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Maori culture in New Zealand
Maori Culture
Maori Culture
Dances of Life (Maori excerpt)
Full Māori Waka Taua documentary, Te Hono ki Aotearoa "Museum Volkenkunde Leiden"
Maori Culture - Cultura Maorí. New Zealand - Nueva Zelanda
Tamaki Maori Village - New Zealand
The Maori People
Gangsterism replacing Maori tribal culture - 28 Oct 09
The Maori Culture
New Zealand Maori Culture #1 (Japanese, 日本語)
Maori Culture - Traditions & History
Māori stick and poi
A Maori Cultural Experience in New Zealand
Discover New Zealand's fascinating Maori culture.
Dutch navigator Abel Tasman was the first European to encounter the Maori. Four members of his crew were killed in a bloody encounter in 1642. In 1769 Britis...
http://preparetoserve.com/NEW-ZEALAND Maori Culture tips and insights. Evan lived in New Zealand and worked among the Moari people off and on for about two years as a missionary.
This is an excerpt from a 55 min documentary we have shot for PBS. For nearly 50000 years, dances and songs have been an expression of Pacific Islanders' or...
Waka Taua documentary.
In this episode Ruben Alonso travels to Rotorua in New Zealand to discover the Maori Culture. To know this culture he visits the Tamaki Maori Village, a natu...
A short documentary about what life was like for Maori people in New Zealand. This film shows the every day activities of the native people including a perfo...
Informative powerpoint video about the Maori people of New Zealand.
In New Zealand, gangs have become an increasingly serious problem which is now threatening to replace the Maori culture, as more young Maori turn to a life o...
How does the general population in New Zealand influence the Maori and how is/was their relations? This was a school project.
どの文化にも、天地創造に関する言い伝えがあります。マオリ族には、巨人が湖を掘ったり、水生生物が水から上がって丘になったり、山々が美しい娘の心を射止めようと戦いを繰り広げたり、様々な物語があります。 これらの物語は、その他の数々の物語と共に、世代から世代へと受け継がれ、刻々と変わり行く世界と、自然と大地との深いつながりを物語っています。 「アオテアロア - 天と地」はこうした物語のいくつかと、ニュージーランドの類稀な風景の絶妙な美しさを一つにしてお届けしています。古代のマオリ族の言い伝えが、大竹一雄のナレーションとリチャード・ナンズ(ロード・オブ・ザ・リング、クジラの島の少女)の率いるナー・タオンガ・プーオロによる伝統的マオリ音楽により、生き生きと蘇ってきます。 www.movingcontent.co.nz
The cultural expressions of the Maori are magically presented within this program. It includes authentic Maori Art, carving, weaving, dance and song vividly captured and explained by noted...
These are some songs from the DVD "Heritage of Māori Songs" I saw these and really felt like they need to be promoted. The haka seems to take dominance in pā...
http://www.nomadicmatt.com/ - A Maori cultural show in Rotorua, New Zealand that teaches you about their traditional ways. Leave a comment and let me know wh...
More and more Kiwis are still making the move to Australia to make a new living for their families. But never will they have thought about the costs of arranging a funeral there or bringing a body back if something was to happen to them while living abroad. A Māori couple in Brisbane has started their own funeral home because of it.
TE POI ! PATUA TAKU POI PATUA KIA RITE PA PARA PATUA TAKU POI E ! E rere ra e taku poi poro-titi Ti-taha-taha ra whaka-raru-raru e Poro-taka taka ra poro hurihuri mai Rite tonu ki te ti-wai-waka e Ka pare pare ra pī-o-o-i-o-i a Whaka-heke-heke e ki a kori kori e Piki whaka-runga ra ma mui-nga mai a Taku poi poro-titi taku poi e ***CHORUS*** Poi E whaka-tata mai Poi E kaua he rerekē Poi E kia piri mai ki au Poi E-E awhi mai ra Poi E tāpeka tia mai Poi E o taua aroha Poi E pai here tia ra POI... TAKU POI E! Repeat solo a cappella : Chanted by lead female Kaea. PATUA TAKU POI PATUA KIA RITE PA PARA PATUA TAKU POI E ! Verse & chorus repeated again, same sequence. Instrumental break, usually poi percussion. Then key change : repeat chorus on key change. At end of song : POI... TAKU POI E ! 4 times Then everyone chants at song's end : RERE ATU TAKU POI TI TA' TAHA RA WHAKARUNGA WHAKA RARO TAKU POI E! "Poi E" is a New Zealand 1984 number-one hit song by the group Patea Māori Club off the album of the same name. Its popularity is unique in New Zealand as Māori music rarely reaches popular status. Released in 1984, the song was sung entirely in the Māori language and featured a blend of Māori cultural practices in the song and accompanying music video, including Māori chanting, poi dancing, and the wearing of traditional Māori garments.[1] Not only did the song top the New Zealand pop charts for four weeks, but the single also became the biggest seller in New Zealand for 1984, "outselling all international recording artists. Today the song maintains its status as a cult classic in white New Zealand, as the group behind it, Patea Māori Club, was a one-hit wonder. However, for the Māori people, the song is much more important, as it became "the anthem of a new generation", the generation known as the "hip-hop generation" The song was written by Māori linguist Ngoi Pēwhairangi; the music was scored by Dalvanius Prime. Pewhairangi's intent in writing the song in such a way was to promote Māori ethnic pride among young Māori people in a popular format. The two faced indifference from record labels, so Prime produced the song and album under his self-made label, Maui Records. Without radio play and barely any commercial TV airing, a TV news story is credited with shooting the song up to #1 on New Zealand charts in March 1984. Its popularity that same year grew further when it was well-received by British listeners as the Patea Māori Club toured the United Kingdom, playing at the London Palladium and the Edinburgh Festival, as well as giving a Royal Command Performance. It also made a comeback in 2010 by reaching the New Zealand Top 20 after being featured in the successful New Zealand comedy film Boy. On May 24 that year it reached #3 "Poi E" and hip-hop In addition to the Māori cultural influences in the music video for the song, there are interesting influences from hip-hop culture present in the video. Among the most obvious are rapping and breakdancing, and the song itself "combined traditional Māori vocals and show-band and concert-party idioms with gospel and funk", two of hip-hop's own influences as major African-American musical genres. Hip-hop was mixed with the traditional Māori chanting and cultural music because the Patea Māori Club wanted to give the younger hip-hop generation "their language and culture through the medium they were comfortable with", that medium being hip-hop. At the same time as it was helping to teach the children about Māori culture, hip-hop also "provided Māori youth in particular with a viable substitute for their own culture. Hiphop already had had a hold on the people of New Zealand and the Māori in particular, and Poi-E reinforced it and Māori hip-hop crews continued springing up throughout all of New Zealand.
Maori Festival.
The BYUH Culture Night of 2005. This is the Kiwi club performing at the Polynesian Cultural Center.
Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce has announced $2 million in new funding towards an initiative to help NZ companies broaden their brand internation...
http://www.travelsocializer.com Maori Cultural Show in Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand Check in to see more http://www.travelsocializer.com.
Maori culture performance, Nga Potiki a Hinehopu.
Te Puia, the New Zealand Maori Arts & Crafts Institute, promotes traditional Maori arts and crafts in wood and stone carving, weaving and war canoe building,...
What's a historic Maori meeting house doing in Clandon Park? Visitors to the National Trust stately home are often bewildered to see a traditional New Zealan...
Auckland Museum 30.03.2013 Experience Maori Culture with my friends from Sydney Eliyas Rei, Dzenita Cengic, Renata Hadziavdic and Semira Bejdic.
As part of her Master's thesis, Melissa examined Alfred's staging of songs inspired by Māori culture ...
noodls 2015-03-23... assertion of their cultural identity as part of the wider Māori cultural revival (Ngā tuakiri hōu).
Houston Chronicle 2015-02-17... of Auckland's natural resources protecting Māori cultural heritage for future generations.
noodls 2015-02-12... Hutt-so they can contribute a Māori cultural dimension to International Day at Konstanz University.
noodls 2014-12-11She was interested in Māori culture, but it was something she'd only ever read about.
noodls 2014-11-25... responsibilities in architecture, Indigenous design that reflects climate and culture, and more.
noodls 2014-11-18What effect might this have on Māori cultural practices that have traditionally taken place on the marae?
noodls 2014-11-04Māori culture is one of the things I am especially looking forward to learning about-I find it ...
noodls 2014-10-30It says a lot about her interest in Māori culture, which hadn't previously been picked up.
noodls 2014-10-24The Chiefs, whose haka went viral when they won the Super Rugby competition, credit Māori culture as ...
The Guardian 2014-10-13The Chiefs, whose haka went viral when they won the Super Rugby competition, credit Māori culture as ...
The Guardian 2014-10-13His empathy for the advancement of Māori culture has been evident in his development of a number of ...
noodls 2014-10-13... strong interest in Māori culture and language, and involvement in cultural or community activities.
noodls 2014-09-01Māori culture is the culture of the Māori of New Zealand, an Eastern Polynesian people, and forms a distinctive part of New Zealand culture. Within the Māori community, and to a lesser extent throughout New Zealand as a whole, the word Māoritanga is often used as an approximate synonym for Māori culture, the Māori suffix -tanga being roughly equivalent to the qualitative noun ending "-ness" in English.
Māori cultural history is inextricably tied into a larger Polynesian phenomenon. Aotearoa (New Zealand) is the southwestern apex of the Polynesian Triangle, a region of the Pacific Ocean with three island groups at its corners: the Hawaiʻi islands, Rapa Nui (Easter Island), and Aotearoa (New Zealand). The many island cultures within the Polynesian Triangle share similar languages derived from a proto-Malayo-Polynesian language used in Southeast Asia 5,000 years ago. Polynesians also share cultural traditions, such as religion, social organization, myths, and material culture. Anthropologists believe that all Polynesians have descended from a South Pacific proto-culture created by an Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) people that had migrated from Southeast Asia.