 |
Visit Patrick's Website »
Hawaiian
musician, songwriter, producer and
educator Patrick Kahakauwila Kamaholelani
Landeza is considered to be a leading
performer of Hawaiian slack key guitar,
or ki ho'alu, one of the world's great
acoustic guitar traditions.
In
a career that includes having his
original composition featured on a
Miss Universe Pageant television special,
becoming the first slack key artist
to perform the national anthem at
a Major League Baseball game, opening
for legendary Hawaiian musicians Israel
"Bruddah Iz" Kamakawiwo'ole,
Keali'i Reichel and HAPA, and cutting
two albums, it's no wonder that Jim
Harrington of the Oakland Tribune
noted that "Patrick Landeza's
mastery of Hawaiian slack key guitar"
keeps him in heavy demand.
Noted
pianist and ki ho'alu player George
Winston, who has recorded and played
with some of the greatest slack key
musicians, says "Patrick Landeza
is one of the best and most dedicated
of the new generation of slack key
players."
Hawaiian
slack key guitar first evolved in
the 1830s (predating the steel guitar
genre by more than 60 years), when
Mexican and Spanish cowboys, hired
by King Kamehameha III to teach Hawaiians
better ranching methods, brought guitars
to entertain themselves. The Hawaiian
cowboys, or paniolo, quickly adopted
the guitar into their culture, calling
it ki ho'alu, which literally translates
into "loosen the key."
A
century-and-a-half later, ki ho'alu
would spellbind Patrick as a teenager
growing up in Berkeley, California.
Patrick's parents, Danny Landeza,
Jr. of O'ahu, and Frances Kawaipulou
Kuakini O'Sullivan of Moloka'i, moved
to the mainland in the 1950s, but
kept close ties to what so many Hawaiian
songs call "ku'u one hanau,"
or "beloved sands of my birth."
It's
fitting that Patrick, who is of Hawaiian,
Filipino, Chinese and Irish ancestry,
would be drawn to a musical genre
evolved from a similarly rich combination
of heritages.
A
few years after being first introduced
to slack key at age 15 by two uncles,
Patrick discovered the ki ho'alu recordings
of slack key master Raymond Kane.
"He was my idol," said Patrick.
"I listened to him religiously."
The two would soon meet at one of
Raymond's concerts in Berkeley, only
two blocks from Patrick's house.
Taken
by Patrick's passion for slack key,
Raymond took the young man as student.
Patrick would travel to Hawai'i and
pick up pointers from Raymond, as
well as other slack key masters such
as George Kuo, Dennis Kamakahi and
the late Sonny Chillingworth. "Patrick
is a fine slack key player!"
beamed Kane.
Nineteen-year-old
Patrick started playing solo in 1992,
opening tours for Hawaiian artists
like Israel "Bruddah Iz"
Kamakawiwo'ole, Cecilio & Kapono,
Keali'i Reichel and HAPA. Patrick
would join backstage jam sessions
with slack key masters who were also
on tour. Known simply as "The
Kid," he would often be mistaken
for an underage fan and prevented
from entering venues. "They had
to remind the venue that I was a performer,"
recalls Patrick.
In
1995, 1996, and 2003, Patrick was
the only mainland performer to be
invited to the annual Bank of Hawai'i
Ki ho'alu Festival, considered the
"grand-daddy" of all slack
key events. "Playing the slack
key fest was a dream come true for
me," said Patrick. In 1996, Patrick
would venture further across the Pacific
in a tour throughout the Philippine
Islands.
1998
would be a big year for Patrick. His
original composition, Mahealani, written
for 1997 Miss Universe Brook Mahealani
Lee, was featured on her half-hour
television special that aired before
the 1998 Miss Universe Pageant.
Later
that year, Patrick released his first
album, "Pu'unaue" ("to
share"), in which he mixes original
compositions along with traditional
Hawaiian music. His special guests
included Martin Pahinui, George Kuo,
Dennis Kamakahi, and Pekelo Cosma.
One
of the few mainlanders accepted into
the close-knit circle of Hawaiian
slack key artists, "many people
believe that Landeza is on his way
to becoming the mainland's leading
players of ki ho'alu," wrote
Sandy Miranda of the San Francisco
Sunday Examiner & Chronicle in
1998.
In
December 2001, Patrick released "Christmas
to Me." Revealing his numerous
facets as an artist, Patrick's second
album takes the listener on a journey
through many different musical forms
and styles, tying it all together
with the common bond of acoustic ki
ho'alu. Among the talented guest artists
on the album is legendary steel guitarist
Bobby Black, who has played with such
bands as Commander Cody, New Riders
of the Purple Sage, Asleep at the
Wheel and Barbara Mandrell.
Although
a slack key artist for more than a
decade, ki ho'alu has been more of
a passion than a profession for Patrick,
a former middle school vice-principal.
Now, at 31, Patrick tours the nation
regularly with other slack key artists
such as Cyril Pahinui and Dennis Kamakahi.
"A true innovator of Hawaiian
Music and a vocalist of pure nahenahe
(sweet sounding) quality," Kamahahi
says. Patrick also teaches ki ho'alu
through workshops and private lessons.
"Trying to get a lesson with
Landeza is like trying to get admitted
to Stanford," joked the Oakland
Tribune's Harrington.
Patrick
has guest lectured on slack key and
on Asian Pacific American issues at
Stanford University, University of
California-Berkeley, University of
California-Santa Barbara, University
of California-Monterey and his alma
mater California State University,
Hayward.
In
2004, Patrick is wearing different
hats covering all aspects of being
a full-time musician with the release
of his instructional DVD, "Hawaiian
Slack Key Guitar Made Easy" (Lamb
Productions), to making appearances
as an instructor at various workshops
around the nation such as the prestigious
Swannanoa Gathering in North Carolina
and the Healdsburg Guitar Festival.
In addition, his lessons will be published
in Acoustic Guitar Magazine as a guest
clinician.
As
a producer, Landezapresents continues
to bring slack key to different markets
introducing a variety of artists.
From "Hawaiian Music's Next Generation",
(Keoki Kahumoku, Herb Ohta Jr., David
Kamakahi, Patrick Landeza) to "The
Slack Key All-Stars" (Landeza,
Kawika Kahiapo, Mike Kaawa, Jeff Peterson,
Milton Lau) and this year introducing
"The Women of Slack Key".
Musically,
Landeza is currently working on his
third CD to be released in Fall 2004
entitled "Slack Key World"
with special guest appearances from
George Winston, Cyril Pahinui, Sally
Van Meter, Raymond Kane, Bobby Black,
Dennis and David Kamakahi and others.
"I am so grateful for the privilege
of learning ki ho'alu from the masters
and being able to entertain so many
people with that gift," said
Patrick. "Now it's time for me
to share the mana'o, or knowledge
and understanding, with others."
» Back
to Top
|
 |