Paradise Isle - Sam Koki
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- David Matzenik
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Paradise Isle - Sam Koki
For those of you who love the old South Seas adventure movies the complete Paradise Isle from 1937 can be downloaded at this site:
http://www.archive.org/details/paradise_isle
The sound quality varies throughout, but luckily the musical parts are pretty good. Lani McIntire's Hawaiians do the backings. Movita sings and plays the uke, and of course we hear the original version of Sam's party piece. George Piltz, another well remembered Hawaiian musician, plays Tono in a supporting role. Much of the film was shot on location in Samoa and those scenes are now of historical interest. It was a Monogram production which is now defunct. One touch I love is the use of bamboo letters in the titles. I never thought I would get to see this one. Aloha DM
http://www.archive.org/details/paradise_isle
The sound quality varies throughout, but luckily the musical parts are pretty good. Lani McIntire's Hawaiians do the backings. Movita sings and plays the uke, and of course we hear the original version of Sam's party piece. George Piltz, another well remembered Hawaiian musician, plays Tono in a supporting role. Much of the film was shot on location in Samoa and those scenes are now of historical interest. It was a Monogram production which is now defunct. One touch I love is the use of bamboo letters in the titles. I never thought I would get to see this one. Aloha DM
Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother.
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- David Matzenik
- Posts: 1685
- Joined: 8 Oct 2004 12:01 am
- Location: Cairns, on the Coral Sea
Billy, in this short soundie Sam is miming with an acoustic guitar but you can see those forward slants. I have yet to play along in C#m7 tuning.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbQ7Dq_FgGw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbQ7Dq_FgGw
Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother.
- Rick Stratton
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Thanks for posting that, David.
I love these old films! I've never seen this one before.
Everytime I see one of these I end up learning a song or 2! I've already started putting together a version of the title song, works well in A6 tuning. Sounds a little too high on the E6.
"The Hurricane" is a fave ("Moon of Manakoora")
"Waikiki Wedding" ("Sweet Leilani" & "Blue Hawaii")
The list goes on and on and has likely been covered in other posts here.
I love these old films! I've never seen this one before.
Everytime I see one of these I end up learning a song or 2! I've already started putting together a version of the title song, works well in A6 tuning. Sounds a little too high on the E6.
"The Hurricane" is a fave ("Moon of Manakoora")
"Waikiki Wedding" ("Sweet Leilani" & "Blue Hawaii")
The list goes on and on and has likely been covered in other posts here.
- David Matzenik
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- Location: Cairns, on the Coral Sea
- Garry Vanderlinde
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Paradise Isle - Sam Koki
David - U beaut - trust an Aussie to come up with such a pearler. It was listening to playing such as this that prompted me to pose the question on the forum some time ago - are we really doing any better now than then? Take away your multi-necks, stands, pedals, reverb, foot controls - just a six string guitar on your lap and basic amp. - can you think of any of today's players that could do much better? Personally, I do not think we can but I got shot down and was told you cannot compare between now and then - it is like comparing apples with oranges. But the bonus for this household was he sasa. My wife is Samoan and I said to come and have a look at how they did the sasa when she was two years old. Pretty well the same now - I guess there are only a certain number of body movements that can be used. We will be having our own sasa in a couple of weeks at our 50th wedding anniversary. I hope you wish this palagi well. Thanks again David.
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Re: Paradise Isle - Sam Koki
When it comes to the steel it's quite easy to do a decades apart comparison, it's simply a person, the steel w/maybe an amp, solo or in a group, not too complicated. There is no comparison, today is the dark ages vs the golden era, with the inevitable handful of standouts in today's field of whom most may have had trouble getting any steel work back in the day.Mac McKenzie wrote:can you think of any of today's players that could do much better? I do not think we can and was told you cannot compare between now and then.
- David Matzenik
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Aloha Mac,or should I say Talofa, you and your wife have a special perspective on the Samoan content of Paradise Isle. Congratulations on your half century. I'm glad I was able to pass the Paradise Isle website on to appreciative people. Irving Johnson had the schooner Yankee in Samoa in 1937 and she appears in the few Samoan scenes in the movie The Hurricane, another one worth digging up. And yes I agree on the wonders of the little six string Hawaiian guitars.
Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother.
- Nic Neufeld
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Thanks, several years hence, for this! Just the other night I watched "Waikiki Wedding" for the first time, having cajoled myself to order a relatively cheap Bing Crosby collection on Amazon (found it amusing, if a bit of a B movie...humorously my elementary aged children picked the moment to join me watching it right as Martha Raye's character sang a paean to intoxication, with the song "Okolehao"). I was just tinkering with the chords to Paradise Isle when I thought I'd google for Sam Koki's original and found this old thread! The story of Jerry Byrd sitting in a movie theater several times running to figure out how he did it is probably well known. Will have to watch it soon...
Waikīkī, at night when the shadows are falling
I hear the rolling surf calling
Calling and calling to me
I hear the rolling surf calling
Calling and calling to me
- David Matzenik
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Hi Nic, If there was an grading for South Seas adventure movies, it should have been in giant clams, as in many of them, a pearl diver gets his foot caught in one. It is also the theme of Roy Orbison's Leah.
Aloma of the South Seas with Dorothy Lamour gets 4 clams. The high rating being for the sound track music.
Aloma of the South Seas with Dorothy Lamour gets 4 clams. The high rating being for the sound track music.
Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother.
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