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Keola Beamer
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Discography · Booking Agency · Bibliography · Similar Music
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| Biography: | |
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On the other hand, Keola was one of the first slack key masters to experiment with electronic effects, multi-track recording, complex chord progressions, even innovative guitar construction. Keola attributes the controversy this sometimes causes to healthy aesthetic and generational differences. "I remember at fifteen sitting at the feet of Aunty Alice Namakelua and hearing her call Gabby Pahinui a radical," relates Keola. "Now he's considered traditional. For me, that's the beauty of slack key. Who wants to be in an art form with no room for expression left in it?" In the 1960s, Keola studied at the Kamehameha Schools in Honolulu, a hotbed of the emerging "Hawaiian Renaissance." He also gained valuable experience performing with his mother, who remains his favorite collaborator. Their most recent project, a CD of stories and slack key entitled The Golden Lehua Tree (Starscape Music 96112), brings Hawaiian folklore to children and adults around the world. In 1973, Keola released his groundbreaking solo album, Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar in the Real Old Style (Music of Polynesia 22000), and published the first slack key instruction book. In the 1970s, Keola and his brother, Kapono, also formed The Beamer Brothers, bringing slack key to the rock generation. Their mix of Hawaiiana and pop produced many Island standards, including Keola's best known original, Honolulu City Lights. Through the 1980s, Keola continued his solo exploration of new musical territory while gaining inspiration from traditional music. Keola's first album on Dancing Cat, Wooden Boat, was released in 1994. Each of his Dancing Cat albums focuses on a different aspect of his art and is characterized by keen intelligence, instrumental virtuosity and deep sensitivity to nature. "I'm pretty much a nature person," Keola says. "Wherever we go, my wife and I always pause and listen to the environment: the wind blowing through the hala leaves, the water, the birds. I get a lot of inspiration from those moments." One such moment inspired Keola's fourth album for Dancing Cat, Kolonahe, which centers on images of ka makani (the wind). Several songs in this recording make direct references to wind, an important image in Hawaiian music, while others incorporate subtle musical allusions to it. In Hawai'i, the creative impulse usually stems from a pleasurable experience. The concept for Kolonahe came to Keola one afternoon on Maui. "I was out in a distant valley sitting under some hau trees enjoying the space, the quiet, when all of a sudden, the most beautiful, refreshing breeze came through. It caressed everything in its path: the trees, the grass, the stones. It changed the whole complexion of that day. At a time like that, how can you feel anything other than peace in your heart? Music is like that too. You can't see the kolonahe, but you can feel its presence. It brings something beautiful into our lives." In high school and college, Beamer studied classical guitar, and later, when he began to teach guitar, he published the first method book for his instrument titled . Around the same time, in 1972, he recorded his first landmark solo album, Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar in the Real Old Style, filled with the nahenahe (soft and sweet) sound of this Hawaiian tradition. To this day, this album continues to influence many guitarists. Mutual fans of one another's musical careers, Keola Beamer and R. Carlos Nakai met when Nakai was organizing a workshop at Kalani Honua in Hawaii. Nakai wanted to include Hawaiian culture in the workshop and Beamer offered his services. Nakai, who has brought the traditional Native American flute into new musical genres, including jazz, new age and classical, constantly seeks new collaborators and new musical worlds to explore. Therefore, it was natural that he would approach Beamer to see if he would be interested in doing a musical collaboration mixing disparate cultures. The result is Our Beloved Land. Our Beloved Land features the sound of the Native American flute accompanied by the harmonies of the slack key guitar. Several songs also feature Beamer's soulful vocal renditions of original and traditional Hawaiian songs. |
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Kolonahe - From The Gentle Wind (Dancing Cat Records, 1999) Mauna Kea - White Mountain Journal (Dancing Cat Records, 1997) Wooden Boat (Dancing Cat Records, 1994) Sweet Maui Moon (Dancing Cat Records, 1989) Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar In The Real Old Style (Music of Polynesia, 1972) With Kapono Beamer:Honolulu City Lights (Paradise Productions, 1978) Keola &Kapono Beamer ( Tantalus Records, 1976) This Is Our Island Home - We Are Her Sons (Music of Polynesia, 1973) With Nona Beamer:The Golden Lehua Tree (Starscape Music SM 96112) Storytelling by Nona Beamer with slack key guitar, vocal, and traditional Hawaiian percussive instrument accompaniment by Keola |
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| Booking: | |
| Manager: Mana, Bones, Kultur. Address Po Box 589, Felton, CA 95018, USA. Phone/Fax: +1-831-325-3500, Phone/Fax: +1-831-466-3328. E-mail: mbkirk@ix.netcom.com. | |
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Keola Beamer Teaches Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar. CD plus 40-page music
+ tab book. Homespun.
The Art of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar. 80-min. video. Includes music + tab book. Homespun video. |
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| Similar Music: | |
| Hawaiian, Guitar, Guitar - Slack Key | |
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