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Malo Ioane Luafutu, also called Jeshua Ioane Luafutu (born on 29 May 1979), and better known by his
stage name A stage name or professional name is a pseudonym used by performers, authors, and entertainers—such as actors, comedians, singers, and musicians. The equivalent concept among writers is called a ''nom de plume'' (pen name). Some performers ...
Scribe, is a New Zealand rapper of Samoan descent. He achieved two solo number ones on the singles chart from his debut album, '' The Crusader'', which was released in 2003 in New Zealand and later certified four times platinum. He also reached number one as a featured artist on P-Money's 2004 song " Stop the Music", and in 2010 on R&B singer J.Williams' single " You Got Me".


Early life

Scribe was born Malo Loane Luafutu on 29 May 1979 in Christchurch, New Zealand, to Caroline 'Carol' Luafutu and Fa'amoana John Luafutu. He grew up in the suburb of Philipstown, Christchurch.


Career

With the initial focus on the song " Stand Up", director Chris Graham gave the video for the single the energy of a rock video. He invited music guests, DJs and even the general public to participate as extras in the video. The song debuted at number 6 on the New Zealand top 40 singles chart and soon rose to number 1. The single spent 12 (non-consecutive) weeks at number one. Dirty Records released Scribe's debut album " The Crusader" in New Zealand in October 2003 with distribution through
Festival Mushroom Records A festival is an event celebrated by a community and centering on some characteristic aspect or aspects of that community and its religion or cultures. It is often marked as a local or national holiday, mela, or eid. A festival constitutes ...
. The album went gold within hours and platinum within days. It sold 60,000 copies in New Zealand, which is four times platinum status in that country. Scribe followed the success of the album with the limited-edition release of " Not Many – The Remix!" featuring guest vocals from MCs Savage and Con Psy which peaked at No. 2. He then released a new single, "Dreaming" in January 2004; this also reached No. 1. Scribe took a break from new singles and toured the country on the Hook It Up tour before he returned in late 2004 with a new single off P-Money's "Magic City" album called "Stop the Music", again reaching No. 1. In 2005, he opened for the Beastie Boys at shows in Australia.


''Rhyme Book''

Scribe's second studio album, titled " Rhyme Book", was released by Scribe in Australia on 29 September 2007 and in New Zealand on 1 October 2007. "Rhyme Book" did not sell as well as its predecessor. It featured collaborations with New York hip-hop artist
Talib Kweli Talib Kweli Greene (; born October 3, 1975) is an American rapper. He first earned recognition through his collaboration with fellow Brooklyn rapper Mos Def (now known as Yasiin Bey) in 1997, when they formed the group Black Star. Kweli's music ...
(of Reflection Eternal and Black Star fame) on the track "Be Alright". The first single off the album in New Zealand, " My Shit", had its video premiere on 12 August 2007 on local music channel C4. " F.R.E.S.H." was the second single released in New Zealand. The first single in Australia however was "F.R.E.S.H.", followed by "My Shit". The third single in both countries, "Say It Again", features Scribe's cousin Tyra Hammond.


''Scribe is Dead''

After a decade hiatus, Scribe released a single titled "Non Attachment" which will feature on the forthcoming independently released album "Scribe is Dead", due for release in 2025, originally announced for release in 2024. This effectively shelved his third album "Therapy" that was announced in 2011 but never released. A second single for the album, titled "Glowstick", was released at the end of 2023. A third song, "Do or Die, Don’t or Die", was premiered in late April 2024. Scribe said in an interview with ''
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'' that it would be his final album.


Personal struggles and addictions

In 2011, in an interview on '' Campbell Live'', Scribe described how he became addicted to drugs, alcohol and gambling between 2005 and 2007 following lacklustre sales of his second album, "Rhyme Book". His addiction led to his family denying him access to money. He decided to pawn off the platinum awards he had won with his debut album. In November 2011 Scribe was arrested in Wellington for disorder and released after being formally warned. Scribe said his arrest was illegal, but he admitted he was "dissing" the police but that "their ego couldn't handle it". Following the assault on cricketer Jesse Ryder in late March 2013, Scribe took to
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, implying that Ryder was somehow responsible because his behaviour was not "humble" enough for someone visiting Christchurch. He further noted that "Cantabrians don't beat people up for no reason." Scribe's comments were widely vilified on Twitter and numerous blogs, with many posters alluding to Scribe's role in the violent, unprovoked assault on Phil Armstrong in 2004 as further evidence that he condones violence. Ryder later jokingly thanked Scribe for his "support". In August 2018, Scribe was imprisoned for two months after breaching his curfew and performed in Motueka. He was released on 29 October. He was later due in court on 13 December for methamphetamine possession and breach of protection order.


Christchurch earthquake

Scribe released a remix of his single "Not Many" to show support for the victims of the
2011 Christchurch earthquake A major earthquake occurred in Christchurch on Tuesday 22 February 2011 at 12:51 p.m. New Zealand Daylight Time, local time (23:51 Coordinated Universal Time, UTC, 21 February). The () earthquake struck the Canterbury Region ...
s. "Not Many Cities" features Scribe rapping in different parts of the CBD's red zone, with altered lyrics such as "I don't know any city" instead of "I don't know anybody". Although his video received positive attention from the media, there was outcry from some Christchurch residents who claimed it was unfair that Scribe was allowed in the red zones when red zone business owners were not. Shortly after the remix's release, Scribe announced that he was working on a third album, titled "Therapy", but it was later shelved.


Family

Scribe is the cousin of other prominent Samoan New Zealand musicians Ladi6 and Tyra Hammond of The Opensouls. His father is Fa'amoana John Luafutu, who wrote the 2022 film '' A Boy Called Piano'', directed by Nina Nawalowalo. Scribe's brother Matthias Luafutu is an actor. Scribe, Matthias and their father John also collaborated with Tom McCrory and Nina Nawalowalo on the stage play ''A White Guitar'' in 2015, which was an autobiographical story that did an eight-city sold-out tour in 2016.


Discography


Studio albums


Major album guest appearances

* P-Money – ''Big Things'' (2002) (six songs) * Concord Dawn – ''Uprising'' (2003) (one song) * P-Money – ''Magic City'' (2004) (three songs) * P-Money – ''Everything'' (2010) (three songs)


Singles


As featured artist


References


External links


AudioCulture

Festival Music Records New Zealand artist page
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Scribe 1979 births APRA Award winners New Zealand people of Samoan descent New Zealand male rappers Pacific Music Award–winning artists Living people People educated at St Paul's College, Auckland People educated at Linwood College