Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 25, Number 6, 1 June 2008 — Listening to their hearts [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Listening to their hearts

īwo kumu hula capture a eleeaele of hula in song By Lisa Asatu Public lnfurmatiun Specialist Kumu hula Karl Baker ean 'uwehe, 'ami and slide with the best of them. But writing songs in Hawaiian

is another story. "I'm not even a poet in English," he says. "I write great memos, but I'm not a poet." Good thing for Baker he has a collaborator in the music studio, as well as on the pā hula - his fellow kumu hula of Hālau I Ka Wēkiu,

Miehael Casupang. "Miehael speaks Hawaiian. If a song is in Hawaiian, he does the poetry and I do the music," Baker says. "I do the melodies, you know, just like Rodgers and Hanunerstein." This year the two kumu - "kumz" to their students - are celebrating a decade of making music and hula together with their third CD, KUmZ: Listen to Your Heart, and a four-island concert tour with the hālau, starting lune 8 at the Blaisdell Center in Honolulu.

The "The TENder Years" tour travels to the East Coast Iuly 31 to Aug. 1 1 for more perfonnances and workshops before returning home for a concert on Kaua'i sometime this fall. Proceeds from the eoncerts and CD will benefit the halaus

non-profit, Kauakoko Foundation. On the continent, the troupe will perform at venues like the international Iacob's Pillow dance festival in Massachusetts. "They bring the best dance companies from throughout the world like Russia, U.S., and for our little hālau to be invited is amazing. To put hula on that kind of stage is great for hula as far as we're concerned," he says. "And when we're in New York, we're doing the United Nations. They're going to have an indigenous conference there." Baker and Casupang were protēgēs of kumu hula Robert Cazimero, whose latest CD is

reviewed at right. Hālau I Ka Wēkiu's first decade has been "a whirlwind," Baker says. Music lovers ean peer inside that whirlwind through the 14 original songs on KUmZ, whieh "documents our hālau's experiences going on huaka'i to different islands," he says. Their students also had a hand in creating the CD. Student 'Aukai Reynolds helped write the title track, Ho 'olohe I Ka Poli (Listen to Your Heart), whieh happens to be Baker's favorite. The song recounts the hālau's trip to Kaua'i to prepare for what would prove to be its triumphant 2007 Merrie Monarch appearance, when they won four top awards, including overall honors. Baker and Casupang are hoping other kumu hula like what they hear. They gave them copies of their CD with the message, "If something

inspires you, please make it yours," Baker says. "People in the eommunity think just because they write it nobody else ean do it. We wanted them to understand we freely give this to them. We want them to use our music." E

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— MELE 'AILANA ■ ISLAND MUSIC SCENE

The KUmZ, Miehael Casupang and Karl Baker. - Coverart: Courtesy of Hālau I Ka Wēkiu.