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  2. Oahu Music Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oahu_Music_Company

    The Oahu Music Company was a music education program in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s to teach students to play the Hawaiian Guitar. Popular culture in America became fascinated with Hawaiian music during the first half of the twentieth century [1] and in 1916, recordings of indigenous Hawaiian instruments outsold every other genre of music in the U.S. [2] By 1920, sales of ...

  3. The Hawaiian steel guitar changed American music. Can ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/hawaiian-steel-guitar-changed...

    One Cleveland-based enterprise, the Oahu Publishing Company, founded in 1926, sent salesmen door to door, promising families a free guitar for every child that completed a year’s worth of ...

  4. Lap steel guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lap_steel_guitar

    The Dobro or resonator guitar is a uniquely American lap steel guitar with a resonator cone designed to make a guitar louder. [15]: 109 It was patented by the Dopyera brothers in 1927, [15]: 109 but the name "Dobro", a portmanteau of DOpyera and BROthers, became a generic term for this type of guitar. [44]

  5. Joseph Kekuku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Kekuku

    In 1889 while attending the Kamehameha School for Boys, Kekuku accidentally discovered the sound of the steel guitar. In an article first seen in 1932, C.S. DeLano, publisher of the "Hawaiian Music In Los Angeles" whose "Hawaiian Love Song" was the first original composition to be written for the Hawaiian Steel Guitar said:

  6. Electromuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromuse

    Electromuse also made Spanish acoustic guitars, hollowbody acoustic-electric guitars, and other stringed instruments. Vacuum tube instrument amplifiers manufactured by subcontractors such as Valco were also sold under the Electromuse brand, often as part of a package deal offered to consumers that included a lap steel guitar and matching ...

  7. Music of Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Hawaii

    The popularity throughout the 1920s of Hawaiian music, with its unique slide-style of guitar playing, prompted the invention of the electric guitar in 1931, as a lap steel guitar, the "frying pan", by George Beauchamp. Electric amplification allowed the Hawaiian-style guitar to be heard in performances of larger popular bands.

  8. Valco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valco

    Valco manufactured and sold electric (since the 1950s), [3] resonator, [3] lap steel [3] and classical [4] guitars and vacuum tube amplifiers under a variety of brand names including Supro, Airline, National and Oahu. [1]

  9. Oahu’s historic homes offer a slice of history and a ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/oahu-historic-homes-offer-slice...

    There’s a mountain on Oahu named for the Greek myth of Tantalus, for whom satisfaction was always just out of reach. The road up is winding, filled with switchbacks, hanging vines, and vistas ...