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MAUI no
ka oi Magazine

Spring 2005
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Island Portrait:
Hawaiian
Renaissance Man
by Tom Stevens
Guitarist,
writer, teacher, artist, farmer, fisherman, father George Kahumoku just
won’t say “won’t.”
When George Kahumoku, Jr., was five years old, he lived with a hanai
(adoptive) aunt who had some curious child-rearing ideas. She bought him a
toy ‘ukulele and a beautiful paper kite, then hung them out of reach on his
closet door.
“When you’re good, you can play with those,” he was told.
At five, the future slack-key guitar master wasn’t certain what “good”
meant, but he surely wanted to play with the new toys that tantalized him
day after day from the closet door.
When begging, crying and “good” behavior failed, George took matters into
his own hands. Dragging a chair to the door one day, he tearfully smashed
the kite and the ‘ukulele to bits so his aunt could no longer use them
against him.
Recounted in Kahumoku’s colorful memoir, A Hawaiian Life, this tale of a
“stubborn child” strikes a theme that recurs throughout its author’s life
and work. When life says “won’t,” you need a stubborn will.
Life first said “won’t” when George, then six months old, toppled from his
father’s rowboat into the muddy waters of O‘ahu’s Ala Wai Canal. When his
father finally found him on the bottom long minutes later, the baby was
lifeless and blue.
Panicked, his family rushed the infant to an old Hawaiian healer who had
them blow the “breath of life” back into the body. Miraculously, George Jr.
survived, only to suffer a stroke and near-terminal cancer later in life.
“I was diagnosed with cancer when I was 27,” he recalls. “The doctors gave
me six months to live.” But as had others, they underestimated Kahumoku’s
remarkable will. Twenty-seven years later, he’s still going strong.
“I still live like I only have six months,” he confides. “I don’t wait to do
New Year’s resolutions. Every six months, I ask myself: ‘What have I done to
improve the world, or to add something to the world?”
Now 54, the Hawaiian renaissance man has added a lot. He has 40 music
recordings, one book in print and another on the way, his own music label (Kealia
Farms), and original sculptures in public and private collections worldwide.
The Kďhei resident also is a father, teacher, entertainer, fisherman,
farmer, ceramist, builder . . . you name it.
How can so much achievement be packed into one life?
“Up until recently, I only needed about three hours’ sleep a night,” says
Kahumoku. The rest of the time, he bounces from his Lahainaluna School art
classroom to recording gigs, art studios, writing projects and hula
festivals.
His latest projects? “I’m building a house at Kahakuloa and writing a
cookbook for foods you can grow in your own garden,” he says. Also coming up
are the second and third CDs of the Hoku Award-winning Hymns of Hawai‘i
project teaming Kahumoku with multi-instrumentalist Daniel Ho. And Kahumoku
has a recording date with steel guitar legend Bob Brozman for George
Winston’s influential Dancing Cat label.
And—yes, there’s more—Wednesday nights at the Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua Hotel,
Kahumoku hosts the slack-key guitar showcase with other masters.
Stop by. You’ll be inspired by the music—and the man.
©copyright
2005, MAUI no ka oi Magazine and Tom Stevens
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