Che Fu

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Che Fu
Birth name Che Ness[1]
Born 1974 (age 3940)
Origin Auckland, New Zealand
Genres Hip Hop,
Reggae,
Soul,
Funk
Years active 1989–present
Labels Sony/BMG
Associated acts Supergroove, DLT, Dam Native, King Kapisi, Aaradhna
Website Facebook
Che Fu The Musician

Che Fu, MNZM is a New Zealand Hip hop/R&B and Reggae recording artist and producer.[2] Originally one part of the band Supergroove, as a solo artist he has gone on to sell thousands of albums both in New Zealand and internationally, including in Australia and the UK.

History

He began his music career at Western Springs College with a group of friends in forming the Low Down Dirty Blues Band, which went on to change their name to Supergroove.[2] While a member of Supergroove, Fu went by his birth name, Che Ness.

Supergroove's award-winning debut album Traction went triple platinum in New Zealand. Supergroove struggled with the success of Traction, and soon altered their musical style. Follow-up EP Tractor introduced a heavy rock influence, and although Ness was still a band member, his interest in hip-hop and reggae was running against the evolution of Supergroove. Before recording their second and final album, Backspacer, Supergroove significantly altered their line-up. Ness was one of three casualties and turned his attentions to hip-hop.

One of Fu's early hip-hop shows was billed as "Che-Fu", a take on kung-fu. Although not originally intended as a new name to record under, it stuck. The hyphen seems to come and go - it is used on one of three album covers. Within weeks of leaving Supergroove, Fu was invited to record a single with DJ DLT. The result, Chains, focussed on French nuclear tests in the South Pacific, and was a New Zealand number 1.

In 1998 Fu released his debut solo album 2b S.Pacific with BMG. At the 1997 New Zealand Music Awards he received the single of the year, songwriter of the year and male vocalist of the year awards. He then signed to Sony Music and began work for his next album Navigator released in 2001. He also formed an eight piece live band called The Krates. 2005's Beneath the Radar was led out by singles 2D and Lightwork. He has now released a Best Of album Hi-Score: The Best Of Che-Fu.

Fu is the son of Miriama, and one New Zealand's founding reggae musicians, Unity Pacific (Tigilau Ness).[2] Tigilau is a full-blooded Niuean who came from the village of Mutalau. Fu is half Māori, half Niuean. He and wife Angela McDonald have a son Loxmyn.[2] Fu and Angela got married at Uluvehi, Mutalau, Niue on Thursday 28 April 2011, they have 4 sons.

In 2008, Fu teamed up with the Glass Packaging Forum to promote glass recycling with youth. They hosted a competition for 9 to 15 year olds to write rap lyrics to encourage recycling, and the winner would record their lyrics with Fu.[3]

Discography

Albums

Year Title Details Peak chart
positions
NZ[4]
1998 2b S.Pacific
  • Label: BMG
  • Catalogue: 74321 629922
2
2001 Navigator
  • Label: Epic
1
2005 Beneath the Radar
  • Label: Sony
  • Catalogue: 82876729632
7
2006 Hi-Score – The Best of Che Fu
  • Label: Epic
  • Catalogue: 1526872
10
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country.

With Supergroove

  • Traction (1994) BMG
  • Backspacer (1996) BMG
  • Postage (2003) BMG

Singles

Year Single Peak chart
positions
Album
NZ[4]
1996 "Chains" (DLT feat. Che Fu) 1 The True School / 2b S.Pacific
1997 "The Son" (Dam Native & Che Fu) 25 Kaupapa Driven Rhymes Uplifted
1998 "Scene III" 4 2b S.Pacific
"Without a Doubt" / "Machine Talk" 1
1999 "Waka" 6
2001 "Fade Away..." 2 Navigator
"Random" 19
2002 "Misty Frequencies" 10
2003 "U Can't Resist Us" (King Kapisi feat. Che Fu) 9 2nd Round Testament
2006 "Spin 1" (Che Fu feat. Aaradhna) 20 Hi-Score – The Best of Che Fu
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country.

Awards

  • 2009 Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit
  • 2002 APRA Silver Scroll Awards: Che Ness (Che Fu) and Godfrey de Grut, "Misty Frequencies"

RIANZ Awards

Year Award[5] Work As Result
1995 Album of the Year Traction Supergroove Won
Single of the Year "Can't Get Enough" Supergroove Nominated
1996 International Achievement Supergroove Nominated
1997 Single of the Year "Chains" DLT feat Che Fu Won
Best Male Vocalist "Chains" Won
Best Songwriter "Chains" Dl Thompson, C Ness, A McNaughton, K Rangihuna Won
1999 Single of the Year "Scene III" Che Fu Won
Album of the Year 2b S Pacific Nominated
Best Producer 2b S Pacific Che Fu & Andy Morton Nominated
2002[2] Album of the Year The Navigator Che Fu Won
Single of the Year "Fade Away" Che Fu Won
Top Male Vocalist The Navigator Che Fu Won
Best R&B/Hip Hop Album The Navigator Che Fu Won
Best Songwriter "Fade Away" Che Fu Nominated
Best Cover Design "Fade Away" Che Fu and Kelvin Soh Nominated
2003 Single of the Year "Misty Frequencies" Che Fu Nominated
Best Male Vocalist "Misty Frequencies" Che Fu Won
Best Music Video "Misty Frequencies" Che Fu Won
Songwriter of the Year "Misty Frequencies" Che Fu Nominated
2006 Best Male Solo Artist Beneath the Radar Che Fu Nominated

References

  1. Fox, Michael (17 September 2009). "Che Fu: Thanks to grandma and aunty". The Dominion Post. Retrieved 23 September 2011. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Fox, Michael (16 September 2009). "Che Fu honoured in Auckland". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 2009-09-16. 
  3. "Che Fu Raps It Up For Glass Recycling". Scoop. 20 February 2008. Retrieved 10 April 2008. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 "CHE FU IN NEW ZEALAND CHARTS". Charts.org.nz. Retrieved 23 May 2013. 
  5. "NZMAs". nzmusicawards.co.nz. Retrieved 2012-09-30. 

External links

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