Che Fu

While a student at Western Springs College, Fu and a group of friends formed the Low Down Dirty Blues Band,[4] who later became Supergroove.

The song "Chains" protested French nuclear testing in the Pacific and was released in July 1996, within weeks of Fu leaving Supergroove.

The album went double platinum and spawned four top-ten hits, which was unheard-of for a local hip hop artist at the time.

[16] Fu also collaborated with Kimbra and hip hop group Nesian Mystik on their top-ten single "Mr Mista".

As well, Fu performs alongside another hip hop legend, Samoan rapper King Kapisi as one-half of the group Hedlok.

[19] In 2011, Fu and his father Tigilau were featured in a documentary for Māori TV in which they travelled to their homeland of Mutalau, Niue for the first time together.

[22] Along with a few of his friends, including Dj Sir-vere, they created the PacHeat Crew and regularly organises the biggest sneaker swap meet events in New Zealand.

One of his favourite sneakers is Air Jordan IV Retro Black Laser which he stated in New Zealand Sneakerhead Documentary 2021.

Miriama Rauhihi Ness, Fu's mother, 1977
Fu with Tigilau Ness, his father