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Eddie Leilani Kamae was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, and raised both there and in Lahaina, Maui.His grandmother was a dancer for King David Kalākaua's court. [2]He learned to play the 'ukulele [3] with an instrument his bus driver brother found on the public transport.
The trip culminates with a visit to Founder's Island, where Finn meets his biological mother, Minerva Campbell (voiced by Sharon Horgan), and discovers what happened to the remainder of the human race. Islands is the second Adventure Time miniseries to have been produced, following Stakes, which aired in November 2015.
Ohta was a boy when he was taught his first three chords on the ukulele by his mother. He entered an amateur contest at age 9 and won the $10 first prize. [1] Three years later he met Eddie Kamae on the beach, at the time considered the best ukulele player in the world, and became his student. [2]
Peter Moon was born in Honolulu on the island of Oʻahu to parents of Korean and Chinese descent, [3] Wook Moon and Shay-Yung Moon (née Zen). [4] [5] He graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1962 and from the University of Hawaii at Manoa in 1968. [4]
25th episode of the 4th season of Adventure Time "I Remember You" Adventure Time episode Episode no. Season 4 Episode 25 Directed by Larry Leichliter [a] Adam Muto [b] Nick Jennings [c] Written by Cole Sanchez Rebecca Sugar Story by Patrick McHale Kent Osborne Pendleton Ward Featured music "Oh, Bubblegum" by Rebecca Sugar and Cole Sanchez "Nuts" by Rebecca Sugar" "Remember You" by Rebecca ...
Their ' 1978 LP Honolulu City Lights title song was a popular single in Hawaii, and in 2004 Honolulu Magazine placed the album first on a list of the fifty most important Hawaiian albums. In the 1980s, the brothers separated professionally, each producing award-winning records.
By July 1867, the song was printed and was available for purchase in Honolulu, becoming the first of her compositions ever published. This decidedly Christian song served as the national anthem for ten years until her brother, by that time reigning as King Kalākaua, set it aside in favor of his own composition, "Hawaiʻi Ponoʻī", in 1876. [3]
Nora Aunor (1971) on Blue Hawaii [3] Slim Whitman (1977), recorded it on his Home on the Range album; The Melbourne Ukulele Kollective [4] John Ford's 1963 movie Donovan's Reef utilized the song as its opening theme as well as in later scenes. In the 1970s, C&H Sugar used the melody for their jingle