Kalapana is an American pop-rock band from Honolulu , Hawaii . They are known for their songs “Naturally” and “The Hurt”.
25-473: Kalapana may refer to: Kalapana (band) , a Hawaiian pop music group Kalapana, Hawaii , a town on the Island of Hawaiʻi Kalapana of Hawaiʻi (1255-1285), Chief of Hawaii Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Kalapana . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
50-525: A Japanese stringed instrument. Kuramoto admired Earth, Wind, and Fire for the way it combined jazz and R&B, and Santana for his identification with Latinos. He wanted to create a band that would represent Asian Americans. He named it after the Japanese city Hiroshima , which was mostly destroyed by an atomic weapon at the end of World War II . Hiroshima's debut album sold more than 100,000 copies in its first three months. The band's second album yielded
75-492: A compilation of twenty songs. After battling drugs, drug treatment programs, and relapses, Mackey Feary was sentenced to prison. On February 20, 1999, Feary hanged himself in his jail cell. Feary's problems and eventual suicide called attention to the patterns of drug addiction and mental health and treatment needs. During the summer of 1999, Kalapana released "Love Under the Sun", the title song for FM Nagoya's compilation CD, which
100-453: A heart attack on Kaua‘i. He was 69. From the beginning, Bilyeu was one of Kalapana’s resident songwriters. His contributions included "Naturally," "You Make It Hard," "Dorothy Louise," "(For You) I’d Chase a Rainbow," "Girl," and "Many Classic Moments." On September 7, 2021, DJ Pratt was found unresponsive in his home. He was 67. Pratt received two Na Hoku Hanohano Awards for his work as a member of Kalapana. He earned three more for his work as
125-485: A one-night "Kalapana Live Reunion" concert at the Waikiki Shell with Hawaii guitarist John Rapoza standing in for Pratt. Kalapana then went dormant for several years while the various members pursued separate projects. In 1986, Kalapana reunited as a quintet—Bilyeu, Feary, and Pratt plus Gaylord Holomalia (keyboards) and Kenji Sano (electric bass) – and recorded a successful comeback album, Hurricane . Kalapana presented
150-467: A recording studio engineer. The early recordings of Kalapana were originally released on Abattoir Records, a label based in Los Angeles and owned by Ed Guy. However, Guy never paid any royalties, and the band received nothing from Guy for approximately forty years. In June 2017, the original members of the band (with Feary's son and heir Sebastian) sued Guy in federal court in Los Angeles for rescission of
175-506: A six-piece with the 1979 album Northbound. Randy Aloya left the group soon after the album’s release, with Malani Bilyeu and Michael Paulo also exiting after the album’s tour had ended. In 1980, DJ Pratt and Alvin Fejarang continued as Kalapana and released Hold On and the live album Japan Jam Live , both Japan-only releases. The band would then go on hiatus. On December 26, 1982, Bilyeu, Feary, Thompson, Fejarang, Paulo, and Aloya played
200-493: Is an American band formed in 1974 that incorporates Japanese instruments in its music. Hiroshima has sold over four million albums around the world. Dan Kuramoto, Hiroshima's leader, is from East Los Angeles. He attended California State University, Long Beach, then led its Asian-American studies department. Through playing in a band on weekends he met June Kuramoto, a native of Japan who grew up in Los Angeles and played koto ,
225-548: Is “sprouting money”. Thompson said the meaning was “beat of the music”, but he preferred the name “Dove” for the band. Pratt thought it meant “black sand”. Regardless, they named themselves Kalapana, playing their first gig at Chuck’s in Hawaii Kai. Kalapana became a regular band at a Honolulu club called The Toppe Ada Shoppe. They opened concerts for Earth, Wind & Fire , Batdorf & Rodney , The Moody Blues , Sly & The Family Stone , and Cecilio & Kapono . In 1975,
250-602: The Hibiya Open-Air Concert Hall . Hiroshima consists of Dan Kuramoto ( saxophone , flute , keyboards , shakuhachi ), June Kuramoto ( koto ), Kimo Cornwell ( Keyboards ), Dean Cortez ( Bass guitar ), and Danny Yamamoto (drums and taiko ). Hiroshima was given the Visionary Award by East West Players , the oldest Asian Pacific American theatre company in the United States , for the band's "Impact on
275-689: The Hawaii Academy of Recording Arts Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011. The recipients were Bilyeu, Feary (posthumously), Pratt, Thompson, Fejarang, Paulo, Aloya, Holomalia, and Sano. On Sunday, November 20, 2016, Kalapana, performed in Honolulu with the Honolulu Youth Symphony with a line-up of Bilyeu, Pratt, Holomalia, Aloya (bass guitar), John Valentine (guitar), Garin Poliahu drums, and Todd Yukumoto (sax). On December 27, 2018, Malani Bilyeu died of
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#1732858786337300-707: The Lava Rock Concert was taped at the Waikiki Shell. Kalapana toured Japan with Michael Paulo , who was then with Al Jarreau 's band, and Tris Imboden , the drummer for Chicago . Following, Kalapana signed a five-album deal with Pony Canyon Records. In 1997, Kalapana released the Hawaii version of Captain Santa Island Music with liner notes by international radio DJ Kamasami Kong . More recently, Kalapana released, in Japan, another CD titled The Very Best of Kalapana ,
325-671: The Rainbow Villa for Cecilio & Kapono . Bilyeu was a solo performer at the Oar House in Hawaii Kai while Pratt was downstairs at Chuck’s in Sunlight with Kirk Thompson. They got together in Pratt’s grandfather’s garage with Mackey Feary , another solo act at the Oar House. They wrote songs, rehearsed, and at one point discussed the meaning of Kalapana. The literal translation of the word “Kalapana”
350-521: The Water". The fourth LP, "Full Moon Tonight", was released at the time of the royal wedding in Japan in June 1995, and included a new version of "Hawaiian Wedding Song" done R & B style. Their latest album on Pony Canyon Records, "Captain Santa Island Music", consists of songs written for a clothing line in Japan. Each album contains new arrangements of Kalapana classics and newly written songs. Kalapana received
375-465: The album at a release party at Rascals discothèque in Waikiki . The invitations were sent out with singles from the album; roses and T-shirts were given away at the venue. For the "Hurricane" concert, the band wore suits. For the song "Living Without You", the band was brought out wearing white zoot suit dinner jackets with red velvet bow ties . Kenji, Mackey, Malani, and DJ performed choreography during
400-476: The band released their debut self-titled album Kalapana , featuring Jackie Kelso on sax and flute, Bill Perry on bass, and Larry Brown on drums. The album was a big success in Hawaii and Japan. Their second album Kalapana II was released in late 1976. The band performed a three-concert event at the Waikiki Shell during the span of June 25–27, 1976, where 25,000 people attended. Kalapana won two Nani Awards,
425-444: The band toured there regularly, adding keyboardist and guitarist Kimo Cornwell (formerly of Beowolf and later with Hiroshima ). The 1978 live album In Concert was released only in Japan. After the album’s release, Kirk Thompson left the band to pursue a solo career as a producer. His first project as writer, arranger, and producer, the self-titled (and only) album by new Hawaii band Lemuria, was released in 1979. Kalapana continued as
450-630: The concert while Gaylord anchored the group on keyboards. Kalapana released Lava Rock in 1987, and performed with Hiroshima and Anri, musicians from Japan. Kalapana played at the grand opening of the Hard Rock Cafe in Honolulu . They performed in the Philippines for crowds of 10,000 people at two sold-out concerts, toured Japan, the west coast of the contiguous US, Tahiti , Samoa , Guam , Saipan , and outer islands; their first feature-length video of
475-584: The group Chant singing background vocals on "Ten Years After" (written by Komuro), Tris Imboden from the band Chicago on "Another Lonely Night", Michael Paulo on saxophone, and Pauline Wilson and Garin Poliahu on drums. James Studer appears throughout the CD with arrangements and keyboards. Kalapana continues to tour and record in Japan and the West Coast. The releases, to date, on Pony Canyon are: "Back In Your Heart Again", "Kalapana Sings Southern All-Stars", and "Walk Upon
500-432: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kalapana&oldid=932928185 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Kalapana (band) In 1973, childhood friends DJ Pratt and Malani Bilyeu auditioned at
525-407: The mid-1970s agreements. The case was settled quickly, and Guy transferred all of his rights back to the band, including all music publishing rights. As a result, on November 30, 2018, under Manifesto Records , the seven-album, eight-CD box set The Original Album Collection and the single-CD “best of” package Black Sand: The Best of Kalapana were released. Hiroshima (band) Hiroshima
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#1732858786337550-537: The predecessor to the Na Hoku Hanohano Awards . They were nominated for four categories and received Best Performance by a Duo or Group, and Best Male Vocalist (for Feary), who by year's end had split from the group for a solo career. With Pratt, Bilyeu, and Thompson remaining, the group added bassist and vocalist Randy Aloya (replacing the departed Feary), sax and woodwinds player Michael Paulo , and drummer Alvin Fejarang. The band’s third album Kalapana III
575-446: The song "Winds of Change", which received a Grammy Award nomination for Best R&B Instrumental. Hiroshima got its first gold album in 1985 with Another Place and the second with Go which followed it. The album Legacy was nominated for Best Pop Instrumental Album in 2010. Hiroshima has sold more than four million albums worldwide. In 1990, the band was the opening act for Miles Davis , and in 1988 they played with T-Square at
600-626: Was released in late 1977. Earlier that year, Kalapana helped select the entrants for the "Home Grown" album project. Kalapana’s fourth album Many Classic Moments , primarily a soundtrack to the Gary Capo-helmed surf film of the same name, was released in 1978. The domestic version of the album contained eight Kalapana tracks while the Japanese version was a two-record set with 22 tracks total, featuring additional orchestral music composed by David Wheatley. With Kalapana’s popularity in Japan going strong,
625-571: Was used for FM Nagoya's Summer Campaign. Also, they recorded the theme song for the Asahi Super Cup, a series of sailboat races held off the coast of Oahu . Both recordings were done at TK Disc Studios, which are Japanese recording artist/producer Tetsuya Komuro 's recording studios in Hawaii. In November 2002, the group released the studio album the Blue Album . Two songs off of the said album feature Maurice Bega on vocals. Guest artists included
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