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The Tongue

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The Tongue
Background information
Birth nameXannon Shirley[1]
Also known asLil' Teezy, Yung Tunga
OriginSydney, Australia
GenresHip hop
Years active2004–2022
WebsiteOfficial Webpage

Xannon Shirley, better known by the stage name The Tongue, is an Australian rapper, DJ and high school teacher from Sydney. He released two EPs (Bad Education and "Victorious Remixes"), four albums (Shock And Awe, Alternative Energy, Surrender To Victory and Hard Feelings) and three mixtapes (Redux,[2] The Tongue Is Dead and "The Sextape).[3] He also released "Bloodwork: The Best of The Tongue" in 2022. [4]

Musical career

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The Tongue represented Australia in the "Battle 4 Supremacy" competition against New Zealand in 2005 and won the Revolver MC battle the same year.[5] Tongue's songs have been placed on rotation by national Australian youth broadcaster Triple J.[6]

Tongue was signed by independent Sydney record label Elefant Traks following the submission of the Bad Education EP to the Marrickville-based label—the EP was a result of the Revolver victory and featured the production skills of the Bag Raiders (Jack Glass and Chris Stacey), who were former schoolmates of the MC.

In 2009 Tongue hosted the Elefant Traks 10th Anniversary Party Live DVD that was released nationally the same year.[7] The MC also performed the songs "Bad Education", "The Punch", "The Blues" and "The Real Thing" at the anniversary event.[8]

On 11 November 2012, Elefant Traks performed a tribute to children's author Dr Seuss. Featuring over 25 musical performers, the event occurred at the Sydney Opera House in Sydney, Australia and featured a recital of "Gerald Mc Boing Boing" by The Tongue.[9][10]

His second album Alternative Energy features production from El Gusto (Hermitude) and M-Phazes,[11] while his third album Surrender To Victory was solely produced by Cam Bluff from Queensland, Australia. Tongue has also released three free mixtapes in the years 2008, 2009 and 2011.[12]

The Tongue's third album entitled Surrender to Victory, would officially be released on 29 March 2013. The release of a single, entitled "Drums", preceded the album release date and a promotional video was published on the label's YouTube profile. The video also reveals that the album was produced by Cam Bluff and features Suffa from the Hilltop Hoods.[13]

In early May 2013, the MC announced a national Australian tour in support of the third album that will be undertaken over June and July 2013.[14]

The official music video for the song "Australian Dreaming" from Surrender to Victory was produced by the LESMEC company, the video features Tongue in a variety of roles, including a street-based sex worker, a police officer, and a drug dealer.[15]

In 2015 The Tongue released his forth solo album "Hard Feelings", executive produced by Sydney's Papertoy and featuring the likes of Ngaiire, Ev Jones (Jones Jnr), Tenth Dan and Jeswon from Thundamentals.[16]

After touring the album nationally in 2016, The Tongue parted ways with Elefant Traks.

In March 2022 The Tongue released a new single "Joy ft Inês" with an accompanying film-clip directed by Tyler Smith.[17]

In May 2022 The Tongue released "Bloodwork: The Best of The Tongue" [18] a 19 track compilation featuring songs selected from across his four albums, EPs and mixtapes.

In August 2022 The Tongue released "Sadly", a song exclusive to his Youtube channel. The song was rumoured to be a diss track to Urthboy, the CEO of Elefant Traks but this has never been confirmed [19]

On Dec 1 2022 The Tongue released the music video for his new single "Neck + Neck" – the first Australian hip hop clip ever to be made entirely using A.I (Artificial Intelligence) generated art. The video features 'cameos' from Vladimir Putin, Flume, James Packer, Kobe Bryant, Tai Tuivasa, Elle Macpherson, Danny Lim, Kanye West, Jim Morrison, Adam Goodes and many more. The clip was a collaboration/co-direction between The Tongue and Sydney-based filmmaker Bernadette Murray, with the pair creating the hundreds of prompts/images/animations over the course of two months.[20]

Live performance

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The Tongue undertook many headline tours around Australia from 2006 to 2016 in support of his various albums and mixtapes. He also toured as a backup vocalist with Sydney group Astronomy Class (Ozi Batla, Chasm and Sir Robbo).[21]

The Tongue and Astronomy Class performed in Cambodia in 2012 as part of The Tiger Translate Festival.[22]

The Tongue performed at major Australian festivals, including the Big Day Out, Good Vibrations Festival, Groovin The Moo, Sydney Festival, Peats Ridge, Sounds of Spring, Coaster and Park Jam.[23][24] He has also completed national tours with Mac Miller, Astronomy Class, Drapht and Pharoahe Monch.[25][26]

In November 2012, as part of the "Elefant Traks meets Dr Seuss" show, The Tongue performed at the Sydney Opera House[27]

From 2013 to 2015, The Tongue produced and hosted a monthly spoken-word event called Speech Therapy at Work-Shop in Redfern.[28] Guest performers at Speech Therapy included the likes of Remi, Mantra, Brad Strut, Omar Musa, N'fa, Sky'High, Jimmy Nice, Tom Scott, Class A, Solo, P Smurf, Joyride and Joelistics[29]

Collaborations

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The Tongue recorded with Dudley Perkins, Ozi Batla, DJ Diaz,[30] Bertie Blackman, Bag Raiders, Gift of Gab (Blackalicious), Katalyst, Braintax, Georgia Anne Muldrow, and Muph & Plutonic.[31]

Personal life

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Shirley graduated from his Masters of Teaching degree in 2014, receiving qualifications to teach high school English and Geography. He began teaching at Sydney Boys High School in 2016, teaching English, History and Values Education. He also coached basketball there. He went on to teach English and English Extension at International Grammar School.[32]

Shirley had an acting role in the 2019 feature documentary "Machine", a film about how the exponential growth of AI will change humanity in the next century[33]

Shirley has also been a professional DJ since 2021, playing under the name DJ Xolo. He headlined the main-stage for Sydney's Vivid Festival [34] in 2024 and has enjoyed residencies at iconic Sydney venues such as Ivy Pool,[35] The Dock, Buddy's Bar [36] and The Lord Gladstone as well as playing interstate and internationally- most recently co-headlining DJ Festival in Vanuatu. [37]

Discography

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Singles

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  • "Joy" ft Inês – (2022)[38]
  • "Neck + Neck" – (2022) [39]
  • "Two Girlfriends" – (2022) [40]
  • "You Got Me" ft Mataya (2015)[41]
  • "Never Going Down" ft Ngaiire (2015)[41]
  • "Australian Dreaming" (2013)[42]
  • "Drums" (2013)[42]
  • "The Show" (2010)[43]
  • "Crazy" ft Joyride (2010)[43]
  • "Animal Crackers" ft Dudley Perkins and Georgia Anne Muldrow (2007)[44]
  • "Real Thing (2007)[45]
  • "The Punch" (2006)[46]
  • "Bad Education" (2006)[46]

EPs

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  • Bad Education – Elefant Traks (2006)[47]
  • Victorious Remixes remix EP – Elefant Traks (2013)

Albums

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  • Shock & Awe – Elefant Traks (2007)[48][49]
  • Alternative Energy – Elefant Traks (2010)
  • Surrender To Victory – Elefant Traks (2013)
  • Hard Feelings – Elefant Traks (2015)
  • Bloodwork: The Best of The Tongue (2022)

Mixtapes

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  • Redux – (2008)
  • The Tongue Is Dead – (2009)
  • The Sextape – (2011)[12]

Compilation appearances

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  • "Counterfeit Cheques" from Triple J Hip Hop Show – (2005)
  • "Corruption Dub" from Trampled – The Elephant Traks Remix Album – Elefant Traks (2006)
  • Elefant Traks 10th Anniversary Party DVD – Elefant Traks (2009)

Guest appearances

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  • "Wrong One" by Urthboy from The Signal – Elefant Traks (2007)
  • "Catch of the Day Remix" by Bias B from Beemixes – Obese Records (2007)
  • "All You Got Remix" by Katalyst from All You Got 12" – Invada Records (2007)
  • "Superpowers" by Chasm from Beyond The Beat Tape – Obese Records (2008)
  • "Today" by Muph & Plutonic from And Then Tomorrow Came – Obese Records (2009)
  • "War of the Worlds" & "Award Show" by Astronomy Class from Pursuit of Happiness – Elefant Traks (2009)
  • "City Glow" by Mr Hill from The Feedback – (2012)
  • "Crossed Wires" by 1/6 from Electronic Mail – 2012
  • "The Truth" by Chasm from This Is How We Never Die – Obese Records (2012)
  • "Go Hard Or Go Home" by Sky'High from Forever Sky High – Elefant Traks (2012)
  • "High On Life" by Bitter Belief from "The Gallery" – Bitter Belief (2013)[50]
  • "Whoodafunnk" by Beastside from The Prelude – (2013)
  • "D.O.L" by Triple One (2017)[51]
  • "Cold Streets" by Beastside – (2024)[52]

References

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  1. ^ Rule, Dan (4 January 2008), "Over the Hilltops, still far away?", The Age
  2. ^ "The Tongue & DJ Skoob Redux 2008 – The Tongue and DJ Skoob at Fanny's Nightclub, Newcastle, NSW on 4 July 08". Liveguide.com.au. 4 July 2008. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
  3. ^ KRISSI WEISS (23 January 2013). "The Tongue". Beat. Furst Media Pty Ltd. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  4. ^ "Bloodwork: The Best of The Tongue". Archived from the original on 21 September 2022.
  5. ^ MATTSHEA (12 April 2013). "The Tongue: "I don't have to like every Australian hip-hop artist, do I?"". The Vine. Digital Media. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  6. ^ Young, Kane (18 October 2007), "Rolling off The Tongue", Hobart Mercury
  7. ^ Cameron (22 September 2009). "Elefant Traks 10th Anniversary Party DVD". Certified Scribe. WordPress. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  8. ^ "Elefant Traks – 10th Anniversary Party Live @ the Forum". iTunes Preview. Apple, Inc. 15 August 2009. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  9. ^ "Dr Seuss Meets Elefant Traks". Sydney Opera House. 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2012.
  10. ^ Elefantraks (21 April 2013). "Dr Seuss: Gerald Mc Boing Boing (Recited by the Tongue)" (Video upload). YouTube. Google, Inc. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  11. ^ Apter, Jeff (24 September 2010), "Alternate Energy review", The Sydney Morning Herald
  12. ^ a b "The Tongue Facebook Page". Facebook. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  13. ^ Benny Edwards; Frank Meets Wolf (28 January 2013). "The Tongue: Surrender To Victory (Out March 29, 2013)" (Video upload). YouTube. Google, Inc. Archived from the original on 15 December 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  14. ^ Sosefina Fuamoli (5 May 2013). "The Tongue's "Surrender to Victory" tour kicking off in Melbourne on 8 June!". the AU review. Heath Media & the AU review. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  15. ^ Elefanttraks (5 June 2013). "The Tongue – Australian Dreaming (Official Video)" (Video upload). YouTube. Google, Inc. Archived from the original on 15 December 2021. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  16. ^ "The Tongue: Hard Feelings". 9 December 2015.
  17. ^ "The Tongue – Joy ft Inês (Official Video)". YouTube. 15 April 2022.
  18. ^ "Bloodwork: The Best of the Tongue by the Tongue".
  19. ^ "The Tongue – Sadly". YouTube. 4 August 2022.
  20. ^ "The Tongue – Neck + Neck (Official Music Video)". YouTube. 30 November 2022.
  21. ^ "Astronomy Class". Elefant Traks. 1998–2013. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  22. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Astronomy Class x Preap Sovath at Tiger Translate Cambodia 2012. YouTube.
  23. ^ "triple j events: Ausmusic Month 06: Next Crop Artist: The Tongue". Abc.net.au. 31 October 2005. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
  24. ^ "Stream: The Tongue Returns With Explosive New Single "The Show"!". inertia-music.com. Retrieved 26 July 2010.
  25. ^ "The Tongue Artist Page". Elefanttraks. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  26. ^ Gene (18 October 2006). "Astronomy Class take their debut release on the road". The Dwarf. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  27. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Dr Seuss: Gerald Mc Boing Boing (Recited by the Tongue). YouTube.
  28. ^ "SPEECH THERAPY 9". Work-Shop.
  29. ^ The Tongue & P Smurf: Speech Therapy. YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  30. ^ Moran, Jonathon (30 September 2007), "Shock & Awe review", The Sunday Mail
  31. ^ "The Tongue op MySpace Music – Gratis gestreamde MP3's, foto's en Videoclips". Myspace.com. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
  32. ^ "SPIT SYNDICATE "Money Over Bullshit Tour" Live @ The Jack – Backpackers Cairns". The Jack. Union Jack Hotel. 14 September 2013. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  33. ^ "Machine". IMDb.
  34. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFwsiaWskEQ
  35. ^ "Instagram".
  36. ^ "Instagram".
  37. ^ "Instagram".
  38. ^ "Joy Feat. Ines by Tongue". Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  39. ^ "Neck and Neck by Tongue". Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  40. ^ "Two Girlfriends". Spotify.
  41. ^ a b "Hard Feelings". Spotify.
  42. ^ a b "Surrender to Victory". Spotify.
  43. ^ a b "Alternative Energy". Spotify.
  44. ^ "Animal Crackers – the Tongue feat. Dudley Perkins". YouTube. 15 February 2008.
  45. ^ "Shock and Awe". Spotify.
  46. ^ a b "Bad Education – EP". Spotify.
  47. ^ Sasson, Chloe (19 October 2007), "Shock & Awe review", 29 September 2006
  48. ^ "HR Dept. Highly recommended releases", MX (Australia), 15 October 2007
  49. ^ Sasson, Chloe (19 October 2007), "Shock & Awe review", The Sydney Morning Herald
  50. ^ "The Gallery". Spotify.
  51. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Triple One – D.O.L. ft. The Tongue & Diego Rivera (Official Music Video). YouTube.
  52. ^ "Cold Streets (Feat. The Tongue)". YouTube. 29 February 2024.
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