Saturday, June 26, 2010

The 50 Guitars of Tommy Garrett - Take you to Hawaii



Liner Notes:
Hawaii is one of those fun sun places which everybody has heard of but comparatively few get the chance to visit. It’s rather a long way away in the blue Pacific and nobody in Britain has yet managed to organise a conveniently priced package holiday deal to enable we sun-starved Britons to sample its sun sea and sand.
We all know about its existence of course lots of us were aware of it via soothing and sultry recordings of Hawaiian music featuring those seductively wailing steel guitars and strumming ukeleles long before we made the TV acquaintance of Steve McGarrett and the other sleuths of Hawaii 5-0. Music can be totally expressive and it certainly is in the case of the Hawaiian Islands Lulling languorous sometimes syncopated but always evocative of palm trees gently swaying in a light breeze off an azure sea and miles of golden sand and tropical temperatures. The eight Hawaiian Islands containing people are Hawaii, Maui, Molokai, Lanai, Kahoolawe, Oahu, Kauai and Niihau. They grow sugar cane and pineapples amongst other pleasant sun drenched things and they entertain and charm immense numbers of tourist halidaymakers each year. Captain Cook (British you know) was the first European officially acknowledged to have visited those shares in 1778. Although the Spaniards reckoned they were there briefly at least two hundred years before, Captain Cook didn’t really get the right tourist treatment because when he resigned to those sunny shares in 1779 he got involved in a scuffle with the hitherto friendly natives who believed him to be an incarnation of their god Lono on his first visit. The second time around was not so idyllic and Captain Cook died thereon the beach the first of a considerable number of white people from afar to be eliminated by the indigenous Polynesians. American missionaries pacified the Islands a hundred years and more ago and The Hawaiian War Chant is really the last relic of warlike character of a basically friendly people some of whom settled in New Zealand a long time ago and are known as Maoris. They took to the guitar and gave it a special character and style of their own as well as developing the smaller ukelele in its support. This LP presents the best known tunes that have come out of the Islands played by a famous group of Californian guitarists who have built up a formidable reputation on record over recent years under the skilful direction of Tommy "Snuff" Garrett one of Americas leading record producers.

The 50 Guitars treat the songs of the Islands in authentically mellow style drawing forth the full melodic charm and remembering the Maori element with Now Is The Hour. Also present is the beautiful Hawaiian Wedding Song, the evocative Lovely Hula Hands referring to the enticingly graceful matrons of the pretty wahines or Hawaiian girls who speak a language with their hands as well as their hips when dancing and the famous song of farewell Aloha Oe believed to have been written by Queen Liliukalani the last ruler of the Hawaiian Islands before they went under American administration. It's another winner by the 50 Guitars and redolent of sun sand and surf.
NIGEL HUNTER
Arranger Hank Levine
Produced by Tommy "Snuff" Garrett
Art Direction Pierre Tubbs

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Golden Guitar

The Royal Guitar Ensemble