Ray Kane, The Legendary Ray Kane: Old Style Slack-Key (Cord, 2003) Leonard Kwan, The Legendary Leonard Kwan: The Complete Early Recordings (Cord, 2003)
Ray Kane (pronounced Kah-NAY) and Leonard Kwan, both slightly younger than Pahinui, are also among the tradition's acknowledged masters. Born in 1931, Kwan died in 2000 but left a store of grand recordings, of which this welcome reissue documents the first, from discs waxed from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. It opens with his original "Hawaiian Chimes," from a 1957 45 on the local Island label, and goes on to a range of instrumentals, a few of non-Hawaiian origin (the 1873 parlor weeper "Silver Threads Among the Gold"), but all sounding very much part of a single musical vision. As he does for the Kane companion disc, George Winston provides detailed technical notes for hard-core guitar nerds. The rest of us need only listen to marvel at Kwan's overpowering gift. Besides being a wonderfully fluid, soulful guitar player, Ray Kane (b. 1925) possesses a haunting, high-tenor voice with which he covers traditional standards such as "Wai O Ke Aniani," "Hi'ilawe" and "Hawaiian Reverie." Hearty thanks to Cord International for making this seminal American music available to all of us. My own favorite of these two is Kane's, probably because I love his singing so much. But for all real-world purposes, there is no artistic distance worth mentioning between the two. Each has his own take, differing but equally noble, on an exquisite tradition. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 9 October 2004 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |