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2026 Aotearoa Music Awards: The Best and Worst Moments

Last night’s Aotearoa Music Awards had memorable speeches, big wins, and some not-so-good moments. In other words, a vintage awards show.

Marlon Williams at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards

Marlon Williams at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards

Stijl / Emma Beavis

The 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards celebrated the great and the good of New Zealand music in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland last night (May 28th).

Marlon Williams, the lead nominee with seven nods, led the way with three wins (Mark Perkins also won Best Engineer for his work on Williams’ Te Whare Tīwekaweka).

Other major awards went to The Beths (Best Group) and Lorde (Best Pop Artist and International Achievement), while Ché Fu was inducted into the New Zealand Music Hall of Fame on the night.

Check out the full list of winners here.

Check out the best and worst moments from the 2026 AMA below, from instantly iconic speeches to incredible performances and more.

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Pearly*

WORST: Dunedin Deserved Better

Yes, I know that I keep banging on about Ōtepoti Dunedin. Yes, I know that the Aotearoa Music Awards have always been comically Auckland-centric. But it still felt like a shame that one of the best years for Dunedin music wasn’t recognised at New Zealand music’s biggest night.

After discussing the snubbing of the city’s incredible current generation before the ceremony, one dour old git commented, “Have you confirmed that the ‘snubbed’ releases were actually entered in the categories mentioned? Obviously if an artist decides not to enter, it’s not really a ‘snub’ that they aren’t finalists is it?”

His anal comment completely missed the point, attempting to get off on a technicality.

Why aren’t Dunedin musicians being recognised? Can they afford to enter the AMA in the first place, during a tough cost-of-living crisis? Is the city’s music community too jaded from not being recognised in the past? It’s probably a little from column A, a little from column B, but whatever it is, bands like Dale Kerrigan, Pearly* (who had to make do with featuring in our Future of Music 2026 series), and IVY should be getting recognised on a wider national scale.

By our count, just three of this year’s nominees in the main (non-artisan) categories were associated with Dunedin*: Nadia Reid, up for Best Folk Artist, and Michael Norris and Anthony Ritchie, both up for Best Classical Artist)

2025 felt like the best year for Dunedin music in a generation — some national recognition during awards season (none of the 10 nominees for this year’s Taite Music Prize were from Dunedin, either) would have been well deserved.

*Either originally from or currently based in the city

Tom Scott at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards

Stijl / Emma Beavis

BEST: Funny (and Kind) Speeches

Stepping up to receive the Best Soul/R&B Artist award for ANITYA, Tom Scott appeared to be the most relaxed person in the room.

“This is proof that men will make an R&B album before going to therapy,” he joked to much laughter from the crowd. “Next toxic relationship I’m in, I’m going to be like ‘I did the work, I made an R&B album about my divorce,’ so that’s me, I’m healed now.”

Scott continued by thanking the women in his life, including his mother and Lorraine Barry.

Te Wehi, who shot to prominence with a sensational chart run over the past 12 months, had to step onto the stage to collect not one but two awards — for Breakthrough Artist of the Year and Best Roots Artist — and each time he seemed endearingly dazed by the experience.

I mean this as a sincere compliment: Te Wehi’s lack of media training was a delight. He overcame his nerves to genially banter with Rickard and the crowd, taking time to shout out Hori Shaw and thank his wife and his mum.

Don’t ever change, Te Wehi.

Alien Weaponry perform at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards

Stijl / Emma Beavis

BEST: Incredible Performances

Let’s end on a positive note with a bonus ‘best’ moment.

Where to begin, really? Tom Scott bringing out Geneva AM for a surprise duet; MĀ’s incredible charisma and flow; Alien Weaponry’s thrashing metal energy; Dick Move bringing a touch of Whammy Bar to the Civic Theatre; the Kapa haka that welcomed Marlon Williams onto the stage to collect his final award of the night.

The list could go on and on.