AEIOU | |
Cover: | AEIOU by Moana and the Moahunters.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Moana and the Moahunters |
Album: | Tahi |
Released: | April 1991 |
Length: | 4:02 |
Label: | Southside |
Prev Title: | Black Pearl |
Prev Year: | 1990 |
Next Title: | Peace, Love and Family" / "Kua Makona |
Next Year: | 1993 |
"AEIOU" - sometimes subtitled "Akona Te Reo" ["learn the ([[Māori language|Māori]]) language"][1] [2] [3] - is a song by New Zealand musical group Moana and the Moahunters, released in April 1991[4] through Southside Records[5] [6] [7] as the second single from their debut album Tahi (1993).
While the song is sometimes solely credited to group member Mina Ripia,[8] group leader Moana Maniapoto has alternatively commented that it was written by the entire group, with herself and Teremoana Rapley contributing verses around Ripia's original radio jingle chorus. Maniapoto has described the song's purpose as "blatant propaganda" and a "call to action," to both enforce the proper pronunciation of Māori vowels into the minds of Pākeha and encourage Māori youth to join the Māori language revival and learn te reo Māori.[9] Its message has also been interpreted as a broader one aimed at all races to "get back to your roots."
The track is a dance song with a funk backing, and includes a rap by Rapley in its bridge. It was mixed by Mark Tierney of Strawpeople at Lab Studios in Auckland and produced by Stuart Pearce and John Diamond.
Upon its release, "AEIOU" became the first song to receive a music video funded by NZ On Air. The Kerry Brown-directed video includes cameos from singer Mika X, rap duo MC OJ & Rhythm Slave, actor Temuera Morrison, and Maniapoto's father, among others. It was filmed at Albert Park, St. Stephen's College in Bombay, and the home of Brown and his then-wife Rosanna Raymond (who served as the video's stylist). However, the track only reached No. 31 on the New Zealand charts in spite of the No. 2 peak of Moana and the Moahunters' previous single, "Black Pearl." Maniapoto has stated that radio stations considered the song to not "fit the format" and ignored it.