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My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii

"My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaiʻi", written by Tommy Harrison, Bill Cogswell, and Johnny Noble in Hawaii in 1933, is a Hawaiian song in the Hawaiian musical style known as hapa haole. One of the earliest recordings by Ted Fio Rito and his orchestra reached number one on the charts in 1934.[1] Honolulu magazine listed it as number 41 in a 2007 article, "50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii".[2] It has been heard in many movies and television shows and has been covered dozens of times. The title is sometimes shortened to "My Little Grass Shack" or "Little Grass Shack".

"My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaiʻi"
Single by Ted Fio Rito and His Orchestra
RecordedDecember 13, 1933 (1933-12-13)
Genre
Length3:08
LabelBrunswick Records
Songwriter(s)

Composition edit

The song was written by Tommy Harrison and Bill Cogswell for Kona's Independence Day celebration in 1933. The scene was set by the Kona Historical Society:

Kealakekua Bay was the setting for the annual Fourth of July canoe races... During the festivities, a new song written in honor of the occasion was sung for the first time in public. As unfamiliar lyrics rang out over the water, smiling hula dancers swished to and fro, laughing as they imitated swimming fishes and eating two-finger poi with their nimble fingers. The crowd applauded their approval and demanded an encore performance.[3]

Cogswell, a Montana native working in Honolulu who in the 1950s became managing director of the Hawaii Visitors Bureau, was accompanying visitors to the Big Island of Hawaii when he wrote the lyrics, a parody of a 1924 song, "Back in Hackensack, New Jersey". Harrison, who composed the music, showed the song to Hawaiian songwriter and band leader Johnny Noble, a leading figure in hapa haole music. Noble had already heard the song but rejected it because of its similarity to "Hackensack" and because "everyone seemed to have claimed writing it."[4] Harrison persisted and Noble relented upon the recommendation of Variety magazine correspondent Mabel Thomas.[5]

He faced two challenges: Revising the melody to avoid conflicts with "Hackensack" without altering Cogswell's words, as he was "inspired by the lyrics" and their "nostalgic appeal",[5] and crafting the song into a hit:

He set to work revising the music, removing the phrases which to him seemed unoriginal, putting in the touches which... make all the difference between a pretty good song and a song-hit. It was not easy... For days Johnny worked at the piano, playing phrases over and over, scribbling in notes and rests, and still he was not satisfied. There was something he wanted to do to it, but it would not come. And then, quite suddenly it did... 'Honey dear,' he grinned at [his wife Emilie], as he turned from the piano, his eyes shining. 'It's done, and it's good, isn't it?'"[5]

In naming "My Little Grass Shack" one of the "50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii", as chosen by a panel of experts, Honolulu magazine singled out Noble's contribution: "This light-hearted ditty exemplifies composer and band-leader Johnny Noble's talent at creating hapa haole tunes tailor-made for tourists' tastes, but palatable for locals as well."[2]

Noble published the sheet music under the title "My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua". In "Notes on Hawaiian Music", Noble said, "The first two thousand copies sold locally went like hot cakes—the demand for the song was too great. I ordered another two thousand and they too were sold out within a few weeks."[4] With offers from many mainland music publishers, he awarded publishing rights to San Francisco-based Sherman, Clay & Co. for a $500.00 advance against royalties.[5]

Popularity and early recordings edit

Noble sent the sheet music to bandleader Ted Fio Rito at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles where he was regularly playing the Cocoanut Grove radio remote (a nationwide broadcast of live big band ballroom concerts).[6] Fio Rito had been doing radio remotes since 1924 when he was co-leader of a band with Dan Russo (coincidentally, a co-writer of "Back in Hackensack, New Jersey").[7] Fio Rito liked the song well enough to "push it by playing it on his radio program."[5]

Fio Rito recorded "My Little Grass Shack" on December 13, 1933, for Brunswick Records. The big band arrangement featured guitarist Muzzy Marcellino singing the vocal chorus and The Debutantes, a vocal trio, singing the verses. The song was number one on the Billboard charts for fourteen weeks.[8] Fio Rito recorded the song again in 1938 for Decca, The Debutantes performing all the vocals.

That was not, however, the earliest recording, made for Victor on September 14, 1933, in New York City by the Noelani Hawaiian Orchestra under the title "My Little Grass Shack (Kealakekua)".[9] The hapa haole arrangement featured lap steel guitar and ukulele. Cogswell's songwriting credit is incorrectly attributed to Rebecca Roback on the label.[10]

Another hapa haole version pre-dated Fio Rito, recorded for Brunswick on November 11, 1933, by future Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame honoree and lap-steel guitar master Sol Hoʻopiʻi and His Novelty Quartet.[11] Other big bands recorded the song during the 1930s, The Ben Pollack Orchestra charting with a recording made for Columbia in January, 1934.[1]

Style and context edit

"My Little Grass Shack" is a hapa haole song, "a hybrid genre that mixed American jazz and dance rhythms (swing and foxtrot), Hawaiian instrumentation (such as the steel guitar and ukulele), and lyrics in both English and Hawaiian"[12] (hapa haole means "half foreign" and is also used in a literal sense to mean "multiracial"). It was written, recorded, and reached the top of the charts nearly two decades after the start of the hapa haole fad, the Hawaiian music craze, which began with the popularity of a 1912 Broadway musical, The Bird of Paradise, and exploded in earnest at the Hawaiian Pavilion at San Francisco's Panama–Pacific International Exposition in 1915.[13]

The music craze helped promote tourism to Hawaii.[14] "Through national songhits like 'My Little Grass Shack', hapa haole music solidified and perpetuated U.S. mainland caricatures of Hawaiʻi as a place of grass shacks, white sandy beaches, lovely hula maidens, and happy dancing natives."[12]

Though considered a fad in 1915, hapa haole remained popular for decades. Technological innovation in travel, pop culture, and mass production helped sustain its popularity. The 1915 Exposition celebrated the opening of the Panama Canal, which made tourist access to Hawaii easier and faster. PanAm made access even easier and faster when air travel to Hawaii was inaugurated in 1936. Music was a significant element in Hawaiian culture, helping to attract visitors:

Colorful community events were staged, usually involving flowers and parades. Entertainment flourished to keep the visitors occupied. Wonderfully wacky hapa haole music was performed to ukulele and steel guitar. The tourist hula show was born... The [Hawaii Visitors] Bureau took part in many promotional activities over the years, but the most enduring and successful was launched in 1935 as the radio program, Hawaii Calls... Listeners grew up with the sounds of Hawaii from that popular show and developed lifelong desires to see and hear the real thing.[15]

"Hawaiian music, via sheet music, the new technologies of records and radio, and live travelling performances, was a driving force for the 'Hawaii Craze' that besotted the U.S. during the first half of the 20th century."[12] Motion pictures helped keep the fad going through the 1930s, as did television in the 1950s and 1960s.[16] Radio was a particularly significant promotional tool. Nearly a decade before Hawaii Calls, for example, Johnny Noble led a quartet of musicians to San Francisco to promote Hawaii on radio on behalf of the main shipping line to Hawaii, Matson Lines.[17]

The advent of mass production assembly lines contributed as well by increasing supplies and reducing prices of steel guitars and ukuleles. "Sears Roebuck bought the Harmony guitar company to make ukuleles and cash in on the craze. Hawaiian music also became incredibly popular as a result. Ukes were mass-produced in the thousands — Harmony sold 500,000 in 1931 alone."[18]

"My Little Grass Shack" exemplifies these trends. Written for a tourist event, it possessed enduring appeal to tourists. "Everyone wanted to head to Hawaii, take up life in a grass shack, and hang out with their kane and wahine compatriots on the beach at Honaunau," says The Kona Historical Society.[3] It was introduced to mainland audiences via Ted Fio Rito's radio remote broadcast, his recording was a number one hit, and numerous recordings followed. It was used in a number of films during the 1930s, particularly musical shorts. It appeared in television shows through the 1950s and 1960s and even more recently. It remains a standard for ukulele, again a popular instrument.

Lyrics edit

J. P. McEvoy, a popular magazine writer and humorist in the 1920s and 1930s, wrote to the songwriters after hearing "My Little Grass Shack" on the radio. Without benefit of printed lyrics, he asked tongue-in-cheek about some of the Hawaiian place names and phrases in the song: "What does it mean? What are connies and weenies? How do ka-chewbas sway? Where is the beach at Holdem Sow? How do homesick Highland boys get to this place, and is a Fishin' Foy any relation to the late Eddie?"[19]

Two historic locations on the Big Island of Hawaii are mentioned in the title and lyrics. Kealakekua, where the Fourth of July canoe races took place, is where English explorer James Cook was killed in 1779. The beach at Hōnaunau is now the site of Puʻuhonua o Hōnaunau National Historical Park, the best known and best preserved ancient City of Refuge.

The Hawaiian phrase in the line "I want to be with all the kanes and wahines that I used to know" means "men and women". The line, "Where the Humuhumunukunukuapua'a go swimming by," refers to the reef triggerfish, Hawaii's state fish, by its long Hawaiian name. Poi is a Hawaiian food staple made from taro root.

There is one full line in Hawaiian, "Komo mai no kāua i ka hale welakahao," which literally translates to, "Come into our house while the iron's hot." Dolly Parton, in her televised live performance of the song in 1987, shouts out after the line is sung that it means, "Come to my house, we're gonna party!"

The "little grass shack" of the title did not refer to an actual location. But the popularity of the song led to the opening of a gift shop in Kona called The Little Grass Shack. The song was so popular that soldiers stationed in Hawaii during World War II who were not allowed to write letters home instead sent photographs of themselves in front of the gift shop to let their families know where they were.[3]

Structure edit

The song was written in the key of B-flat major and is played in 4/4 common time, popularly known at the time as a foxtrot. Ukulele arrangements are in G major.

The main body of the song is built upon two common chord progressions (not including fills). The first is 1-2-5-1, which in Bb walks up from Bb to C7 to F7, resolving back to Bb. The first eight bars follow this progression, as do the last twelve bars (the last four of those last twelve bars repeat the melody, lyrics, and chords of the 5-1 F7-Bb resolution in the preceding four bars). The second progression, which makes up the second set of eight bars, is 3-6-2-5, D7 to G7 to C7 to F7, a form often heard in Gospel music.

After the first sixteen bars, there are variations within each progression and in their order. In this middle section, the first progression transitions directly into the second progression (D7) without resolving to Bb. The second progression resolves back to Bb rather than finishing on F7 as we enter the last twelve bars and repeat the first progression.

Most recordings begin with an instrumental introduction built upon the primary eight-bar 1-2-5-1 progression, or at least its last four bars, featuring the same melody that is later played behind the "Humuhumunukunukuapuaa" lyric. The original Noble sheet music differs. It starts with a four-bar instrumental introduction (5-1, F to Bb, with the "Humuhumunukunukuapuaa" melody) and then leads into an eight-bar vocal introduction with a unique melody that is not repeated later in the song, the lyrics setting up the theme of a homesick Hawaiian sailor yearning to return to Kona. The full Noble introduction is rarely heard among available recordings. There are examples of an introduction using the melody of another famous Hawaiian song, "Aloha ʻOe".

Big band versions present an instrumental version of the main verse before launching into the vocals, frequently following up with additional instrumental verses. Most versions in other genres that highlight vocalists launch straight into the vocals after a short 1-2-5-1 introduction.

Cover versions edit

"My Little Grass Shack" has been recorded many times. A partial list of artists who have recorded versions include:

Film and television edit

"My Little Grass Shack" has been used frequently in movies, in two waves. In the first decade after the song was written, a time when Hollywood regularly produced shorts for theatrical exhibition, performances of the song were common.

  • "Mike Fright" (1934): Our Gang star as The International Silver String Submarine Band crashing a youth talent show where another contestant, Joy Lane, sings "My Little Grass Shack" with four girls dancing hula and Billy Lee tap dancing (Joy Lane joined Ted Fio Rito's Orchestra in 1947).[22]
  • "Show Kids" (1935): Another short centered on a youth talent show in which Joy Lane sings the song playing the ukulele backed by hula dancers.[22]
  • "Mirrors" (1934): Features Freddie Rich and His Orchestra performing the song with Vera Van and The Eton Boys singing vocals.[22]
  • "Freddie Martin and His Orchestra" (1935): The title band performs the song.[22]
  • "Club House Party" (1935): Roy Smeck performs an instrumental version on slide guitar.[23]
  • "My Little Grass Shack" (1942): "Soundie" made up entirely of the song, the music and background vocals by Andy Iona, who played saxophone in Johnny Noble's Moana Orcherstra and the Royal Hawaiian Orchestra.[24]
  • Go For Broke! (1951): The first lines played as an act of defiance by a Nisei member of the 442nd RCT, following first meeting with their platoon's new commanding officer.

The second wave began in 1990, "My Little Grass Shack" becoming a popular movie soundtrack song, particularly for films set in Hawaii.

On television, "My Little Grass Shack" was sometimes sung by a cast member as part of the story, sometimes accompanying themselves on ukulele, and sometimes was performed in variety shows.

Precursor and sequels edit

"My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii" was originally written as a parody of the chorus of "Back in Hackensack, New Jersey", composed in 1924 by Dan A. Russo and Art L. Biner. The opening lines of the chorus are, "I wanna go back to a black little shack, back in Hackensack, New Jersey, I wanna see all the gals and pals that I used to know". The chord structure is nearly identical, the melody slightly altered. Other verses in "Hackensack", with completely different chord structures and melodies, have no corollaries in "My Little Grass Shack".[32]

Two sequels were written to "Little Grass Shack" in 1934, Johnny Noble getting partial credit for both. "I've Found a Little Grass Skirt for My Little Grass Shack in Hawaii" is credited to Noble and Harry Owens, who took over for Noble as leader of the Royal Hawaiian Orchestra when Noble stepped down to concentrate on song publishing.[33]

Also in 1934, Royal Hawaiian Orchestra players Lee Wood and Don McDiarmid submitted a sequel to Noble titled, "It's Just a Little Brown Gal in a Little Grass Skirt in a Little Grass Shack in Hawaii". Owens did not want to add yet another "Little Grass Shack" number to the orchestra's songbook. Noble published it, giving himself co-writing credit. He then gave it to Ray Kinney, a future Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame honoree he had worked with before. The success of Kinney's recording convinced Owens to add it to the songbook under the shortened title "Little Brown Gal". Kinney joined the Orchestra that same year. The song became an oft-covered hapa haole classic that Lee Wood himself continued to perform a half century later.[34]

In 1950, Harry Stewart recorded "My Little Old Shack (in Minneapolis, Minnesota)" under the character name Yogi Yorgesson, substituting comic Swedish lyrics for the Hawaiian lyrics in "My Little Grass Shack". In the last line of the verse, Yorgesson sings, "When the mackerel and the pickerel and the lutefisk go swimming by."[35]

Bibliography edit

  • Bolante, Ronna; Keany, Michael (2007). "50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii". Honolulu Magazine. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  • Cooley, Timothy J. (2014). Surfing About Music. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520276635.
  • Inman, David (2006). Television Variety Shows: Histories and Episode Guides to 57 Programs. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0786421985.
  • Kanahele, George S. (1979). Hawaiian Music and Musicians: An Illustrated History. The University Press of Hawaii. ISBN 978-0824805784.
  • Melrose, Maile. "Soldiers and The Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua". Kona Historical Society. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  • Noble, Gurre Ploner (1948). Hula Blues: The Story of Johnny Noble, Hawaii, Its Music and Musicians. Literary Licensing, LLC. ISBN 978-1258818135.
  • Shishikura, Masaya (2007). I'll Remember You: Nostalgia and Hapa Haole Music (PDF). University of Hawaii M.A. Thesis.
  • Whitcomb, Ian. "Hawaiian Memories". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  • Yamashiro, Aiko (2009). "Ethics in Song: Becoming Kamaʻāina in Hapa-Haole Music" (PDF). University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa. Retrieved October 10, 2016.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Chart appearances for the song 'My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii'". Database of Popular Music. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  2. ^ a b "50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii". Honolulu Magazine. 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c "Soldiers and The Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua". Kona Historical Society. 20 May 2014. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  4. ^ a b Kanahele, pp. 261
  5. ^ a b c d e Noble, pp. 87-88
  6. ^ "The Cocoanut Grove Ambassadors". Radio Archives. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  7. ^ "Liner Notes". Collateral Works. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  8. ^ "Songs from the Year 1934". The World's Music Charts. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  9. ^ "Victor matrix BS-77672. My Little Grass Shack / Tony Harrison; Noelani Hawaiian Orchestra". Discography of American Historical Recordings. UC Santa Barbara Library. 2016. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  10. ^ "My Little Grass Shack (Kealakekua) Victor label". Aloha Valley. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  11. ^ "Kolo Pa b/w My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaii". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  12. ^ a b c Yamashiro, p. 1
  13. ^ "Hapa Haole Songs". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  14. ^ Cooley, p. 31
  15. ^ "Hawaii Visitors & Convention Bureau History". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  16. ^ Shishikura, pp. 23-26
  17. ^ Noble, p. 79
  18. ^ "Ukulele History". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  19. ^ Noble, pp. 89-90
  20. ^ "A Bing Crosby Discography". BING magazine. International Club Crosby. Retrieved December 8, 2017.
  21. ^ "allmusic.com". allmusic.com. Retrieved December 8, 2017.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Johnny Noble Filmography". IMDB. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  23. ^ "Roy Smeck Little Grass Shack". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  24. ^ "1940's My Little Grass Shack Musical Soundie". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  25. ^ Inman, p. 12.
  26. ^ "The Lawrence Welk Show: Champagne Medley". YouTube. Retrieved October 10, 2016.[dead YouTube link]
  27. ^ Inman, p. 288.
  28. ^ Inman, p. 291.
  29. ^ "Little Grass Shack". OddCouple.info. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  30. ^ Inman, p. 376.
  31. ^ "Simpsons Archive". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  32. ^ "Back in Hackensack, New Jersey". Library of Congress National Jukebox. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  33. ^ "I've Found a Little Grass Skirt". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  34. ^ Whitcomb, Ian. "Hawaiian Memories". Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  35. ^ My Little Old Shack In Minneapolis, Minnesota. OCLC 80862214.

little, grass, shack, kealakekua, hawaii, little, grass, shack, kealakekua, hawaiʻi, written, tommy, harrison, bill, cogswell, johnny, noble, hawaii, 1933, hawaiian, song, hawaiian, musical, style, known, hapa, haole, earliest, recordings, rito, orchestra, rea. My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaiʻi written by Tommy Harrison Bill Cogswell and Johnny Noble in Hawaii in 1933 is a Hawaiian song in the Hawaiian musical style known as hapa haole One of the earliest recordings by Ted Fio Rito and his orchestra reached number one on the charts in 1934 1 Honolulu magazine listed it as number 41 in a 2007 article 50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii 2 It has been heard in many movies and television shows and has been covered dozens of times The title is sometimes shortened to My Little Grass Shack or Little Grass Shack My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaiʻi Single by Ted Fio Rito and His OrchestraRecordedDecember 13 1933 1933 12 13 GenreHapa HaoleBig BandLength3 08LabelBrunswick RecordsSongwriter s Bill CogswellTommy HarrisonJohnny Noble Contents 1 Composition 2 Popularity and early recordings 3 Style and context 4 Lyrics 5 Structure 6 Cover versions 7 Film and television 8 Precursor and sequels 9 Bibliography 10 ReferencesComposition editThe song was written by Tommy Harrison and Bill Cogswell for Kona s Independence Day celebration in 1933 The scene was set by the Kona Historical Society Kealakekua Bay was the setting for the annual Fourth of July canoe races During the festivities a new song written in honor of the occasion was sung for the first time in public As unfamiliar lyrics rang out over the water smiling hula dancers swished to and fro laughing as they imitated swimming fishes and eating two finger poi with their nimble fingers The crowd applauded their approval and demanded an encore performance 3 Cogswell a Montana native working in Honolulu who in the 1950s became managing director of the Hawaii Visitors Bureau was accompanying visitors to the Big Island of Hawaii when he wrote the lyrics a parody of a 1924 song Back in Hackensack New Jersey Harrison who composed the music showed the song to Hawaiian songwriter and band leader Johnny Noble a leading figure in hapa haole music Noble had already heard the song but rejected it because of its similarity to Hackensack and because everyone seemed to have claimed writing it 4 Harrison persisted and Noble relented upon the recommendation of Variety magazine correspondent Mabel Thomas 5 He faced two challenges Revising the melody to avoid conflicts with Hackensack without altering Cogswell s words as he was inspired by the lyrics and their nostalgic appeal 5 and crafting the song into a hit He set to work revising the music removing the phrases which to him seemed unoriginal putting in the touches which make all the difference between a pretty good song and a song hit It was not easy For days Johnny worked at the piano playing phrases over and over scribbling in notes and rests and still he was not satisfied There was something he wanted to do to it but it would not come And then quite suddenly it did Honey dear he grinned at his wife Emilie as he turned from the piano his eyes shining It s done and it s good isn t it 5 In naming My Little Grass Shack one of the 50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii as chosen by a panel of experts Honolulu magazine singled out Noble s contribution This light hearted ditty exemplifies composer and band leader Johnny Noble s talent at creating hapa haole tunes tailor made for tourists tastes but palatable for locals as well 2 Noble published the sheet music under the title My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua In Notes on Hawaiian Music Noble said The first two thousand copies sold locally went like hot cakes the demand for the song was too great I ordered another two thousand and they too were sold out within a few weeks 4 With offers from many mainland music publishers he awarded publishing rights to San Francisco based Sherman Clay amp Co for a 500 00 advance against royalties 5 Popularity and early recordings editNoble sent the sheet music to bandleader Ted Fio Rito at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles where he was regularly playing the Cocoanut Grove radio remote a nationwide broadcast of live big band ballroom concerts 6 Fio Rito had been doing radio remotes since 1924 when he was co leader of a band with Dan Russo coincidentally a co writer of Back in Hackensack New Jersey 7 Fio Rito liked the song well enough to push it by playing it on his radio program 5 Fio Rito recorded My Little Grass Shack on December 13 1933 for Brunswick Records The big band arrangement featured guitarist Muzzy Marcellino singing the vocal chorus and The Debutantes a vocal trio singing the verses The song was number one on the Billboard charts for fourteen weeks 8 Fio Rito recorded the song again in 1938 for Decca The Debutantes performing all the vocals That was not however the earliest recording made for Victor on September 14 1933 in New York City by the Noelani Hawaiian Orchestra under the title My Little Grass Shack Kealakekua 9 The hapa haole arrangement featured lap steel guitar and ukulele Cogswell s songwriting credit is incorrectly attributed to Rebecca Roback on the label 10 Another hapa haole version pre dated Fio Rito recorded for Brunswick on November 11 1933 by future Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame honoree and lap steel guitar master Sol Hoʻopiʻi and His Novelty Quartet 11 Other big bands recorded the song during the 1930s The Ben Pollack Orchestra charting with a recording made for Columbia in January 1934 1 Style and context edit My Little Grass Shack is a hapa haole song a hybrid genre that mixed American jazz and dance rhythms swing and foxtrot Hawaiian instrumentation such as the steel guitar and ukulele and lyrics in both English and Hawaiian 12 hapa haole means half foreign and is also used in a literal sense to mean multiracial It was written recorded and reached the top of the charts nearly two decades after the start of the hapa haole fad the Hawaiian music craze which began with the popularity of a 1912 Broadway musical The Bird of Paradise and exploded in earnest at the Hawaiian Pavilion at San Francisco s Panama Pacific International Exposition in 1915 13 The music craze helped promote tourism to Hawaii 14 Through national songhits like My Little Grass Shack hapa haole music solidified and perpetuated U S mainland caricatures of Hawaiʻi as a place of grass shacks white sandy beaches lovely hula maidens and happy dancing natives 12 Though considered a fad in 1915 hapa haole remained popular for decades Technological innovation in travel pop culture and mass production helped sustain its popularity The 1915 Exposition celebrated the opening of the Panama Canal which made tourist access to Hawaii easier and faster PanAm made access even easier and faster when air travel to Hawaii was inaugurated in 1936 Music was a significant element in Hawaiian culture helping to attract visitors Colorful community events were staged usually involving flowers and parades Entertainment flourished to keep the visitors occupied Wonderfully wacky hapa haole music was performed to ukulele and steel guitar The tourist hula show was born The Hawaii Visitors Bureau took part in many promotional activities over the years but the most enduring and successful was launched in 1935 as the radio program Hawaii Calls Listeners grew up with the sounds of Hawaii from that popular show and developed lifelong desires to see and hear the real thing 15 Hawaiian music via sheet music the new technologies of records and radio and live travelling performances was a driving force for the Hawaii Craze that besotted the U S during the first half of the 20th century 12 Motion pictures helped keep the fad going through the 1930s as did television in the 1950s and 1960s 16 Radio was a particularly significant promotional tool Nearly a decade before Hawaii Calls for example Johnny Noble led a quartet of musicians to San Francisco to promote Hawaii on radio on behalf of the main shipping line to Hawaii Matson Lines 17 The advent of mass production assembly lines contributed as well by increasing supplies and reducing prices of steel guitars and ukuleles Sears Roebuck bought the Harmony guitar company to make ukuleles and cash in on the craze Hawaiian music also became incredibly popular as a result Ukes were mass produced in the thousands Harmony sold 500 000 in 1931 alone 18 My Little Grass Shack exemplifies these trends Written for a tourist event it possessed enduring appeal to tourists Everyone wanted to head to Hawaii take up life in a grass shack and hang out with their kane and wahine compatriots on the beach at Honaunau says The Kona Historical Society 3 It was introduced to mainland audiences via Ted Fio Rito s radio remote broadcast his recording was a number one hit and numerous recordings followed It was used in a number of films during the 1930s particularly musical shorts It appeared in television shows through the 1950s and 1960s and even more recently It remains a standard for ukulele again a popular instrument Lyrics editJ P McEvoy a popular magazine writer and humorist in the 1920s and 1930s wrote to the songwriters after hearing My Little Grass Shack on the radio Without benefit of printed lyrics he asked tongue in cheek about some of the Hawaiian place names and phrases in the song What does it mean What are connies and weenies How do ka chewbas sway Where is the beach at Holdem Sow How do homesick Highland boys get to this place and is a Fishin Foy any relation to the late Eddie 19 Two historic locations on the Big Island of Hawaii are mentioned in the title and lyrics Kealakekua where the Fourth of July canoe races took place is where English explorer James Cook was killed in 1779 The beach at Hōnaunau is now the site of Puʻuhonua o Hōnaunau National Historical Park the best known and best preserved ancient City of Refuge The Hawaiian phrase in the line I want to be with all the kanes and wahines that I used to know means men and women The line Where the Humuhumunukunukuapua a go swimming by refers to the reef triggerfish Hawaii s state fish by its long Hawaiian name Poi is a Hawaiian food staple made from taro root There is one full line in Hawaiian Komo mai no kaua i ka hale welakahao which literally translates to Come into our house while the iron s hot Dolly Parton in her televised live performance of the song in 1987 shouts out after the line is sung that it means Come to my house we re gonna party The little grass shack of the title did not refer to an actual location But the popularity of the song led to the opening of a gift shop in Kona called The Little Grass Shack The song was so popular that soldiers stationed in Hawaii during World War II who were not allowed to write letters home instead sent photographs of themselves in front of the gift shop to let their families know where they were 3 Structure editThe song was written in the key of B flat major and is played in 4 4 common time popularly known at the time as a foxtrot Ukulele arrangements are in G major The main body of the song is built upon two common chord progressions not including fills The first is 1 2 5 1 which in Bb walks up from Bb to C7 to F7 resolving back to Bb The first eight bars follow this progression as do the last twelve bars the last four of those last twelve bars repeat the melody lyrics and chords of the 5 1 F7 Bb resolution in the preceding four bars The second progression which makes up the second set of eight bars is 3 6 2 5 D7 to G7 to C7 to F7 a form often heard in Gospel music After the first sixteen bars there are variations within each progression and in their order In this middle section the first progression transitions directly into the second progression D7 without resolving to Bb The second progression resolves back to Bb rather than finishing on F7 as we enter the last twelve bars and repeat the first progression Most recordings begin with an instrumental introduction built upon the primary eight bar 1 2 5 1 progression or at least its last four bars featuring the same melody that is later played behind the Humuhumunukunukuapuaa lyric The original Noble sheet music differs It starts with a four bar instrumental introduction 5 1 F to Bb with the Humuhumunukunukuapuaa melody and then leads into an eight bar vocal introduction with a unique melody that is not repeated later in the song the lyrics setting up the theme of a homesick Hawaiian sailor yearning to return to Kona The full Noble introduction is rarely heard among available recordings There are examples of an introduction using the melody of another famous Hawaiian song Aloha ʻOe Big band versions present an instrumental version of the main verse before launching into the vocals frequently following up with additional instrumental verses Most versions in other genres that highlight vocalists launch straight into the vocals after a short 1 2 5 1 introduction Cover versions edit My Little Grass Shack has been recorded many times A partial list of artists who have recorded versions include Paul Whiteman 1934 Mills Brothers 1934 Dorothy Lamour 1944 Guy Lombardo 1949 Ames Brothers with Roy Smeck 1951 Les Paul and Mary Ford 1951 Annette Funicello 1960 and 2008 Tony Randall 1960 Bing Crosby recorded the song in 1961 20 for use on his radio show and it was subsequently included in the CD Return to Paradise Islands 21 Crosby also included the song in a medley on his album On the Happy Side 1962 Teresa Brewer 1961 Firehouse Five Plus Two 1961 Ray Charles 1962 Benny Goodman 1963 The Andrews Sisters 1965 Hank Snow 1967 June Christy Arthur Godfrey Dave Van Ronk 1973 Don Ho 1979 Leon Redbone with Ringo Starr 1994 Lisa Loeb 2002 Jesse Colin Young 2004 Film and television edit My Little Grass Shack has been used frequently in movies in two waves In the first decade after the song was written a time when Hollywood regularly produced shorts for theatrical exhibition performances of the song were common Mike Fright 1934 Our Gang star as The International Silver String Submarine Band crashing a youth talent show where another contestant Joy Lane sings My Little Grass Shack with four girls dancing hula and Billy Lee tap dancing Joy Lane joined Ted Fio Rito s Orchestra in 1947 22 Show Kids 1935 Another short centered on a youth talent show in which Joy Lane sings the song playing the ukulele backed by hula dancers 22 Mirrors 1934 Features Freddie Rich and His Orchestra performing the song with Vera Van and The Eton Boys singing vocals 22 Freddie Martin and His Orchestra 1935 The title band performs the song 22 Club House Party 1935 Roy Smeck performs an instrumental version on slide guitar 23 My Little Grass Shack 1942 Soundie made up entirely of the song the music and background vocals by Andy Iona who played saxophone in Johnny Noble s Moana Orcherstra and the Royal Hawaiian Orchestra 24 Go For Broke 1951 The first lines played as an act of defiance by a Nisei member of the 442nd RCT following first meeting with their platoon s new commanding officer The second wave began in 1990 My Little Grass Shack becoming a popular movie soundtrack song particularly for films set in Hawaii The Hot Spot 1990 Instrumental version by The New Hawaiian Band 22 North 1994 Part of Marc Shaiman s Hawaii Medley 22 Runaway Bride 1999 Barbershop quartet The Hale Town Four sing a cappella in the luau scene 22 Breakfast of Champions 1999 Martin Denny s instrumental lounge version 22 50 First Dates 2004 New version by Leon Redbone with Ringo Starr contributing vocals in the background of a date scene 22 Lilo amp Stitch 2 Stitch Has a Glitch 2005 Soundtrack album includes Lisa Loeb cover Lilo amp Stitch Hawaiian Volume 2 includes Annette Funicello cover Forgetting Sarah Marshall 2008 Instrumental version by Hawaii Tattoo but not in the scene where Dwayne the Bartender Da Vone McDonald is asked about Hawaii s state fish and answers Humuhumunukunukuapuaa bitch 22 On television My Little Grass Shack was sometimes sung by a cast member as part of the story sometimes accompanying themselves on ukulele and sometimes was performed in variety shows Our Miss Brooks May 30 1954 Osgood Conklin Gale Gordon sings it to convince a client to vacation in Hawaii in The Hawkins Travel Agency 22 The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show April 4 1955 George Burns sings and plays the ukulele with Gracie Allen singing along in the final scene of Gracie Tries to Select George s Next Wife 22 The Steve Allen Show October 13 1957 Dorothy Lamour sings 25 The Bob Cummings Show April 22 1958 Bertha Krause veteran character actress Kathleen Freeman sings it in the Bob Sails to Hawaii episode 22 The Lawrence Welk Show 1958 Part of the Champagne Medley 26 You Bet Your Life January 1 1959 Played by Groucho Marx s orchestra 22 The Hollywood Palace November 21 1964 Host Arthur Godfrey sings accompanying himself on ukulele 27 The Hollywood Palace January 1 1966 Bing Crosby co hosting with Sonny amp Cher sings with Donna Butterworth of Paradise Hawaiian Style 28 The Odd Couple February 2 1973 In the episode Myrna s Debut Felix Tony Randall plays the ukulele and sings with Murray Al Molinaro while Myrna Penny Marshall tap dances in a hula skirt 29 Tony Orlando and Dawn March 5 1975 Performed by series hosts Tony Orlando amp Dawn 30 Dolly September 27 1987 In the episode My Hawaii Dolly Parton sings My Little Grass Shack with local musicians and with eight girls dancing hula at the famous luau at Paradise Cove on Oahu Muppets Tonight March 8 1987 In the premiere episode of the short lived series in the Bay of Pigswatch skit David Hoggselhoff sings a couple of lines of My Little Grass Shack for Andy and Randy Pig before he collapses upon the entrance of Spamela Hamderson The Simpsons November 12 2000 In the episode Insane Clown Poppy Krusty the Clown Dan Castellaneta tries to cheer up his estranged daughter Sophie Drew Barrymore by singing and playing the song on ukulele 31 Precursor and sequels edit My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaii was originally written as a parody of the chorus of Back in Hackensack New Jersey composed in 1924 by Dan A Russo and Art L Biner The opening lines of the chorus are I wanna go back to a black little shack back in Hackensack New Jersey I wanna see all the gals and pals that I used to know The chord structure is nearly identical the melody slightly altered Other verses in Hackensack with completely different chord structures and melodies have no corollaries in My Little Grass Shack 32 Two sequels were written to Little Grass Shack in 1934 Johnny Noble getting partial credit for both I ve Found a Little Grass Skirt for My Little Grass Shack in Hawaii is credited to Noble and Harry Owens who took over for Noble as leader of the Royal Hawaiian Orchestra when Noble stepped down to concentrate on song publishing 33 Also in 1934 Royal Hawaiian Orchestra players Lee Wood and Don McDiarmid submitted a sequel to Noble titled It s Just a Little Brown Gal in a Little Grass Skirt in a Little Grass Shack in Hawaii Owens did not want to add yet another Little Grass Shack number to the orchestra s songbook Noble published it giving himself co writing credit He then gave it to Ray Kinney a future Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame honoree he had worked with before The success of Kinney s recording convinced Owens to add it to the songbook under the shortened title Little Brown Gal Kinney joined the Orchestra that same year The song became an oft covered hapa haole classic that Lee Wood himself continued to perform a half century later 34 In 1950 Harry Stewart recorded My Little Old Shack in Minneapolis Minnesota under the character name Yogi Yorgesson substituting comic Swedish lyrics for the Hawaiian lyrics in My Little Grass Shack In the last line of the verse Yorgesson sings When the mackerel and the pickerel and the lutefisk go swimming by 35 Bibliography editBolante Ronna Keany Michael 2007 50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii Honolulu Magazine Retrieved October 10 2016 Cooley Timothy J 2014 Surfing About Music University of California Press ISBN 978 0520276635 Inman David 2006 Television Variety Shows Histories and Episode Guides to 57 Programs McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0786421985 Kanahele George S 1979 Hawaiian Music and Musicians An Illustrated History The University Press of Hawaii ISBN 978 0824805784 Melrose Maile Soldiers and The Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Kona Historical Society Retrieved October 10 2016 Noble Gurre Ploner 1948 Hula Blues The Story of Johnny Noble Hawaii Its Music and Musicians Literary Licensing LLC ISBN 978 1258818135 Shishikura Masaya 2007 I ll Remember You Nostalgia and Hapa Haole Music PDF University of Hawaii M A Thesis Whitcomb Ian Hawaiian Memories Retrieved October 10 2016 Yamashiro Aiko 2009 Ethics in Song Becoming Kamaʻaina in Hapa Haole Music PDF University of Hawaiʻi Manoa Retrieved October 10 2016 References edit a b Chart appearances for the song My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaii Database of Popular Music Retrieved October 10 2016 a b 50 Greatest Songs of Hawaii Honolulu Magazine 2007 Retrieved October 10 2016 a b c Soldiers and The Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Kona Historical Society 20 May 2014 Retrieved October 10 2016 a b Kanahele pp 261 a b c d e Noble pp 87 88 The Cocoanut Grove Ambassadors Radio Archives Retrieved October 10 2016 Liner Notes Collateral Works Retrieved October 10 2016 Songs from the Year 1934 The World s Music Charts Retrieved October 10 2016 Victor matrix BS 77672 My Little Grass Shack Tony Harrison Noelani Hawaiian Orchestra Discography of American Historical Recordings UC Santa Barbara Library 2016 Retrieved October 10 2016 My Little Grass Shack Kealakekua Victor label Aloha Valley Retrieved October 10 2016 Kolo Pa b w My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaii Retrieved October 10 2016 a b c Yamashiro p 1 Hapa Haole Songs Retrieved October 10 2016 Cooley p 31 Hawaii Visitors amp Convention Bureau History Retrieved October 10 2016 Shishikura pp 23 26 Noble p 79 Ukulele History Retrieved October 10 2016 Noble pp 89 90 A Bing Crosby Discography BING magazine International Club Crosby Retrieved December 8 2017 allmusic com allmusic com Retrieved December 8 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Johnny Noble Filmography IMDB Retrieved October 10 2016 Roy Smeck Little Grass Shack YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Retrieved October 10 2016 1940 s My Little Grass Shack Musical Soundie YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Retrieved October 10 2016 Inman p 12 The Lawrence Welk Show Champagne Medley YouTube Retrieved October 10 2016 dead YouTube link Inman p 288 Inman p 291 Little Grass Shack OddCouple info Retrieved October 10 2016 Inman p 376 Simpsons Archive Retrieved October 10 2016 Back in Hackensack New Jersey Library of Congress National Jukebox Retrieved October 10 2016 I ve Found a Little Grass Skirt Retrieved October 10 2016 Whitcomb Ian Hawaiian Memories Retrieved October 10 2016 My Little Old Shack In Minneapolis Minnesota OCLC 80862214 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua Hawaii amp oldid 1182019637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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