City wise

Hawaiian Blossom

Jazz, baby

Raiatea Helm's new album is one for jazz heads too

Hawaiian Blossom / Unless there is a hurricane, tsunami or earthquake, I’m one of those people who rarely (if ever) turn on the radio. I like who I like. So, when I find a CD that I dig, I put it on repeat and play the hell out of it until I’ve had my fill. Therefore, I could possibly be the only person in the state of Hawai’i who had never actually listened to a Raiatea Helm recording. She seems to be everywhere with no plans of staying in one place anytime soon.

After all, the sweet young singer from Moloka’i has racked up an impressive body of work in a few short years while cultivating a national and international following. Just a few weeks ago she was rocking out at the Diamond Head Crater Celebration as the featured female voice with Nick Fleetwood’s Island Rumours Band.

With her latest CD, Hawaiian Blossom (co-produced by Dave Tucciarone and Zachary Helm) she continues to flourish in the Hawaiian music genre. She delivers a polished collection of 13 songs; traditional hits, lesser known covers, an original written specifically for her and a tantalizing, unexpected jazz standard that nearly knocked my socks off. When barely 18 years old, Helm set the Hawaiian music community abuzz with the release of her 2003 debut CD, Far Away Heaven. Almost immediately she was heralded as the obvious successor to such greats as the legendary Lena Machado, Hawaiian music doyenne Aunty Genoa Keawe and the reigning leo ki’eki’e luminary Amy Hanaiali’i Gilliom. Her freshman release captured the prestigious Na Hoku Hanohano awards for Female Vocalist of the Year and Most Promising Artist. At the Hawai’i Music Awards, she was named Female Vocalist of the Year. In 2005 her second album, Sweet and Lovely, in which she sang with a host of established Hawaiian music stars, soared to the top of American music heights with a Best in Hawaiian Music Grammy nomination and Na Hoku Hanohano Awards for Female Vocalist of the Year and Favorite Entertainer.

For her latest effort, she once again selects carefully from the best and gathers big time Hawai’i music industry heavy hitters around her: Ledward Ka’apana (slack key guitar), Aaron Sala (piano), Hoku Zuttermeister (’ukulele, guitar, bass, ipu), Louis ‘Moon’ Kauakahi (vocals and guitar), Steve Jones (bass), Brian Tolentino (’ukulele), Casey Olsen (steel guitar), and others. ‘Poi ‘Awa’awa,’ penned by renowned composer Puakea Nogelmeier, is a delicious homage to the more challenging dynamics of love and friendship. On ‘Ko’ula/Manowaiopuna,’ Hawai’i’s most beloved tenor, Robert Cazimero, lends his distinctive expansive vocals for a pairing that is second to none. Composers Tony Conjugacion and O’Brien Eselu each lend a composition, while Kauahi writes ‘Lei Kukui’ specifically to honor the young Moloka’i songbird. While a few tunes, such as Kimo Kamana’s ‘Pua Tuberose’ and Lena Machado’s ‘Ei Nei,’ seem almost too slow, the pace soon picks up with ‘My Dede’ featuring Scott Villager on clarinet. That song sets the stage for the final track: ‘Taking A Chance On Love.’ Encouraged by her manager/father Zachary Helm to include the jazz standard previously recorded by the likes of Frank Sinatra, Rod Stewart and others, Helm knocks this one out of the park. Arranged by the prolific Kit Ebersbach, it features Brian Kessler (guitar), Steven Kessler (bass), DeShannon Higa (trumpet,) Abe Lagrimas (percussion) and a delightful string section that includes Claire Hazzard, Hung Wu, Mark Butler and Karen Betchel. Helm shows off with confident vocals that combine the prerequisite class and sass that make this jazz ditty a real winner. While Hawaiian Blossom will continue to enchant Helm’s legions of Hawaiian music enthusiasts, make way for jazz heads to come a-calling.


Hawaiian Blossom

Raiatea Helma
Raiatea Helm Records, $16.99

SURFER, The Bar

COMMENTS

We often print online comments in our “Letters to the Editor” section of Honolulu Weekly. While submitted letters are often edited for length and clarity, online comments we use are printed entirely as they are written for the website. If you do not wish for your comment to be used in Honolulu Weekly print issues, please write “Don’t Print” at the end of your comment. For questions, e-mail editorial@honoluluweekly.com. Thank you!

blog comments powered by Disqus

This week

Endless (( Sonic )) Summer!

There’s a swell on the horizon. Listen closely and you’ll hear it…AUDIO INVASION 2012.

Circus Unleashed!

It’s been a while, but a man donning dresses and surgical gowns, spouting rap-rock assaults over a bed of crunchy guitars, has drifted back into the sunbeam of MTV like a forgotten fleck of light. With the spastic delivery of a fallen patient from One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Matt Shultz, lead singer of Cage The Elephant, is channeling the preeminent poster-child of grunge–Kurt Cobain.

Beach Boogie Waves

Boys, beaches, bags of weed. In 2010, Best Coast blazed onto the music scene with a sealed Zip-lock of 7” singles that led the indie pop duo to roll out a fatty debut record called Crazy For You.

Red Hot Sounds, South of the Border

So what do you do if you’re a band who made it big in the L.A. hardcore-punk scene with several critically acclaimed self-titled albums under your belt?

Foster the Heartbreak

Last Thursday, Foster the People sent news through their publicist that they won’t be performing at Audio Invasion 2012 due to “unforeseen circumstances.” (They’ll return to Hawaii on March 18.) Rumors are their two Grammy noms for Best Alternative Album and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance led to their cancellation. What a let down.

RAIL RIFTS

On Jan. 26, members of the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transit (HART) Finance Committee mostly sat in silence while listening to an earful from Wynnie Joy-Hee of Mililani, who said that she had taken the bus all the way into town at 7am to address the issue of how her tax money is being spent.

RAIL BOSS WANTED

HART intends to hire an executive director as early as March 1, 2012. The semi-autonomous agency is currently headed by interim executive director Toru Hamayasu, who is also a candidate for the permanent position The ED’s salary has been estimated to be within the range of $150,000 to $350,000, and HART has allotted $300,000 for the position thus far, Vice Chair Ivan Lui Kwan told the City Council Committee on Transportation on Jan.

TEACHING TERMS

Poor communication between the union and the teachers themselves, on top of a general sense of mistrust, were blamed for the overwhelming rejection of the Hawaii State Teacher’s Association (HSTA) contract last week–an unprecedented two-thirds voted against the union-backed contract. The president of the teachers’ union, Will Okabe, quickly took the blame, stating in a Jan.

BEACH blocked

The “war on terror” has taken a bite out of beach access on Kauai, where the Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) has kept five miles of westside shoreline off-limits since Sept. 11, 2001.

KINDA KONA

A bill that would require bags of roasted coffee sold in Hawaii to list the place where each type of coffee it contains was grown, and its percentage by weight in descending order, was introduced to the state legislature by Sen. Josh Green.

DOG BILL

In September of 2011, the Weekly ran a piece highlighting one of Hawaii’s most dangerous invasive threats: the dreaded brown tree snake. Following up on Gov.

CIVICS: Be Heard!

HART Board: The Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transit will meet and take public testimony before convening an executive session. For more info, contact the project hotline at 566-2299 or e-mail [email: info].

The cost of Kiyosaki

[Jan. 18: “Cheap Advice”] Robert Kiyosaki did not talk, or attend.

Rails vs. roller-skates

[Dec. 21: “Underground Railroad”] The anti-rail pundits are right of course.

Capture the crooks

I propose that President Obama devote the remainder of his presidency to doing something useful, which would be to seek out all the crooks on Wall Street and Washington who have contributed to the sorry state of the economy in this country. Obviously he has not lived up to the expectations of a president and continues to perform as if Saul Alinksy was a member of his cabinet and the United Nations was his political platform.

Population overload

[Dec. 21: “Underground Railroad”] Traffic follows commercial development.

No haters

[Dec. 21: “Underground Railroad”] To all those opposed to the “rail.” You are the very people who will be in gridlock on the freeway, not able to move.

Vegetarian variation

I was delighted to read the new USDA guidelines requiring schools to serve meals with twice as many fruits and vegetables, more whole grains, less sodium and fat and no meat for breakfast. The guidelines were mandated by the Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act signed by President Obama in December of 2010 and will go into effect within the next school year.

No exceptions

[Jan. 25: “Kyo-Ya-Ya”] Making an exception on zoning sets a dangerous precedence that will undoubtedly be followed by other properties.

Kyo-ya supporter

The protests last year of Turtle Bay’s expansion plans highlight the challenge facing us in Hawaii. We need to find a way to balance the need for new, upgraded hotel and timeshare offerings that visitors are increasingly seeking with the desire by nearly all residents to protect the remaining undeveloped areas of the island.

Efficiency not grandiosity

[Jan. 25: “Gridlock”] If the plan is to create a second city in West Oahu, I would consider that to be an urban center.