Packing a Hawaiian punch
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Young Chang
Between last week’s Senegalese singer Baaba Maal and the Korean
musical percussion group SamulNori slated to perform Sunday, the Irvine
Barclay Theatre has decided to go Hawaiian.
Called “Mele Hula: A Celebration of Hawaiian Song & Spirit,” the
energetic Saturday show will feature a handful of Hawaii’s top
contemporary singers, chanters, storytellers and other artists.
Barry Flanagan, a guitarist and songwriter from the musical group
HAPA, will perform contemporary songs.
Hawaiian diva Amy Hanaiali’i Gilliom, a 10-time winner of the Na Hoku
Hanohano award, will sing her hits in the ha’i style -- a traditional
form of island singing.
Other performers including chanter and storyteller Charles Ka’upu,
bassist Jack Ofoi and hula dancer Moea Defries will round out the
evening.
“It takes you back to Hawaii for two hours,” said Gilliom. “I know a
lot of the Irvine audience travels to Hawaii a lot, and they miss it a
lot.”
Flanagan describes the show as a celebration of contemporary music
that mixes styles of today with musical traditions from yesterday.
Performers will wear indigenous leis, while the theme of the material
performed will speak about everything from Hawaii’s seas to its land and
its famous chiefs.
An island mood will envelop the show, which will progress almost as a
series of mini-concerts.
Gilliom’s repertoire of songs will be sung in what she describes as a
“female falsetto singing” style that pays tribute to the kupunas, which
means “elders.”
“Being that [the style] is dying, the old-timers will come and watch
me and just cry because you don’t really hear that style anymore,” said
Gilliom, whose new album “Pu’uhonua” has kept a place on Billboard’s
World Music Charts for weeks. “It’s real important that when you sing
ha’i, you sing it the way it’s supposed to be sung. You give respect to
the actual art form of it.”
Flanagan will perform original material from his group HAPA, whose
recent albums include “In the Name of Love” -- a compilation of Hawaiian
chants and music played on the finger cymbals, sitar and drums.
“I hope that [the audience] feels the special aloha spirit that really
defines what Hawaii is,” he said. “We really all expect to warm everybody
up quite a bit.”
FYI
* What: “Mele Hula: A Celebration of Hawaiian Song and Spirit”
* When: 5 and 8:30 p.m. Saturday
* Where: Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 Campus Drive, Irvine
* Cost: $24-$29
* Call: (949) 854-4646
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