Maisey RikaI’m not the kind of person who would get choked up from watching a music video, but Maisey Rika’s “Reconnect” moved me. It’s a sublime combination of music, lyrics, and vision. Things from Aotearoa/New Zealand tend to hit a particular chord for me. The clip for “Reconnect” reminds me of Tiki Taane’s “Tangaroa” in how the ancestral past never disappears. Instead, it’s always present… you just need to look at things from a slightly different angle for all those from ages past to reappear.







LISTEN NOW

“Reconnect” is off Maisey Rika’s self-titled debut EP, now available on  iTunes.  She has since followed up with the gorgeous Tohu.

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So our trip into the moana nui continues… We’re currently digging the track “Hiro’a” off Ma’ohi rock band Manahune’s fifth studio album Tapu. The guitar riffs and the battle cry chorus are especially tight. Unfortunately, the album is not out on iTunes yet. We’re crossing our fingers for a quick release so we can avoid international shipping.

Manahune - Tapu

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A brief visual retreat for the end of the weekend… Beatifully shot intro for Fa’ahe’e, Surfeurs du Paradis, which debuted at FIFO (Festival international du film documentaire oceanien) in Tahiti this past January.

FA’AHE’E, SURFEURS DU PARADIS

Documentary, 2009, 52 minutes
Directors: Denis Pinson & Laurent Jacquemin
Production : Archipel Prod & Bonne Pioche & France Télévisions

A Linguistic P.S.

For you  ‘ōlelo Hawai‘i speakers,  fa’ahe’e is reo Tahiti for he‘e nalu. Curiously enough, He‘e Nalu is also the name of a surfwear label based in… Tahiti.

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Warm kisses where??? – Tikahiri live

By Kaila Hawai`i
Filed in Mele / Music

We are totally digging this live clip from our favorite pa’umotu rock band, Tikahiri. It was shot during the band’s multimedia, laser-injected spectacular that rocked La Maison de la Culture – Te Fare Tauhiti Nui in Tahiti this past spring.  We think of it as a foreshadowing good things to come – namely, a kick-ass concert in Hawai’i nei in 2011. (And guess who is helping?)

P.S. In case you were wondering about the name of the song. It’s called “Penetration”, off Tikahiri’s latest album Merahi Kerekere, or Black Angel – now available on iTunes

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A Reggae Divine: Om Namah Shivaya

By Kaila Hawai`i
Filed in Mele / Music

om namah shivaya

In keep with the South Asian theme of yesterday, we just discovered this sweet track from Apache Indian (he’s not Native American) entitled “Om Numah Shivaya”.  Produced a few years backs, it combines reggae and the sacred mantra of Shiva, “Om Namah Shivaya”. (Yes, the song name is spelled differently.) Not only is the song haunting, but the lyrics carry a message appropriate for the vehicle. But instead of posting them here, you can let them speak for themselves.

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Talvin Singh presents Anokha: Soundz of the Asian Underground 

Back in my college days on the East Coast, I always had Talvin Singh’s compilation Anokha: Soundz of the Asian Underground playing in the background. It was one of those discs that heralded the arrival of the Asian sound into electronica and the greater mainstream music consciousness. Just think it would only be one year later that Madonna ended up worshipping “the guru’s lotus feet” on Ray of Light’s “Shanti/Ashtangi” produced by William Orbit. (On a digressive note, I recently realized that her VMA performance of “Shanti” – - was probably the first time any thing in Sanskrit was broadcasted on MTV. Unfortunately, though replete with bharata natyam dancers and projections of Hindu deities, the performance was vocally far from Ms. Ciccone’s best.)
Mr. Talvin Singh on the tabla
In any case, more than a decade had passed since I originally chilled out to Mr. Singh’s fine selections brewing organic Chai in college housing when I ended up coming across the original clip for Mr. Singh’s “Jaan”. Directed by Mr. Rob Howard, “Jaan” feels likes a step back into a recent but far different time. (One more digression: is this how people feel when they look back at the sixties?) One thing for certain is that “Jaan” is certifiably one tripped out video: lots of soft-focus close ups of a statue of Buddha merging with Mr. Singh’s eyes, then long haired women in flowing fabrics, and finally feeding of farm animals. I think this would be a textbook example of what could be called an impressionistic non-narrative. Perhaps, knowledge of Hindi (I hope I’m not making a linguistic faux-pas) would help understand the context, but at least the vast intellectual storehosue of the Internet has left me with no answers.

Here is Mr. Singh’s in more recent times in a stunning tabla performance entitled “Devotion”. I can’t help but think that Hawai’i is in need of more tabla-injected dance parties.

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Crema Coffee Bar, Honolulu Design Center

When we’re not going local with our coffee, our favorite place for a little kaffeeklatsch is Crema Coffee Bar at the Honolulu Design Center. The coffee is classic Illy, and the sandwiches and pastries are from the same kitchen as Stage on the Design Center’s second floor. With the building’s modern design, Crema is a great spot to get away from the ho-hum. Plus, it’s right near Kaila favs Aloha Rag and Jimmy Choo. And we think an Illy coffee cup makes a far better accessory than one from Starbucks, as we demonstrate in our Jimmy Choo-Illy combo above. (On a side note, check out the clip on our post on American Vogue editor Anna Wintour to see which coffee graces Vogue’s offices in New York’s Times Square.)

DETAILS

Crema Coffee Bar
Honolulu Design Center
1st Floor
1250 Kapiʻolani Boulevard
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96814
Open from 7 am, Monday – Saturday
Open from 8 am, Sunday


EDITORIAL NOTE

In case you didn’t catch the cultural reference in the title, it comes from the song “You’re the Cream in My Coffee,” once performed by many. But we like the version sung by the one and only Mr. Nat King Cole.

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Yes, we’re feeling Washed Out, and that’s not a bad thing.

Washed Out is a one-man ensemble by up-and-coming musician Ernest Green, who hails from Georgia. (Yes, we wouldn’t have thought Southern boys like electronics, but we’re glad  to be proven wrong.)   This track “Feel It All Around” is a perfect soundtrack for hot summer weather and cooling off in the water… or with liquid refreshments. The appropriately directed clip was produced by Fiction.

Ernest Green is Washed  Out

DETAILS

“Feel It All Around” is off Washed Out’s Life of Lesiure EP now available on iTunes and Amazon.

Washed Out - Life of Leisure (EP)

Mr. Green has quite a groovy photo blog along with a MySpace music page, which features the great non-EP track “You and I,” replete with old-school but tastefully subtle Madonna sample. We spotted other current fav, Toro Y Moi, who we’ve been listening to on our blip.fm station.

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We’re currently loving “Future Days (Getting High)” by Brit duo electronic duo Society. The clip is a veritable venture in altered states directed by fashion photographer Pierre Debuschere. Belgian actor Jey Crisfar – best known for his work with Canadian director Bruce LaBruce (no commentary here) – plays the starring role here, either dancing or running by the forest, torches in hand. (Your interpretation is as good as ours.)

LISTEN MORE

“Future Days” is off Society’s 4-track EP The Rules of Attraction, currently available on iTunes and Amazon.

Society - "Rules of Attraction"

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We across this gorgeous fashion-meets-art-house clip via Wallpaper* magazine. It’s a kind of cinematic triptych, moving, as its title aptly suggests, from darkness to light.

THE LOWDOWN

“From Darkness to Light”

In the almost vampiric first segment, Megan Fox runs through the streets of Paris at night, while the film closes in color-drenched shots of Hilary Rhoda. The middle section, featuring Brazilian model Marlon Texeira, apparently is an older clip called “Higher States,” originally shot for British label Qasimi’s Spring Summer 2010 men’s collection. Peruvian-born photographer Vivanco has done editorial shoots for the likes of Numero, Vogue Nippon, Allure, and Details.

The film comes from the video gallery of Imagine Fashion, whose full fashion blog is soon to launch. In the meantime, we’ll be exploring  the other fashion clips.

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