Thursday, March 28, 2024

Soothed by Sweet Hawaiian Soul Music

It was the longest, scariest night of my life, the time my son Jack came home from the hospital after being born. His mother and I had several people over to share in our joy, but when the baby started crying, then didn’t stop, our friends wisely said goodnight and left us with our cluelessness. Childbirth classes had prepared us for this moment like a stewardess’ preflight aisle demonstration does passengers for a plane crash.

Like this only screaming.
Like this only screaming.

I had the first shift, and when our freshly-circumsized bundle started airing out those hacky-sack-sized lungs again, I held him and rocked him and tried to feed him, but he wouldn’t stop crying. He felt a little warm, but I was too nervous to even consider a rectal thermometer. “Soothing music,” I remembered. “That will help him sleep.” But I didn’t own any New Age CDs. Probably the softest thing I had was the Velvet Underground, but I was afraid if I played that, my child might grow up to be a junkie. If he lived through the night, that is.Then I remembered receiving some Hawaiian slack key guitar records from George Winston’s Dancing Cat label in the mail a few days earlier. Since my son was conceived on a previous trip to Maui (don’t ask why I’m so sure), I thought there might be some sort of spiritual bond.

Even after living in Hawaii for 15 years (or maybe because of it), I had never really liked Hawaiian music, but the time was right for tolerance, so I put on “Sonny Solo” by Sonny Chillingworth and felt the anxiety lift with the first track, “Moe Uhane.”

Jack was soon sleeping, and I kept the music playing because I was afraid that when it stopped he’d wake up and I’d once again feel pink and helpless. Sitting there in the dark, listening to Chillingworth sing “Hi’ilawe,” (the 1955 Gabby Pahinui hit that’s to Hawaii what “Jole Blon” is to Louisiana or what “Rocky Top” is to Tennessee) while my little boy slept in my arms, is perhaps the most beautiful memory of that crazy and invigorating first leg of the parenthood journey.

The sounds of Hawaiian music have been with me ever since.

Slack key was invented in the 1830s on guitars left behind by Spanish and Portuguese cowboys hired by King Kamehameha III to teach Hawaiians how to handle the Islands’ growing cattle population. It was a self-taught style influenced by flamenco colorings and native Hawaiian chants. Tunings, with names such as “Taro Patch,” “Wahine” and “Mauna Loa,” were often closely guarded family secrets, and those who wanted to learn slack key had to earn the trust of a master before they could intern.

Pops. Gabby Pahinui.
Pops. Gabby Pahinui.

In the early ’70s, a slack key renaissance was sparked by a growing Hawaiian sovereignty movement and the rediscovery of Gabby “Pops” Pahinui, whom George Winston calls “the vortex of Hawaiian slack key guitar.” Gabby is to Hawaiian music what Bob Marley is to reggae. You could also compare Pahinui, who died of a heart attack on the Kahuku Golf Course in 1980, to Willie Nelson, in that Gabby was an adored man of the people, who could play a state dinner for a visiting prime minister then walk across the street to jam with the blalahs at the Alakea Grill. Both folk heroes were also heavily influenced by jazz, especially Django Reinhardt’s gypsy guitar playing, and they infused elements of the improvisational style into their otherwise traditional music.

As a boy, Gabby Pahinui didn’t really like the music of his people. “(My parents) would bring out some old Hawaiian music, and I’d turn it off,” he said in a 1977 interview. “To me Hawaiian music all sounded the same.”

When our military family moved to Hawaii in 1970, I felt the same way. Almost as grating as the traditional Island music were the wildly popular mid-70s Hawaiian pop groups like Cecilio and Kapono, Kalapana and Country Comfort who incorporated slack key guitar playing into their update of Seals and Croft. These groups used to sell out the Waikiki Shell (capacity 10,000) three nights in a row. Meanwhile, when the Talking Heads played Honolulu in 1978, it was at the Little Orphan Annie’s nightclub, where a crowd of about 300 paid $1.50 to get in. When I tell people that I lived in Honolulu for 14 years, they invariably say, “That must’ve been nice.” But it wasn’t, really. The things I

Sonny Chillingworth was a paniolo.
Sonny Chillingworth was a paniolo.

remember most about living in the Aloha State were poverty, sunburn and cover bands.

One of my earliest mentors, Bill Mann, (now a TV critic for one of the dailies in San Francisco) used to call Hawaii “the world’s most highly technologized banana republic,” and it sure felt that way when even the people at the bank spoke pidgin English. “We no can cash dees check wit’out one drivah’s license.” Whatever rebellious streak I was born with was intensified by spending vital years, from 10th grade to age 28, in a city, a state, a culture, where I didn’t fit. My old stomping grounds were made of sand.

But in recent years, beginning with that experience with the Sonny Chillingworth record on April 28, 1994, I’ve grown into affinity for Hawaiian music, especially slack key guitar. I’ve also taken to speaking in pidgin to the three of my four sisters who still live on Oahu. Sometimes you need to get away from a place to really appreciate it, and maybe I can get a witness from someone from Lubbock.

Return of the non-native

It was the longest, scariest afternoon of my life — the 71/2-hour flight to Hawaii that Jack and I took a couple of weeks ago. He’s a good kid, but he’s 3 years old and I was ready for the requisite one meltdown per three hours quota. To keep fellow passengers from hating me when the inevitable “I want my MOMMY!” shrieks rang through the cabin, I had planned to say, “Remember what I told you, Jack? Mommy’s in heaven with the angels. Let’s look out at the clouds and see if

Jack, age 3. Not a happy kamaiana.
Jack, age 3. Not a happy kamaiana.

we can find her.” Luckily, it never came to that. He had a couple of outbursts, but in terms of keeping Jack occupied, the bag of plastic dinosaurs I bought the night before proved to be the best $4 I’ve ever spent. Once the pain in my side (from turning toward Jack and reading book after book) subsided, it was a piece of cake.

Having a child turns you into a tourist of the world. You end up going to all the places you’ve been driving past for years, like Schlitterbahn and Chuck E. Cheese and that place past New Braunfels where you feed the animals out of your car. Taking Jack to Hawaii meant first-time visits for both of us to Sea Life Park and Waimea Falls and photo ops with hula dancers and parrots. But the main reason why we made the trip was because Jack hadn’t yet met his aunts, cousins or grandfather who live in Hawaii.

I scheduled our father-son sojourn to coincide with the 15th annual Ki Ho’alu (Slack Key) Festival, every year on the third Sunday of August. Dedicated to the Holy Trinity of slackers: Gabby Pahinui, Atta Isaacs and Sonny Chillingworth (who died of cancer soon after the release of “Sonny Solo”), the all-day fest attracted many contemporary greats, ranging in age from 14-year-old Inaika Brown to the legendary Ray Kane (who was a World War II hero when he swam a mile off the coast of Nanakuli to rescue an American pilot who’d been shot down). Also on the bill were Gabby’s sons Cyril and Bla, the duo of Dennis Kamakahi & George Kuo, Ozzie Kotani, Brother Noland, Nedward Kaapana and more.

I was excited for the chance to see the type of show I had passed on for years. The reason baseball is better in person than on TV is because you don’t have the constant close-ups of players spitting. I felt the same way about slack key music. One thing I don’t like about the Dancing Cat solo records is the squeaking of fingers as they slide between frets. In a live setting, with backing musicians, that irritating sound would be buried in the mix.

On paper, the whole thing looked promising, but the show ultimately proved to be a dumb thing to plan a trip around. In previous years, the festival was on the beach in Waimanalo, where Gabby, Atta and their bassist Joe Gang had spent countless hours through the years picking and singing and drinking Olympia beer, or at the McCoy Pavilion in Ala Moana Beach Park. This year it was on the grounds of the Bishop Museum, in conjunction with family-oriented “Fun Day” festivities. Presenting such soulful indigene in an ossified museum setting is akin to holding a blues festival in the ballroom of the Four Seasons Hotel. With kids running around everywhere, or waiting in the lengthy shave ice line, the music seemed to take on a secondary role. The

John Cruz (L) and a 19-yearold Matt Swalinkavich, now known as Makana.
John Cruz (L) and a 19-yearold Matt Swalinkavich, now known as Makana.

performers all looked so uncomfortable and the hoped-for magic didn’t materialize. That is, except during one glorious and scintillating 15-minute set pairing 19-year-old Matthew Swalinkavich and local hitmaker John Cruz. The recipient of a State Foundation on Culture and the Arts apprenticeship grant that enabled him to spend a year under the tutelage of his Pearl City neighbor Chillingworth, Swalinkavich is well-versed in the classic slack key numbers. But he’s flashier than his mentors, as proven by the adrenalized instrumental that closed his segment, when he played the guitar with various parts of his arm, including his elbow. Slack key guitarists have been known to lay a needle on their strings, as it dangled from thread held in their teeth, and to play guitar behind the back, but Swalinkavich’s re-energization of the genre had more to do with his blazing fingerwork than any gimmickry. Respectful, even when he’s ripping, the Portuguese-Hawaiian “Ki Ho’alu Kid” could end up doing for slack key what Stevie Ray Vaughan did for the electric blues.

I tried to talk to the kid after the set, and thanks to the legendarily lax Hawaiian security I was able to stroll backstage unquestioned. But Matt just fixed himself a plate lunch, covered it with foil and drove away, even as another teacher, Ray Kane, was set to take the stage. It was that kind of show, with little of the reckless joviality and camaraderie that you can be sure was present at the festivals held in Waimanalo.Scan 84

Cruz, who’s all over Hawaii radio with “Island Style,” did stick around for a little while, so I was able to get the info on his 19-year-old partner. I wondered if he wasn’t a little surprised there weren’t more people on hand for a free show featuring such a tremendous lineup, to which Cruz replied, “People here are used to it. Slack key’s been around forever and will always be part of Hawaiian music, so there’s no real rush. They know if they miss this year, they can always catch it next year.” But you wonder how many people thought the same thing in August ’93, when Chillingworth played his last Slack Key Festival. I interviewed him by phone in May ’94 and was able to tell Sonny Chillingworth about how his music soothed a nerve-wracking situation. He was pretty sick and weak, so he let me go on and on, and when I was done talking he just said, softy, that hearing stories like mine meant so much to him. “It’s not the way the guitar is tuned. It’s not the movement of the fingers. It’s the soul,” he said. “That’s where it comes from.”

Like it or not, Hawaii’s where I’m from. That’s where I came of age. Slack key is sweet Hawaiian soul music, calling an adopted son back home.

Scan 82An addendum: When Jack was about 8 or 9, I picked him up from school and he was in the back seat on the drive home. Someone had just made me a mix CD of Hawaiian music and I was playing it, when a cut from “Sonny Solo” came on. I remembered that long, long night as the slack key instrumental played and looked back to see if it registered with Jack at all. He was sound asleep.

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