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Monday, April 25, 2011

Hana & Satchwell: It's all about Ohana


 "Want to be with my Ohana. Want to ride in my canoe. 
We can all be friends and family...If your heart is true."

Those lines are taken from "Island Daze and Island Nights", one of sixteen tracks on Hana & Satchwell's  "Chillaxin'" cd, winner of the Hawaii Music Awards "Pop Album of The Year" in 2010 (their previous cd, "Love Of The Islands" took home the same honors the year before).

The theme of Ohana - along with the Hawaiian spirit of Aloha -  runs through all of Hana & Satchwell's music. Ohana means family in Hawaiian and, if you have spent any time on the Hawaiian islands, you know that they celebrate two families. There is the nuclear family - brothers, sisters, mother, father. But, there is also an extended family. You can stop and ask a complete stranger for directions and chances are the reply might include being called "cuz" or "brudda", for "cousin" or "brother". That's because Hawaiians have a deep seeded belief that all people are related. Bob Marley's "One Love/One World". Hawaiians are also extremely proud of their islands, the beauty and history. And that's another theme that runs through Hana & Satchwell's music. So, who are these two multi-award winning musicians who bring the traditions of the Hawaiian islands to the 21st century?

Hana is Ricky Hana. He grew up playing piano on California's Catalina Island, but moved to Santa Barbara in his mid teens and picked up the guitar. At the time, the early 70's, he was more into the rock bands of the day - Cream, Santana, Buffalo Springfield. "I got a job working at one of the music venues and got to see bands like Led Zep, Jethro Tull - guitar players like Page and Clapton." Convinced he wanted to make music his career, but still attending school for "something to fall back on", Ricky started playing guitar at local parties, bowling alleys, and bars, eventually joining a local group called DB Cooper, which landed a contract with Warner Brothers Records. "It was cool. We opened for bands like
Tom Petty, Judas Priest, Toto, The Pretenders and many times for the The Beach Boys, were paid weekly salaries, flew from town to town, had roadies. The whole rock and roll lifestyle!" But, eventually, that lifestyle caught up with him and he felt he needed to take a break. "I wanted to get away, raise my Ohana, my family. So, I packed up and moved to Hawaii."

Satchwell is Alan Satchwell. He also grew up near the coast of California - in Palos Verdes, but played the trumpet as a youngster, inspired by Herb Alpert. "I started writing songs on a little four track recorder when I was about 16 or 17." A music degree from UCLA followed, then some studio work as a singer, as well as time spent on the popular nationally televised music shows Solid Gold and Solid Gold Hits. "In the 80's I was in a band called North by Northwest that played the clubs in the L.A area and got a deal with Interscope Records, and I also wrote songs for other artists. Then, in 1993, I went to work for a church in the San Fernando Valley. I helped them build a gospel choir - which came in handy much later when it came time to do the vocal arranging on the Hana & Satchwell cds." Like Ricky, Alan soon got burnt out on the lifestyle, too. But, instead of heading to the Hawaiian islands, Alan sought his solace in Santa Barbara, in the picturesque St. Ynez Valley. "I raised four kids there, had a small vineyard..It was nice."

Two California musicians, with successful careers, moving in different directions. And, each ultimately fried on the business and lifestyle. How did their paths converge? And how did their rock/pop/jazz/new wave/gospel backgrounds evolve into to the island rhythms which ultimately led them to having the Top Pop Album in Hawaii two years running? I'm getting to that...As H&S might say, "Chillax, brudda!"

"We had grown up in the same area of California, actually played in a band together - a Christian band - years earlier. So, we were friends," says Alan. "But, then we lost track of each other for must have been 8-10 years. Ricky had moved to Hawaii and I was in Santa Barbara." 

Ricky picks it up: "I fell in love with Hawaii, the people and the natural beauty. I worked as a tour guide in Maui for a while, spent time with my Ohana. Was there for twenty years. But, eventually, I missed the music. I picked my guitar back up and started writing some new material, which was influenced by what I had been experiencing. In 2008, I released a cd on my own, "My Hawaii."

Alan: "I came across Ricky's new stuff on the internet, was really impressed with the songs he was writing - they had this great island feel to them. I had been to Hawaii during this time too, on a second honeymoon with my wife. I got to spend some time with the locals. You look into their eyes, see the depth of their spirituality and your blood pressure drops. Hawaii ministered to me. I really got a sense of Aloha. I started writing some new material and sent it to Ricky in Hawaii. That was it. We decided we needed to work together."   

Ricky: "Once we decided to work together, our first cd, "Love Of The Islands", came together really quickly. It was recorded and out in three months. A month later we won the Hawaii Music Award!"

So, you knew each other, had even worked together, but it was Hawaii that really was the common bond?

Alan: "Southern California and Hawaii have always had this relationship, there's alot of synergy between the two. When things get too crazy in California, people go to Hawaii to recharge. Musicians like Jack Johnson and Mick Fleetwood have homes in both places. Hawaii is like 'California West."

Ricky: "I love to come back to California, still keep a place in Santa Barbara. I come to see Alan, to play, and to work on new music. But, I still consider Hawaii home. The music scene there is great; open and refreshing. They respect their older musicians, but welcome new energy."

How did you write and record the second cd, "Chillaxin'?


Ricky: "Pretty much the same way as the first. We each came with our ideas. We'd trade files over the internet, I would carry a portable studio with me for whenever I came up with a new idea. And, when I came to California, we'd get together at Alan's studio."

Alan: "We played what we felt, that spirit of Aloha. It's hard to explain. It's not something you can force, it's more of a concept, like the term 'Trop Rock'. It's what's in your heart. I mean, Brian Wilson wrote about waves and cars, couldn't surf and didn't even have a driver's license!" The process was very fluid. Almost every sound on the cd is unedited, exactly as we played it the first time."

So what is next?

Ricky: "We're constantly writing. As soon as we finish one album, we start working on the next. We want to get out and play around California. And we have been discovering - starting to be embraced by - the Trop Rock community. We're looking to do more of the 'Parrot Head' type events around the country. Now that DJ Jeff Allen lives near us in California, we hope to be on BeachFront Radio soon."

Alan: "And we want to say 'Mahalo' to you for all your help in letting people know about us, spreading the Aloha."



I also asked Ricky and Alan about some of their favorite places to hang out when they're not working, in Hawaii and SoCal:

Ricky: I spend alot of time in Waikiki. There are a lot of great local spots but, believe it or not, I like the Cheesecake Factory (on Kalakaua - Fred)! Great food and great prices. When I want to get out of the city, there is a little surfing town called Hale'iwa on the North Shore (be sure to grab a shave ice at Matsumoto's - Fred). If you're in Kaua‘i, Bar Acuda in Hanalei has great food and great service.

Alan: In Santa Barbara, Brophy Brothers has some tasty food. It's right on the harbor. In Long Beach, Shoreline Village has lots of shops and restaurants - places like The Yard House, which has around 1000 different beers - and always has great entertainment.
http://www.facebook.com/Hana.Satchwell

http://www.thecheesecakefactory.com/
http://haleiwatownhawaii.com/
http://www.gonorthshore.org/
http://www.matsumotoshaveice.com/


http://restaurantbaracuda.com/ 
http://brophybros.com/
http://shorelinevillage.com/
http://www.yardhouse.com/CA/Long_Beach/