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The origins of '''Hui Kawaihau''' dated to Prince [[Leleiohoku II|William Pitt Leleiohoku II]], the youngest of the musically talented “Nā Lani ‘Ehā” (the royal four) siblings that included King [[Kalākaua]], Queen [[Liliʻuokalani]] and Princess [[Likelike]]. They each wrote and performed music, most often as part their individual glee clubs,{{sfn|Carr|2014||p=162}} described by Liliʻuokalani as, " ... engaged in
The origins of '''Hui Kawaihau''' dated to Prince [[Leleiohoku II|William Pitt Leleiohoku II]], the youngest of the musically talented “Nā Lani ‘Ehā” (the royal four) siblings that included King [[Kalākaua]], Queen [[Liliʻuokalani]] and Princess [[Likelike]]. They each wrote and performed music, most often as part their individual glee clubs,{{sfn|Carr|2014||p=162}} described by Liliʻuokalani as, " ... engaged in friendly rivalry to outdo each other in poetry and song."{{sfn|Troutman|2016|p=36}} Strolling glee clubs composed of vocalists and musicians were fashionable in Hawaii during the monarchy.{{sfn|Troutman|2016|p=29}} In 1876, Leleiohoku II formed the Kawaihau Glee Club. [[Curtis P. Iaukea]] was one of his members, " ... we used to go out of evenings with a new song the Prince had composed and make the rounds. First on King Kalakaua at Iolani Palace; then to Washington Place to serenade Princess Liliuokalani, and even as far as [[ʻĀinahau]], the Waikiki residence of Princess Likelike. Reaching home again at “Kaakopua” on Emma Street, where the Prince made his residence with his Mother by adoption, Princess [[Keʻelikōlani|Ruth Keelikolani]], half sister of the Fourth and Fifth Kamehamehas, in the“wee small hours of the morning. Happy days those were; the days when “Wine, Women and Song” were the rule of the day."{{sfn|Iaukea|2011|p=63}}
friendly rivalry to outdo each other in poetry and song."{{sfn|Troutman|2016|p=36}} Strolling glee clubs composed of vocalists and musicians were fashionable in Hawaii during the monarchy.{{sfn|Troutman|2016|p=29}} In 1876, Leleiohoku II formed the Kawaihau Glee Club. [[Curtis P. Iaukea]] was one of his members, " ... we used to go out of evenings with a new song the Prince had composed and make the rounds. First on King Kalakaua at Iolani Palace; then to Washington Place to serenade Princess Liliuokalani, and even as far as [[ʻĀinahau]], the Waikiki residence of Princess Likelike. Reaching home again at “Kaakopua” on Emma Street, where the Prince made his residence with his Mother by adoption, Princess [[Keʻelikōlani|Ruth Keelikolani]], half sister of the Fourth and Fifth Kamehamehas, in the“wee small hours of the morning. Happy days those were; the days when “Wine, Women and Song” were the rule of the day."{{sfn|Iaukea|2011|p=63}}


Leleiohoku II died of [[rheumatic fever]] at age 22 in 1877,{{sfn|Kuykendall|1967|page=196}} effectively ending the glee club. Kalākaua appropriated the name for his own purposes when he engaged in sugar cane planting on Kauai.
Leleiohoku II died of [[rheumatic fever]] at age 22 in 1877,{{sfn|Kuykendall|1967|page=196}} effectively ending the glee club. Kalākaua appropriated the name for his own purposes when he engaged in sugar cane planting on Kauai.

Revision as of 00:44, 24 February 2020


NOTE: Right now, this user page is a repository for Hawaii-related sources and potential articles. This user page is ONLY for sorting out sourcing details.


The origins of Hui Kawaihau dated to Prince William Pitt Leleiohoku II, the youngest of the musically talented “Nā Lani ‘Ehā” (the royal four) siblings that included King Kalākaua, Queen Liliʻuokalani and Princess Likelike. They each wrote and performed music, most often as part their individual glee clubs,[1] described by Liliʻuokalani as, " ... engaged in friendly rivalry to outdo each other in poetry and song."[2] Strolling glee clubs composed of vocalists and musicians were fashionable in Hawaii during the monarchy.[3] In 1876, Leleiohoku II formed the Kawaihau Glee Club. Curtis P. Iaukea was one of his members, " ... we used to go out of evenings with a new song the Prince had composed and make the rounds. First on King Kalakaua at Iolani Palace; then to Washington Place to serenade Princess Liliuokalani, and even as far as ʻĀinahau, the Waikiki residence of Princess Likelike. Reaching home again at “Kaakopua” on Emma Street, where the Prince made his residence with his Mother by adoption, Princess Ruth Keelikolani, half sister of the Fourth and Fifth Kamehamehas, in the“wee small hours of the morning. Happy days those were; the days when “Wine, Women and Song” were the rule of the day."[4]

Leleiohoku II died of rheumatic fever at age 22 in 1877,[5] effectively ending the glee club. Kalākaua appropriated the name for his own purposes when he engaged in sugar cane planting on Kauai.

  • Kalakaua
  • John Owen Dominis
  • George W. Macfarlane
  • James Makee
  • John M. Kapena of the Island of Oahu;
  • J. S. Walker
  • C. H. Judd
  • Koakanu, a high chief of Koloa, on Kauai.


  • The Hui, thirty-two in number, for the cultivation of the lands of Kapaa, on Kauai, to sugar cane.


p=29 Glee clubs typically featured a chorus of voices with instrumental accompaniment and entertained both the aliʻi and the makaʻāinana.[6] Prince Leleiōhoku, reported to be “an expert on the guitar,” organized one of the earliest and most influential such guitar groups, the Kawaihau Glee Club, in 1876

Troutman 2016, p. 65 By 1905, Sam Nainoa, whose violin,as we have seen, may have helped inspire his cousin’s kīkā kila, was managing the Kawaihau Glee Club, a string band and vocal group that performed regularly at the Hawaiian Hotel.

Hui Kawaihau

  • "Music at the zoo – the Kawaihau Orchestra". The Honolulu Advertiser. May 28, 1905.

Bibliography

pp=50-51

King Kalakaua entered into the business, taking a one-quarter interest in the Makee Sugar Company of Kauai, and in 1877 promoting the formation of the Kawaihau Hui, an association composed mainly of personal friends and retainers of the king, whose purpose was to grow sugar cane to be ground on shares at the mill of the above-mentioned company. Nothing of much permanent value resulted from these Hawaiian activities. The Kawaihau Hui went out of existence about 1881; its property and leases passed into the control of the Makee Sugar Company.

References

  1. ^ Carr 2014, p. 162.
  2. ^ Troutman 2016, p. 36.
  3. ^ Troutman 2016, p. 29.
  4. ^ Iaukea 2011, p. 63.
  5. ^ Kuykendall 1967, p. 196.
  6. ^ "Commoner, populace, people in general; citizen""maka.ʻāi.nana". wehewehe.org. Hawaiian Dictionaries.

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