UH Maui College Wins Nā Hōkū Hanohano Music Award
The University of Hawai‘i Maui College’s Institute of Hawaiian Music final recording project was selected as the Hawaiian EP (Extended Play) of the Year at the 2019 Nā Hōkū Hanohano music awards.
A blessing for its recently renovated ‘Apo Leo Learning Studio was also held last month, just in time to honor the faculty and students responsible for the project.
IHM faculty coordinator Keola Donaghy was proud of the team’s recognition, noting the limitations they had prior to the studio’s renovation, which necessitated renting time at commercial studios to ensure acoustic quality.
“The Nā Hōkū win was a great measure of our success, so imagine what our future students can do with the newly improved facility,” said Donaghy.
The ‘Apo Leo Learning Studio renovation began last year as part of a U.S. Department of Education grant intended to strengthen music and Hawaiian performing arts at UH Maui College. It includes a combination classroom and control room that houses the facility’s state-of-the-art recording system and space for student learning. There is also an isolated talent room, with sound lock, where performances are recorded.
The IHM program has won two Nā Hōkū Hanohano Awards so far; the first for the compilation CD “Aloha ‘Ia Nō ‘O Maui” in 2016, and “‘He Lani Ko Luna, He Honua Ko Lalo,” which was this year’s Hawaiian EP of the Year.
UH Maui College’s IHM is a one-of-a-kind mentorship program dedicated to the perpetuation and preservation of Hawaiian music. Formal university classes are supplemented with mentorship sessions led by professional Hawaiian musicians. Students selected for the IHM program will receive exclusive opportunities to receive personal training, guidance and knowledge through mentor-mentee relationships with performers, composers and industry professionals including
Keali‘i Reichel, Raiatea Helm, Jake Shimabukuro, Kenneth Makuakāne and former IHM director and Grammy Award-winning slack key guitarist George Kahumoku Jr.