0-year career has spawned oceans of musical aloha By LESTER CHANG TGI Staff Writer On Friday evenings at the Holiday Inn SunSpree Hotel, longtime entertainer Larry Rivera presents a type of entertainment visitors and old-time residents can hardly find any
0-year career has spawned oceans of musical aloha
By LESTER CHANG
TGI Staff Writer
On Friday evenings at the
Holiday Inn SunSpree Hotel, longtime entertainer Larry Rivera presents a type
of entertainment visitors and old-time residents can hardly find any more in
Hawai’i: Hapa Hawaiian music from the 1950s.
The music, which mixes
Hawaiian and English words with soft melodies, caresses the ear, relaxes the
body and conjures up images of a balmy South Seas paradise.
Wearing an
aloha shirt and lei, Rivers sits on a stool on an open hotel deck and plays
renditions from 200 songs he has created during a 50-year career.
On this
night, visitors applauded Rivera and demanded an encore.
The type of music
has become an art form in Hawai’i and has helped perpetuate the Hawaiian
culture and family values, Rivera said.
“I love all kinds of music, but I
have heard from so many visitors that they don’t hear enough of this type of
music, which is so associated with Hawai’i,” Rivera said.
His music, which
focuses on all things that are Kaua’i, has helped bring visitors back to the
island, Rivera said.
Some of his more popular songs are “Love and Aloha.”
his first hit, “Beautiful Rainbow,” “Kamalani,” “Beautiful Kaua’i,” which he
popularized ,”What a Wonderful World” and “The Hawaiian Wedding,” made famous
by Elvis Presley.
His music drew the interest of Presley and Bing Crosby
and media celebrities such as Arthur Godfrey.
In Hawai’i, his music has
been recorded by Israel Kamakawiwo’ole and the Makaha Sons and has won
recognition among other musicians, he said.
Rivera, who turned 70 last
month, said he draws his inspiration from one source: Kaua’i, his birthplace.
He sings songs that are synonymous with Hawai’i such as “Beyond the Reef”
and “Tiny Bubbles,” were made famous by Don Ho and Pearly Shells.
Rivera
said he writes music dealing with Kauai’s natural beauty, its people and its
lifestyle.
“You can get inspired from a setting sun, a person’s quotation
or a person’s feeling,” he said.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Iniki,
Rivera felt compelled to craft a song that would lift the spirit of Kauaians,
to encourage them to rebuild the island. His creation was “Valley of Rainbow,”
a song that spoke of optimism in the face of natural destruction.
If there
were any singers he patterned his singing style after, they would be Connie
Francis, “because she sings from the heart,” and Perry Como, “because he sings
so smoothly,” Rivera said.
Rivera got his start in music 50 years ago. Born
and raised in Kekaha, he had worked briefly at the Coco Palms Lodge, a small
operation and the forerunner of the Coco Palms Hotel.
Rivera went into the
Army during the Korean War and met his future wife of 45 years, Gloria, on
O’ahu (they have six grown children now, including three daughters who are
professional entertainers, and there 16 grandchildren and one
great-grandchild).
After the war, Rivera returned to Kaua’i and was
reemployed at the lodge. Grace Guslander and her husband took over the hotel
property in the mid-1950s and began expanding the operations. Rivera worked as
a bartender, dishwater, waiter, front desk clerk and entertainer.
He
initially performed for free. That changed as the Guslanders discovered Rivera
had talent and was marketable, and billed him as top entertainer at the
hotel.
For 20 years, Rivera also attained notoriety by performing the
“Blue Hawaii” weddings in a lagoon on lands used by Hawaiian royalty.
Grace Guslander is dead now, but Rivers said he still holds her in the
highest regard because “she was like a mother to everyone and treated everyone
with respect.”
Rivera worked at the hotel until Hurricane Iniki closed it
down. There are now plans to renovate it and to reopen it.
Rivers recently
led 19 U.S. mainland visitors on a tour through the hotel in conjunction with
Elder Hostel, a Boston-based group that sets up travel outings for people who
are 50 and older. The tour was intended to widen their understanding of
Hawaiian music. Similar musical tours were conducted on Oahu and
Mau’i.
Rivera discussed the history of the hotel, which was the flagship
hotel on Kaua’i in the 1950s and which personified gracious Hawaiian
hospitality.
From an old dining room stage he once performed on, Rivera
reminisced about nightly performances: The blowing of conch shells, the
lighting of torches among a grove of hundreds of coconut trees, and the
pounding of drums.
The grounds were once the home of Queen Debra Kapule,
Kaua’i’s last queen, Rivera said.
Rivera also sang renditions of some of
his favorite songs, including the “Hawaiian Wedding Song,” popularized by
Presley.
Rivera met the king of rock and roll during the filming of Blue
Hawai’i at the hotel in 1961. Rivera recalled it was his turn to perform with
other employees before an audience that included Presley, and that he was so
nervous he could barely look up. Rivera sang “Love and Aloha” and received a
reception that surprised him. Presley stood up and clapped loudly and wanted an
encore, Rivers said. The song was later introduced to Bing Crosby.
Through
their friendship, Rivera was introduced to other heavyweights in the music
industry on the U.S. mainland.
The recent tour at the old Coco Palms
affected Joe Leinbach, a retired banker, and his wife Wilda, both from Florida,
the same way.
Wilda was a teacher at Leileihua High School on Oahu in 1959
when she met her Joe, a Navy officer stationed at Pearl Harbor. They got
married and celebrated their honeymoon at the hotel.
Being on the musical
tour has helped her appreciate Hawaiian music more, Wilda Leinbach
said.
“Larry Rivera is doing a wonderful job,” she said. “His music is more
paniolo than Hawaiian, but it is wonderful. It is part of Hawai’i,
too.”
Staff writer Lester Chang can be reached at 245-3681 (ext. 225)
and lchang@pulitzer.net