Mahalo to all who helped make the 4th Annual Gabby Pahinui Waimānalo Kanikapila a success, today. You can still order t-shirts from our order page. Here are some photos from today. Please enjoy and we will see you next year. A hui hou!
Mahalo to all who helped make the 4th Annual Gabby Pahinui Waimānalo Kanikapila a success, today. You can still order t-shirts from our order page. Here are some photos from today. Please enjoy and we will see you next year. A hui hou!
Aloha e Mr. Cyril Pahinui,
How are you, dear Uncle? I enjoy the summer time in Japan.
By the way, I have the small classes for ukulele and slack-key guitar lessons in Osaka, Japan. And the other day my 2 students came to the ukulele class putting on Gabby Pahinui T-Shirts. Mrs. Miyuki Muraki and her daughter, Shiori.
They got the t-shirts from the link on my website. They are so satisfied with the T-Shirts, though too large for Shiori. I guess Shiori will grow up soon and the shirt will become fit.
They are so glad to get them!
I have attached files of their pictures.
Mahalo
Slack-Key Marty
The Gabby Pahinui Waimanalo Kanikapila supports the efforts to establish a museum and performance center for Hawaiian music and hula. To this end, we have committed to donate $1 from each t-shirt sold. Our goal is to raise $1,000,000. So, your t-shirt purchase not only ensures the continuation of this annual festival in Waimanalo it also supports making a major contribution to the perpetuation of Hawai‘i’s musical heritage and helps to honor those who have contributed to Hawai‘i’s unique musical voice.
Purchase your 2011 collectable t-shirt andhelp us reach this goal at: gabbypahinui.com
Pure Gabby

Hula Records, CDHS-567
Dave Guard’s 1961 production (1978 release) of Hawaiian Slack-Key Guitarist,
Gabby Pahinui
A note from the producer on how this record came to be:

Dave Guard is my name; my music with the original Kingston Trio may be familiar to you. I was born in Honolulu, brought up in Waikiki, and the first record I ever bought was Hi’ilawe by Gabby Pahinui. When my folks gave me my earliest guitar I learned to play in the “G” slack key tuning first. I would hang around the Queen’s Surf night club just to hear Gabby’s trio (with Joe Diamond and Ralph Alapai.) I pestered Gabby for lessons and he showed me one of his “C” tunings, but he said “It’s not how you tune’ em up, it’s how you pluck ‘em.” But only recently has Gabby considered himself a teacher: it’s enough that he plays the sweetest, cleanest most soulful, most Hawaiian guitar music ever heard, It’s enough that he has one of the finest voices in the world. It’s enough that when I hear Gabby I’m home.