Will Power by Mental Health Triangle
Posted: June 3rd, 2011 | Author: admin | Filed under: Mental Health Triangle, Tokerau, Toki, Video | Comments OffFrom the album “Red Album”: www.mentalhealthtriangle.bandcamp.com
eatheathy!
Posted: March 16th, 2011 | Author: admin | Filed under: Lady Gray, Mental Health Triangle, Releases, Tokerau, Toki | Comments OffWarpholez of thA mind
Posted: January 10th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Releases, Tokerau, Toki | Tags: Warpholez of thA mind | Comments Off
The debut album from Tokerau. Recorded at The Regent in 1999 and released in 2000. Until now this rare album was only available through good timing. Warpholez of thA mind (as the title suggests) is an exploration of Tokerau’s inner thoughts, with poetic lyrics which tell a story and take you on a journey. Full of gems with input from friends, transients and urban legends from the legendary Dunedin city and hinterland.
Lovers Leap
Posted: January 5th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Releases, Tokerau | Tags: LOVERS LEAP | Comments Off
From Tokerau. A heartfelt eclectic mix of reggae, dub, love songs and a lion-rocking political anthem. First released in 2004 and now available beyond the hills of Dunedin.
A Leg Up to Nowhere
Posted: January 5th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Releases, Tokerau | Tags: A LEG UP TO NOWHERE | Comments Off
The first EP from Tokerau, first released in 2001. A hit on Dunedin Student Radio. Refreshingly acoustic and lowfi, featuring reggae, hints of the Dunedin-sound and a wicked sense of humour.
Review
Posted: September 20th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Big Fat Raro, Reviews, Tokerau, Toki | Comments OffAUTOPHARPIES/ ISO12/ OTEPOTI UNDERGROUND/ MOTHER EARTH
20 September 2008, Chicks Hotel Port Chalmers
First up, the illustrious Toki Wilson, all wired-up and armed with colourful plastic sound toy machinery, rarotongan militant psychedelic hip-hop southern side and the harsh realities of Stafford street art-skool old-skool. Subtle, to the point of evil, Toki’s Otepoti Underground project, now in it’s solo form, set the standard of the evening – an electronic rat-a-tat-tat. His rhyme slick, his stage presence diminuitive yet simmering, cool incarnate.
Source: http://www.fink.net.nz/autoharpies.html
Review
Posted: August 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Reviews, Tokerau, Toki | Comments OffThe None Gallery
31 August, 2007
…Mixed media pieces are always dear to my heart. Toki Wilson’s piece, a combination of cut and shaped painted plywood, clapboard house siding, a 45 rpm record entitled ‘I’m Gonna Write a Song’, and a little speaker sticking out with the sound of running stream water is both touching and funny. The piece brings to mind elements of nature and the urban, natural sounds, and Toki’s life creating sounds as a musician, each element inseparably influencing the other, hence portrayed in mixed media…
Source: http://www.critic.co.nz/about/reviews/348?page=2&review_type_id=1
Review
Posted: April 28th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Reviews, Tokerau, Toki | Comments OffMestar, Onanon and Toki Wilson
28 April 2007, The Backstage
The Backstage can be a big empty concrete box when you have to start early. This is how it was for Toki Wilson, who has been teaching himself how to play the ukulele, and treated a very supportive audience to several classics from his songbook. Interesting stuff. Toki’s ukulele style is very much in the “island ukulele orchestra” mould, with cheerfully frantic strumming and very well signposted double times. Still, I’d like to see some more experimentation, maybe shove a pickup in there and make some strange noises, or add another couple of players and do the orchestra thing.
Toki has made a name for himself in the last couple of years playing guitar and singing with reggae band Irie Eyes. The rest of his set was made up of Iries numbers and a couple of trips down memory lane to visit the grunge house where Toki grew up. Toki can be very shy on stage as a soloist, but this doesn’t take anything away from a very powerful voice and a pop sensibility that helps him overcome the banality that can befall many reggae writers. A real standout song is his ’30,000 people,’ about the sole, criminal survivor of a Caribbean volcanic eruption. If Toki were Wellingtonian, and had the right friends, there is every chance somebody would have made a lavalava with his face on it by now.
Source: http://www.dunedinmusic.com/reviews/53