Mokotron, real name Tiopira McDowell (NgÃÂti Hine) and often stylised MOKOTRON, is an electronic musician from New Zealand. His debut album, WAEREA, was named New Zealand's second-best album of 2024 by Rolling Stone and won the 2025 Taite Music Prize.
McDowell grew up in TÃÂmaki Makaurau (Auckland). His mother was from Northland with whakapapa that connects to NgÃÂtokimatawhaorua te waka, while his father was from Palmerston North and has British and Irish ancestry. His sister is actor, director and playwright Miriama McDowell.
In 1998 as a high school student McDowell worked with Micronism (producer Denver McCarthy) on an album, The Lonely Robots Club, that was never released. The experience left him feeling unsupported and discouraged from making music as anything more than a side-project.
He started self-releasing music in 2011 but stopped again the next year. In 2020 he made a decision sparked by the death of producer Reuben Winter (Totems), and returned to music-making. His home-recorded music falls into the genre of "MÃÂori bass", mixing drum and bass and dub step beats with taonga pà «oro (traditional instruments like wooden flutes) and vocals chanted in te reo MÃÂori.
Mokotron released four EPs in three years: Battlezone in 2020; 2021âÂÂs TATAU O TE Pà  and TAWHITO in 2021; and EMBRACE THE BASS in 2022.
In March 2024 he released The United Tribes of Bass, a collection of remixes by eight different MÃÂori and Cook Island MÃÂori artists. His first album, WAEREA, followed that December.
Doctor McDowell is a senior lecturer in MÃÂori and Pacific studies, and the head of Te WÃÂnanga o Waipapa, at the University of Auckland.