Taranaki Smokefreerockquest 2011 results
Media Release Taranaki Smokefreerockquest 2011 results
A five piece band with a distinctive rock-indie-blues sound won the Taranaki Smokefreerockquest regional final at the TSB Showplace on Saturday night.
Living Lightly from Francis Douglas Memorial College and New Plymouth Boys' High School was formed earlier this year, but most members had been in Smokefreerockquest before, including bass player Sam Thomson who was in the Taranaki winning band in 2009.
Sam says Living Lightly has a massive Hammond Organ that creates an imposing presence on stage:
“On Saturday night we realised between the heats and the finals that we really needed to get a lot more energy into our stage presence,” he says. “I think this helped us to stand out and our genre was a bit different from the other bands.”
The other members of Living
Lightly are Samuel Notman, Jake Church, BJ Monk and Jarrod
Bakker.
BJ Monk won the APRA Lyric Writer’s Award for
his song ‘Could it be?’
Second place went to Wonderland from New Plymouth Boys’ High School, a three piece made up of Willam Livingston, Reuben Knauf and Stuart Morris.
These top two bands win musical gear from NZ Rockshops and go on to compete for one of six national finalist spots in this year’s Smokefreerockquest.
Rockquest Promotions Founders and Directors Glenn Common and Pete Rainey said from here on the Taranaki finalists would have to work hard and draw on their creativity to make the most of the opportunity Smokefreerockquest offered.
“The bands to play off at the national final in September are chosen from DVDs of their own music,” Common said. “This means they’ll need to work together as a group and develop the skills that will turn their talent into success.”
The six national finalists will be selected from a pool made up of first and second place-getters from each of the 27 regional finals, and bands from Rockshop Second Chance, an opportunity for established bands who feel they didn’t play at their best on the night. Last year’s record of 800 entrants has already been exceeded, with more entries to come as Christchurch bands have been given an extended deadline.
In term three, Smokefreerockquest and the NZ Music Commission, with funding from the Ministry of Education, will partner the regional winner with a mentor band - a band that is some years ahead and has first hand knowledge of the industry.
The national final will be held this year in the new 5000-seat Claudelands Arena in Hamilton on 17 September. The prize package is designed as a big helping hand into the music industry. It includes a NZ On Air new recording and music video grant worth $10,000, a place on the NZ On Air Kiwi Hit Disc, musical gear to the value of $10,000 from NZ Rockshops, recording time at York St Studio, 1000 single CDs produced by Forge Media, and radio and TV play of single. There is also the MAINZ Scholarship for outstanding musicianship, the APRA Lyric Award, the Lowdown Best Song Award and the Smokefree Women’s Musicianship Award.
In this year’s Taranaki Smokefreerockquest all
entrants got the real life experience of rock stardom -
performing on the big stage in the TSB Showplace, with the
top eight called back for the final in the evening.
Other regional awards made on Saturday
night.
Third place winning musical gear from NZ
Rockshops and their suppliers: Armada, Francis Douglas
Memorial College
The Mainz Musicianship Award with the
opportunity to be selected for the $4500 Music and Audio
Institute of New Zealand Scholarship, announced at the
national final: Ryuki Han the lead guitarist from
Armada
Smokefree People’s Choice: The Usual Suspects,
Opunake High School
Smokefree Award For Women’s
Musicianship with a prize of $150: Shae Trounson, the bass
player from Faithless Fairytale, Waitara High
School
Lowdown Best Song: Faithless Fairytale
To find out more about Smokefreerockquest 2011, visit the official website sfrq.co.nz.
ENDS
Smokefreerockquest –
23 years of musical success
Smokefreerockquest is
New Zealand’s only nationwide, live, original music, youth
event. Now well into its third decade, the series of 28
events reaches audience numbers in excess of 24,000 every
year. This year the Smokefreerockquest Circus, an expo with
hands-on displays, workshops and careers info will be held
as part of Smokefreerockquest in main centres.
Founded
in 1988 by music teachers Glenn Common and Pete Rainey, who
now run Rockquest Promotions full time out of Nelson,
Smokefreerockquest has become a New Zealand institution.
Musical successes from Smokefreerockquest over its 23-year
history include Opshop, Ladyhawke, Kids Of 88, Midnight
Youth, Brooke Fraser, Cut Off Your Hands, Evermore, Minuit,
Die!Die!Die!, Pistol Youth, Bang!Bang!Eche!, Ivy Lies,
Cairo Knife Fight, Luke Thompson, the Datsuns, Anika Moa,
Anna Coddington, Kora, Steriogram, Aaradhna, Spacifix,
Phoenix Foundation, The Feelers, The Black Seeds, Nesian
Mystik, Bic Runga, The Checks, Julia Deans, Liam Finn, Pine,
King Kapisi, Kingston, The Naked and Famous, Autozamm and
Elemeno P.
Smokefreerockquest aims to motivate young
musicians to prove their ability and realise the heights
they can reach in their music careers, and to encourage
their peers to support 100% original New Zealand music. For
more information visit www.sfrq.co.nz
Smokefree’s Smoking Not Our Future
Campaign
The latest research from HSC shows that 94
percent of all young people have seen the Smoking Not Our
Future initiative and that Smokefreerockquest plays a large
part in getting its key messages and its celebrities in
front of young people. Where possible, guest bands, judges,
mentors and emcees at the events are part of Smoking Not Our
Future. Smokefree has been the naming rights sponsor of
Smokefreerockquest for 22 of its 24 years and this
longstanding partnership between the two agencies has been
mutually beneficial. Smokefree is able to deliver its
messages to 25 percent of all secondary school students
every year, while fostering connections to school and
positive role models, as well as enhancing their musical
abilities and aspirations.
Hamilton – Home of
the national final
Hamilton is the now the home of
the Smokefreerockquest national final. And it is easy to see
why when you consider that the city is charged with one of
the country’s most youthful demographics (15-24 yrs) and
that it is the location of New Zealand’s newest, 5000-seat
purpose-built music arena, Claudelands. Each year Hamilton
adds to its already impressive portfolio of major events,
including the now international Parachute Music Festival,
the 2010 World Rowing Champs, the Fuel Festivals of NZ Music
and Theatre, 2011 Rugby World Cup matches and V8 Supercars
Australia. Building on that platform and bringing events of
this calibre to Hamilton is what the city is all about.
Smokefreerockquest has spent the past 23 years making kiwi
music legends; it is a national institution that has gone
from strength to strength. With a Vector-style arena set to
open and over two million people on the city’s doorstep,
Hamilton is the perfect venue to grow Smokefreerockquest
even more. www.hamilton.co.nz for more
info.