancing in a style that you think you can trace the origins of. The reality is, you can’t. We’re all influenced by our environments.
It’s always more conducive to helping art and culture evolve, by supporting any expression which seems to carry origins that you can discern and even locate as to being ‘foreign’ to what you might think you know the artist to ‘not’ be originated from at an ancestral level, as opposed to saying ‘ayeeeeeee that’s not the accent you speak with when I speak to you’.
This is how culture and art evolve my guy.
Supporting every step of this evolution, is how YOU can be a part of this evolution.
Although I’m not Maori (I’m Polynesian) from what I’ve observed or Maori, their way is to support any artistic contribution, iteration or rendition if it’s from someone’s heart.
Maybe the way to make your comment more ‘Maori’, is to support the brother.
He sounds pretty mint to me.
What rubbish
stay hating mayt 😛 .
Why everyone want to copy Jamaican style
Plz ya pacific ocean people do ya own style plz
Let Rasta alone
Are you aware of how this brother was raised brother?
Maybe a more useful question, would be to ask how Jamaican and Rastafarianism influenced him growing up.
This is art my guy. Expression.
You gonna tell people who break dance around the world to stop looking like American popping and locking style?
Oh snap, then you realise American popping and locking was influenced by young people from the United Kingdom who imitated mechanical manufacturing movements.
Oh snap and they were influenced by indigenous Australian movements mimicking animal movements to collaborative rhythmic movements.
I know it can be very strange to see someone singing or rapping or dancing in a style that you think you can trace the origins of. The reality is, you can’t. We’re all influenced by our environments.
It’s always more conducive to helping art and culture evolve, by supporting any expression which seems to carry origins that you can discern and even locate as to being ‘foreign’ to what you might think you know the artist to ‘not’ be originated from at an ancestral level, as opposed to saying ‘ayeeeeeee that’s not the accent you speak with when I speak to you’.
This is how culture and art evolve my guy.
Supporting every step of this evolution, is how YOU can be a part of this evolution.
@@poeravaAgree and well said. Tautoko.
Plz thnx for big essay
Do you own thingz
Don’t copy simple
Ya pacific do ya pacific dance songs
Don’t copy Jamaican it’s they thing
Stick with Moari haka n create island flavors
Sweet and simple
@@immi117
Thank you for your reply and for reading my lengthy response
I hear what you are saying.
And as a Tahitian/Welsh/Irish person, raised in NZ and living in Melbourne, writing in English (as you are and I won’t assume you’re from
the UK because your comment is written in English), when I speak French and listen to French speaking hip hop, I’ll try and engage here.
And as you said, it feels ‘sweet and simple’. This is because you know haka is Maori and you know Regae is Jamaican and you know a kiwi accent is from New Zealand and a Jamaican accent is from Jamaica. Am I hearing you right?
What I’m saying isn’t disagreeing with you. It’s trying to show that the premise of your type of ‘true to one’s origins’ explanation is pretty dumb. But understandable.
And I mean that. I used to leave comments on some Polynesians born and raised in Australia and rapping in an accent doing American gang signs etc. So I ain’t hating on you.
Maybe I can try it this way
Do you know the band called ‘herbs’ or ‘ardijah’
I want to bring up two songs. ‘Sensitive to a smile’ and ‘watchin’ u’.
Do you know those songs?
@@poerava cuz big essay again ain’t make sence
Just be islander my man not Jamaican
Simple as that
🔥🔥🔥🔥
🫡 Salute 🇻🇺 🔊🎶🎵
Churr💯🔥❤🤍🖤🙏