Troy Kingi's latest album Holy Colony Burning Acres has left a footprint in the New Zealand scene as it takes out yet another award at yesterday's Taite Music prize giving.
The Northland musician was awarded winner of the Taite Music Prize 2020 for his deep-roots/reggae album that came out in July last year, "delving into the dark corners of worldly Indigenous politics, namely colonisation and its (c)rippling effects on today's social climate", as Kingi describes it.
Last year the record earned Kingi two awards: the Te Māngai Pāho Best Māori Artist and Best Roots Artist at the New Zealand Music Awards (TUI).
Embedded in electrifying 70's-style deep roots/reggae, Kingi takes these issues head-on with Marley-inspired political consciousness.
Holy Colony Burning Acres is the third album in his aspirational 10-10-10 project: 10 albums in 10 genres in 10 years.