The Kid LAROIĀ has been awarded Artist Of The Year at this year’s National Indigenous Music awards.
- READ MORE: The Kid LAROI talks new single āStayā with Justin Bieber and shares update on debut album
The 18-year-old Kamilaroi rapper-singer – who grew up in Waterloo, Sydney before moving to Los Angeles – took home the top prize at this morning’s (November 14)Ā reimagined ceremony, beating nominees Sycco, Birdz, Miiesha, Baker Boy and Jessica Mauboy.
LAROI’s recognition comes after a big year that saw him drop two extended editions of his ‘F*ck Love (Savage)’ project, which feature his Justin Bieber collaboration ‘Stay’, which recently logged 10 weeks at Number One on Billboardās Pop Airplay chart.
This year’s NIMAs were originally scheduled for August at the Darwin Amphitheatre but was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic. Instead, theyĀ were broadcast via triple j, Double J and triple j Unearthed as well as being available to First Nations community radio stations via The National Indigenous Radio Service.
Hosted by Yuin rapper Nooky and Triple Jās Karla Ranby, the event featured performances by electronic duo Electric Fields and this yearās Triple J Unearthed NIMA competition winner Tilly Tjala Thomas.
You can see the full list of winners below:
Artist Of The Year: The Kid LAROI
Album Of The Year: JK-47 – ‘Made For This’
Song Of The Year: Miiesha – ‘Damaged’
Best New Talent of the Year: Budjerah
Best Film Clip Of The Year: Baker Boy (Feat. Yirrmal) – ‘Ride’
Indigenous Language Award Of The Year: Guwanbal Gurruwiwi and Netanela Mizrahi – ‘The Djari Project’
Community Clip Of The Year: Kakadu Collective & Victor Rostron – ‘Mayali’
Archie Roach Foundation Award: J-Milla
The NIMAs also celebrated the life and vastly important work of Indigenous musician Kev Carmody, inducting him into the Hall of Fame as part of the 2021 award ceremony.
“Iām absolutely so proud, humbled and honoured to accept the award on behalf of all of us. Past, present and of course future, because itās a collective way of thinking in my opinion, that we all go together and no one gets left behind,” Carmody said upon his induction.
“Iām so proud of the young ones! It might be rap, it might be hip-hop, it might be reggae; weāre still expressing [ourselves] through the oral cultural traditions, which is songs and storytelling, itās just in a musical sense. Iām so proud of our young mob with the music, and with dance ā thatās an interpretation too ā and art. Thatās our way of passing on our oral tradition and I think itās fantastic. I can sit back now. Iāve played my four chords and thatās it.”

LAROI is currently working on his debut full-length album, expected for release in 2022. The rapper confirmed earlier this month that he also has several other projects in the pipeline, including one that will explore the origins behind his artist name, a nod to his motherās Indigenous roots as a member of the Kamilaroi tribe.
Last month, he teased a potential collaboration with Tame Impala, sharing two photos of himself in a recording studio with the psych-pop outfitās frontman and primary songwriter, Kevin Parker.
Neither offered any context, but both photos show the pair sitting in front of a mixing console, with the first captioned with emojis for a pill, a police car, a couple and a glass of whiskey.
September saw LAROI announce his first ever world tour for 2022, which will kick off in late January with stops in the US, Europe, UK, Australia and New Zealand.
The rapper moved from previous representation A Grade Projects to Braunās SB Projects in early June, a month before releasing hit single āStayā with Justin Bieber, who Braun has managed since early in the pop starās career.
Billboard reports that the split was āamicableā, and that LAROI is now being represented by veteran artist manager Adam Leber, whose Rebel Management company also counts Lil Nas X and Labrinth among their current clients.
The post The Kid LAROI takes home Artist Of The Year at 2021 National Indigenous Music awards appeared first on NME.