Luke Girgis | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Coptic Soldier |
Born | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Origin | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
Genres | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, manager, producer, record executive |
Instrument | Voice |
Years active | 2005–2011 |
Labels | Nurcha |
Website | web |
Luke George Girgis, formerly known by his stage name, Coptic Soldier, is an Australian hip-hop artist, music manager, record label executive, and publisher. He often performed with stage partner, Phatchance (aka Chance Waters) and later became his manager.
Girgis founded a talent management company, Be Like Children, in 2006, and in 2013 co-founded a record label, I Forgot Sorry! In 2017 he established Seventh Street Media Pty Ltd, first acquiring music publications, Tone Deaf and The Brag, and later expanding to include several other publications under the Brag Media Australia trade name.
Luke George Girgis [1] [2] was born in Melbourne. His parents were second generation Egyptian migrants who raised him in Sydney's Sutherland Shire as a member of the Australian Coptic Orthodox church. [3]
He attended St Patrick's College in Sutherland.[ citation needed ] He later recalled his first live band "A Year 12 rock band in the school hall when I was in Year 5. – Can't remember their name..."; from that performance he learnt "That no matter how bad your music is, you can always make a crowd laugh". [4]
Girgis obtained a degree in rehabilitation counselling at the University of Sydney before completing a degree in Theology at Charles Sturt University.[ citation needed ]
Coptic Soldier was signed to Nurcha Records in 2005 before its closure in 2009. He remembered, in 2008, that he was "first introduced to hip hop by the likes of US bigwigs Eminem and Tupac, but has since drawn inspiration from artists closer to home." [5] His performance name acknowledges his heritage in the Coptic Christian faith and his "fighting for what you believe in." [6] He released his debut mix tape, False Start, on that label in 2006. [7] InTheMix's Xpose described his work: "While this release isn't in the upper echelon of those currently coming out in this country, it definitely impressed me. Potential wise Coptic Soldier has a lot to offer, he is an emcee you want to hear more from as he speaks what is on many of our minds." [7] As from 2007 he ran an artist management company, The Girgis Circus, [6] which catered for his fellow artists, including Phatchance aka Chance Waters. [2]
In 2010 Coptic Soldier teamed up with Sydney soul vocalist Miriam Waks and independently released an extended play, The Sound of Wings, which was produced by K21, an Adelaide-based hip hop artist. [8] [9] As a solo artist he independently distributed a release, The Past Three Years. [5] He described it as "a street release that really reflects my life in the last three years... I write basically whatever is on my mind. Most recently I have been in huge reflection about my growth and fortune, so all the music I seem to be writing at the moment shows just that." [5]
In March 2010 he joined Phatchance for a national tour, Inkstains, which saw the pair co-headline nine dates across Australia. [10] He also provided management for other hip hop artists Mind over Matter and Elgen & Johnny Utah; and for a pop music artist, HR King. [11] [12] Also in that year he co-founded an independent record label, I Forget, Sorry!, together with Phatchance and Mind over Matter, to cater for the artists' releases. [13] [14] He explained his plans to Birdie of Beat magazine, "The biggest focus will be this acoustic tour for now but we do have a couple of other big things that we’ll work on after that. Chance is going to work on his album, which I’m excited about – that will hopefully be late this year or early next year. Then I'm going to be doing my album late next year too. For me the acoustic EP is a sequel to my debut EP [The Sound Of Wings] with Miriam Waks and a guy from Adelaide called K21 who won the Hilltop Hoods initiative." [2]
During 2011 Coptic Soldier and Phatchance undertook a combined Hey Where's Your DJ tour, which Chris Singh of The AU Review caught, "When one thinks of live hip-hop, the usual picture in their head is that of at least one emcee rapping to the beats dropped by at least one DJ – a format often criticised by those outside of hip-hop. Every so often, a hip-hop act comes along and replaces the DJ with a backing band, not only giving their concert much more musical credibility, but allowing for more creative live interpretations of each of their songs... [the pair] decided to start experimenting with instrumental interpretations of their fine Aussie hip-hop tracks, national interest in these two emcees skyrocketed and their resulting acoustic EPs were met with more success than they hoped for." [15] In May 2011 the pair appeared on Hip Hop Show on youth radio, Triple J; they were interviewed by the host, Hau Latukefu, who also played their tracks, "No More Waiting" (by Coptic Soldier featuring Phatchance) and "Liquid Company" (by Coptic Soldier, live in the studio). [16]
In May 2012 Coptic Soldier was performing solo shows through New South Wales to Coffs Harbour. [17]
In February 2006 Girgis founded talent management company Be Like Children [18] [19] with the mission statement to be "always artist first". [20] [21]
As Chance Waters' manager, in 2012, he negotiated[ failed verification ] for that artist's album, Infinity, to appear on Permanent Records, an imprint of Shock Records. [22]
From November 2012 until October 2014, Girgis was player development officer for the professional rugby league club Sydney Roosters. [18]
In 2013 Girgis worked to negotiate a deal for Chance Waters with Island Records Australia, a subsidiary of the Universal Music Group. Due to Waters' tracks being listed in the 2012 Triple J Hottest 100, that artist also signed a publishing contract with Universal Music Publishing. [23] [24]
In 2014 Girgis was given funds from The Seed Arts Music Grant to attend a management workshop. [25] He formed a performance duo, Run to Damascus, with Jon Reichardt, to release a single, "Hide & Seek", via I Forget, Sorry! [26] The track was mixed and executive produced by Waters. [14]
Also in 2014 he and his business partner, Matt Cannings, formed Careless Management (part of Be Like Children [20] ) and became co-managers of Sydney-based pop rock act, Little Sea, and signed them to a deal with Sony Music Australia. They debuted at number 1 on the Australian iTunes music chart, before touring Australia as main support for international stars 5 Seconds of Summer. [27]
In July 2015 Girgis oversaw the release of Little Sea's EP, With You Without You, featuring the single, "Change for Love", which peaked in the ARIA Singles Chart top 40. [28] [29]
From November 2015 until July 2016 Girgis was A&R/label director at Shock Records. [19] [18]
Be Like Children was terminated in December 2016. [18]
Early in 2017 he established Seventh Street Media Pty Ltd with the acquisition of the privately-owned music publications, Tone Deaf , The Brag , and J Play. [13] [30] Rolling Stone Australia , Tone Deaf, [31] The Brag, The Industry Observer, the Gig Guide are among the brands owned or operated by Seventh Street Media, trading as The Brag Media Australia, [32] which describes itself as "Australia's biggest youth publisher". [33] Others include The Music Network , IndieWire , Variety Australia , [34] [35] Epic Digital [36] (founded in 2019 [37] ), don't bore us, Funimation, Enthusiast Gaming, Life Without Andy, and HypeBeast. [38] The Brag Media is a publishing and events company with a focus on music. [39] [38] [40]
Tone Deaf was acquired by Seventh Street Media in January 2017, along with The Brag (formerly published by Furst Media) and J Play. [41] The Music Network was purchased by The Brag Media in February 2022. [42] J Play was a B2B resource showcasing and tracking artists and songs played on Triple J radio. Launched in 2006 by Paul Stipack, it created a large archive of statistics of every song played by Triple j over 12 years. Owing to changes in the music industry, including the need to track many other sources, its usefulness diminished, and it ceased operation in January 2019. The Brag Media retained the J Play database of 40,000 songs, 11,000 artists, and 15,000 playlists. [43] Don't Bore Us was a pop music social media hub (on Instagram and Facebook [44] ), launched in January 2017. [41] It was expanded to a new website in May 2017, [44] [45] but appears to have folded into Tone Deaf at some point after that. [46]
In September 2023 the key people at The Brag Media were: editor-in-chief Poppy Reid; CEO Luke Girgis; and chief operating officer Joel King. [47] In 2024 The Brag Media was acquired by Vinyl Group, and on 5 June 2024 Girgis (then described as managing director and publisher) left the company. [48]
As of 2017 [update] Girgis was living in Sydney with his wife Christine and their child. He is an active Christian and wrote an article in support of same-sex marriage ahead of his the Australian same-sex marriage postal survey conducted in 2017. [49]
Triple J is a government-funded, national Australian radio station founded in 1975 as a division of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). It aims to appeal to young listeners of alternative music, and plays more Australian content than commercial networks.
Jordan Michael Houston III, known professionally as Juicy J, is an American rapper, songwriter, and record producer. Originally from Memphis, Tennessee, he is a founding member of the Southern hip hop group Three 6 Mafia, established in 1991. He released ten studio albums with the group, which began as an underground act until attaining mainstream recognition and signing with Loud Records, an imprint of Columbia Records in 2000. The group's 2005 single, "Stay Fly", yielded their furthest commercial success, peaking at number 13 on the Billboard Hot 100. That same year, they recorded the song "It's Hard out Here for a Pimp" for the film Hustle & Flow, which won an Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Australian hip hop traces its origins to the early 1980s and was initially largely inspired by hip hop and other urban musical genres from the United States. As the form matured, Australian hip hop has become a commercially viable style of music that is no longer restricted to the creative underground, with artists such as Onefour, Hilltop Hoods, Kerser and Bliss n Eso and having achieved notable fame. Australian Hip-Hop is still primarily released through independent record labels, which are often owned and operated by the artists themselves. Despite its genesis as an offshoot of American hip-hop, Australian hip hop has developed a distinct personality that reflects its evolution as an Australian musical style. Since the inception of the Australian hip-hop scene, Australian Aboriginals have played a prominent role.
Bliss n Eso are an Australian hip hop trio based in Sydney. They are currently signed to Melbourne record label Illusive Sounds, and are managed and booked by label co-founders Adam Jankie and Matt Gudinski. Bliss n Eso have released seven studio albums which include three number 1 debuts on the ARIA Charts. They have also won two ARIA Awards for Best Urban Release for their 2008 album Flying Colours and for Best Music Video for their 2017 single "Moments". Eso, under his alias Esoterik, released an album entitled "My Astral Plane" in May 2018.
Shock Records was an Australian independent record label, branded with the logo Shock or Shock Australia. Founded in 1988, it traded as Shock Records Pty. Ltd, and its publishing arm as Shock Music Publishing Pty. Ltd. Its most prominent sublabel was Permanent Records. After going into receivership in August 2010, company assets were bought by Regency Media Group, and the company was rebranded Shock Entertainment. Regency Media folded in February 2023.
Joelistics is an Australian MC, producer and multi-instrumentalist, who is a member of the Melbourne-based Australian hip hop group TZU and a solo artist on the Elefant Traks music label.
American rapper Gucci Mane has released 16 studio albums, 3 collaborative albums, 10 compilation albums, one soundtrack, 8 extended plays (EPs), 80 mixtapes and 100 singles and 16 promotional singles.
Mind Over Matter is an Australian hip hop outfit from Sydney, Australia consisting of MC Smiles Again and DJ Ntaprize. Previously, the lineup also included MC Willow, but he left the group in 2014. The group has played alongside and toured in support of some of Australia's biggest artists, including Jebediah, Bliss n Eso, Drapht, The Herd and Pez.
Alasdair David George Murray, professionally known as Illy, is an Australian rapper from Frankston, Victoria. Illy first emerged onto the hip hop scene in 2009. He has released five studio albums and has won multiple ARIA Music Awards. Illy has performed at many Australian music festivals including headline spots at Groovin' the Moo, Splendour in the Grass, Spilt Milk and Yours and Owls.
Chance Dylan Waters, is a retired independent Australian hip hop artist and record producer. Under the moniker Phatchance, Waters was a founder of the group Natural Causes, in 2003 which issued an album, The Incidental Noise Demo, and toured nationally. The group disbanded later that year.
Matthew James Colwell, better known by his stage name 360, is an Australian rapper. He has released four studio albums: What You See Is What You Get (2008); Falling & Flying (2011), which peaked at No. 4 on the ARIA Albums Chart and was certified platinum; Utopia (2014), and Vintage Modern (2017). 360's second album provided four charting singles, including "Boys like You", which peaked at No. 3 on the ARIA Singles Chart and was certified 4× platinum. At the ARIA Music Awards of 2012, he received six nominations and won the 'Breakthrough Artist – Release' award for Falling & Flying, while Styalz Fuego won the ARIA 'Producer of the Year' Artisan award for the same album.
The Music Network (TMN) is an Australian music magazine launched as a in 1994 by John Woodruff. It was printed weekly until March 2013, when it went fully online. In 2017 it was acquired by Jake Challenor, who served as its publisher and editor. In February 2022 The Music Network was acquired by The Brag Media, with Poppy Reid serving as editor-in-chief.
Adam Briggs, who performs as Briggs and self-describes as Senator Briggs, is an Aboriginal Australian rapper, record label owner, comedy writer, actor, and author. Briggs became well known as a "solo rapper", signing with Golden Era Records in 2009, before co-founding the hip hop duo A.B. Original in 2016.
Playback 808 is an Australia-based independent record label and creative movement founded in 2011 by recording artist, activist and poet Gabriel Akon. The imprint is independently distributed and releases most of its content digitally.
Sampa Tembo, known professionally as Sampa the Great, is a Zambian singer, rapper and songwriter. Between 2014 and 2020, she was based in Australia. Her debut solo album, The Return, peaked at No. 12 on the ARIA Albums Chart. At the ARIA Music Awards of 2019 she won Best Hip Hop Release for her second single, "Final Form". In the following year she won the same category for The Return, as well as Best Female Artist and Best Independent Release. In March 2020 Sampa became the first artist to win the Australian Music Prize twice: for Birds and the Bee9 and The Return. The artist was based back in Zambia from late 2020, where she issued her second studio album, As Above, So Below.
Ruby Phillips, known professionally as Ruby Fields, is an Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist from Cronulla, New South Wales. In 2018, she released her debut EP Your Dad's Opinion for Dinner, followed by the singles "I Want", "P Plates", and "Ritalin". Her single "Dinosaurs" reached number nine on Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2018.
"Send It!" is a song by Australian hip-hop musician Hooligan Hefs, released as a standalone single on 18 November 2020 through DB Music and Warner Music Australia. It debuted and peaked at number 31 on the ARIA Singles Chart, becoming Hefs' highest entry to date.
J-Milla, often styled J-MILLA, is an Aboriginal Australian hip hop musician. He was born as Jacob Nichaloff in Darwin in the Northern Territory.
Australia has had a long history of street press media, beginning in the 1980s. Most street press have been centred around music and gig guides, but subjects have also included movies, fashion, and food. Each major city in Australia had at least two music street press at some point, and they were at their most popular during the 1990s.
Vinyl Group Ltd is an Australian music technology company. It is traded on the Australian Securities Exchange. Its subsidiaries are Jaxsta, Vampr, Vinyl.com, The Brag Media, Mediaweek and Serenade.