Like the Hawaiian Islands themselves, HAPA's Pan-Polynesian music is an amalgam of infuences ranging from ancient genealogical chants to the strummed
ballads of Portuguese fisherman, Spanish cowboys, and the inspired
melodies and harmonies of the traditional church choirs of the early
missionaries. Add to this a dose of American acoustic folk/rock, and
you have what has been described as the “most exciting and beautiful
contemporary Hawaiian music the world knows!”… (Maui Times).
These disparate ingredients blended together musically in the Pacific
emotes the unique flavor of what Hawaii and HAPA music is: “beautiful,
fragile, spiritual, powerful”… (L.A. Times).
Often encapsulated
as the “Sound of Maui”, HAPA’s music evokes a place
that many people at different times have referred to as heavenly. The
overriding quality of their music is one of beauty and serenity, found
in the majestic tones of the oli (chant), mele (song), the elegant
movements of the sacred dance known as hula, and the exhilarating innovative
sounds of virtuoso slack key guitar. HAPA’s self entitled debut
cd released in 1993, swept the 1994 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards (Hawaii’s
equivalent of the Grammy’s), becoming the biggest selling CD
by a group or duo in the history of recorded Hawaiian music. The group’s
ground breaking music has established them as the most recognized name
in Hawaiian music internationally since their debut release, with sold-out
shows from Tokyo to New York.
Written by Barry Rivers, President, Maui
Film Festival
June, 2003
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