Remove ImagesClass Project The music of Halau Ku Mana and Native Sound Underground August 24, 2006 SAM@MAUITIME.COM There is a lot at stake. You can hear it in the lyrics of songs they sing and see it by the way over 200 students and professional musicians join together to raise funds for it, in producing a double-disc compilation of diverse Hawaiian offerings. Halau Ku Mana (HKM) is a public charter school—one of 12 schools in Hawai`i's Na Lei Na`auao Charter School Alliance—dedicated to providing a culture-based, hands-on education for disadvantaged students ages 11 through 17. Now five years running, the biggest obstacle the school currently faces is financing. Receiving approximately half the funds from the state as other public schools, with no money allocated for a permanent residence, Halau Ku Mana must get creative with resources. And they've accomplished this mainly by holding benefits and producing music. Mana Maoli, Vol. II & III is HKM's second release, which features previously unreleased originals and freestyle recordings from students, teachers and family, as well as the likes of Jack Johnson, Oshen, Paula Fuga, John Cruz and others—a loose, informal collective known as the Native Sound Underground. Many students have contributed to the project, but this is no amateur operation. Slick production, natural talent and what appears to be the heart and soul of everyone involved makes for a double-CD—that's 89 songs, clips, chants and riffs—filled with some surprising gems. In "Life's Butterfly" on Vol. II (InnoNative), HKM senior Kapua Chock sings of inner strength and letting go of pain and suffering. It's a haunting melody that Chock composed and her voice is magnetic—at once vulnerable and proud, passionate and insightful—as she is backed by musicians from The Girlas, Inner Session and the Opihi Pickers. The rich, distinctive voice of Kawai Hoe shines on the acoustic reggae ballad "Who's To Say," when he liltingly instructs that, "The truth stands more complicated than what lies in your head/Some questions have no answers, some answers them tell lies." John Cruz supplies his infectiously melodious and positive spin on "The Song Remains," as he croons, "You came to me, honest, open and strong/I came to you, 'cause I knew you believed in my song." And in the short freestyle clip, "From Darkness We Shine," Maria Remos of Microscopic Syllables soulfully harmonizes with HKM's Kawika Mersberg, Paula Fuga and FunkyDeliah, who are joined by Kevin Chang, Noe Goodyear-Ka`opua and Koalani Lagareta for a group poetry slam, called "Eia Hawai`i." On Vol. III (Change is Coming), "Longshot on the Rise" features Bison, of Oahu ska kings Go Jimmy Go, along with guest vocals provided by his four-year-old son, Casius, which somehow smoothly segues into Travis T's powerful rap "Can It Be?": If we'd just awake from our sleep, and challenge this reality We could make sense, not dollars, of what our lies really mean And from those visions, make decisions What's meant to be will always be, though I control my destiny Be careful of the things you do, it eventually comes back to you Universal law, Babylon shall fall I pray for peace in time of war |