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Alien Weaponry - Biography


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2010-

Biography

Alien Weaponry is a three-piece thrash metal band from Waipu, New Zealand, formed in 2010 by brothers Lewis and Henry de Jong, who were 8 and 10 years old at the time. The band consists of Lewis de Jong (guitar and vocals), Henry de Jong (drums), and Ethan Trembath (bass guitar).

The band is most noted for its fusion of Te Reo Māori (the native language of New Zealand) with thrash metal - delivering emotionally and politically charged stories of conflict and grief with a warrior-like attitude. Drummer Henry de Jong says, "Our musical style and messages have a lot of similarities with haka, which is often brutal, angry and about stories of great courage or loss."

The de Jong brothers are of Ngati Pikiāo and Ngati Raukawa (Māori tribal) descent; and began their schooling at a kura kaupapa Māori (full immersion Māori language school), where singing waiata (songs) and performing haka were a daily routine. Also ingrained in their early learning were stories of New Zealand history told to them by their father, who, alongside the story telling, played them music from Metallica, Rage Against the Machine, Anthrax, Ministry, Red Hot Chili Peppers; and it is this combination of music, language, history and socio-political commentary that underpins the band's sound and ideas.

The brothers named the band Alien Weaponry after watching the movie District 9. After moving to the small town of Waipu in 2012, they were joined by bass guitarist Ethan Trembath in April 2013. Trembath replaced Wyatt Channings who had briefly played bass for the band the previous year.

The band toured with New Zealand chart topping band Devilskin on their 'We Rise' tour in 2014; and performed at The Powerstation in support of New Zealand's best known rock band Shihad in May 2015. They came second in the 2015 national finals of New Zealand's two most prestigious High school band competitions, Smokefree Pacifica Beats and Smokefree Rockquest; the latter of which they had been regional finalists in every year since 2012.

Alien Weaponry are believed to be the youngest recipients to have ever received New Zealand on Air funding - for their song 'Rū Ana Te Whenua' in October 2015. They received a $10,000 grant to complete recording of the song and produce a video; and have since received additional NZ On Air grants to record and produce music videos for 'Urutaa,' 'Raupatu,' 'Holding My Breath,' 'Kai Tangata,' and 'Whispers.'
In 2016, Alien Weaponry won the national finals of Smokefreerockquest and Smokefree Pacifica Beats; the only band to have ever won both events, winning funding to record and release singles and music videos, as well as musical instruments and other equipment. At the end of that year, the band was named by UK Metal Hammer Magazine as one of New Zealand's top 10 hard rock and metal acts.
In 2017, Alien Weaponry won the APRA Maioha Award for their song 'Raupatu;' and were finalists in the following additional New Zealand awards - Waiata Māori (best Music Video) for 'Rū Ana Te Whenua;' APRA Silver Scroll for 'Urutaa;' Vodafone NZ Music Awards for Best Māori Artist. They toured New Zealand to promote their single Rū Ana Te Whenua, and sold out venues in Auckland, Hamilton and Wellington.

In September 2017, the band signed a management contract with German-based agency Das Maschine; and in January 2018 they announced a worldwide distribution deal with Napalm Records to distribute their debut album, Tū. They performed at a number of festivals in New Zealand over the summer of 2017/18, including headline/main stage slots at the NZ Tattoo & Arts Festival, Wavefront and Auckland City Limits; as well as opening for Prophets of Rage in March 2018.

Since the release of their album on 1 June 2018, Alien Weaponry have sold out headline shows in Australia and Europe; and played to record crowds at some of the biggest and most prestigious festivals and in Europe and the UK, including Wacken Open Air (Germany), MetalDays (Slovenia), Summer Breeze (Germany) and Bloodstock Open Air (UK).

In the same period, the single 'Kai Tangata' rocketed to no.1 on the prestigious 'Devil's Dozen' countdown for the Liquid Metal show on New York based Sirius XM, where it remained for 13 weeks. The video for 'Kai Tangata' was the 'Most Added Metal Song' for June 2018 on US Cable Channel Music Choice (delivering to 50 million households). It had 1.5 million views on YouTube in the first four months since its release; and is also a finalist in the NZ On Air Best Music Video category of the 'Show Me Shorts' International Film Festival screening around New Zealand in October 2018.

In September 2018, Alien Weaponry won the Waiata Māori (best Music Video) Award for 'Kai Tangata;' and are finalists in the 2018 Vodafone NZ Music Awards in six categories: Best Album (for Tū); Best Group; Best Rock Artist; Best Māori Artist; Best Producer (for Tū); and best Engineer (for Tū).

Source: Facebook