Brother Noland - Speaking Brown (AGS-082)
The year was 1980, and the influences of artists like The Sunday Manoa, Gabby Pahinui, Olomana, and Keola and Kapono Beamer resonated throughout the islands as they heralded a new sound of and for modern indigenous peoples, part of the cultural revolution known as the Hawaiian Renaissance. On the other side of 1970s island life, bands like Kalapana, Country Comfort, and Cecilio & Kapono were shaping a contemporary sonic identity for locals â indigenous and otherwise â blending rock, soul, country, and jazz into a pleasant pop blend that continues to inspire musicians today.
In the middle of it all was Brother Noland.
In a catalog that now spans more than 40 years, Speaking Brown is Brother Nolandâs magnum opus. Listen to the album in full, and youâll instinctively understand this as the songs unfold. The music â all originals, save for âHaleakalÄâ and âManowaiopuna/KĆâulaâ â melds Hawaiian music with contemporary styling, but not in the way that The Sunday Manoa or the Beamer Brothers had done in the previous decade. Close comparisons are Chucky Boy Chockâs folksy explorations of Hawaiian music on his Oahu Brand and Brown Co. Vol 1 albums, and Nohelani Cyprianoâs 1979 debut LP, which married Hawaiian instruments with modern genres. Cyprianoâs effort was much more pop-centric than Nolandâs; her recordings nod to current and past eras (like Motown and hapa-haole), whereas with Speaking Brown each song is place-based or in tribute to a loved one, a typical quality of Hawaiian mele. The album grew from modern and ancestral Hawaiian identities, and from Aloha âÄina, the love and respect for Hawaiâi, its land and its people, which remains a core belief Brother Noland practices to this day.
The album opens with an original arrangement of âHaleakalÄ Hulaâ, composed by Alice NÄmakelua. The first 30 seconds of the song indicate how Brother Noland does things: the rocking rhythm and disco syndrum propel the layered guitars and vocal harmonies into a fusion of old Hawaiian music with modern day attitude. Sung in âĆlelo Hawaiâi, as a listener you might think you know what to expect herein, but so far itâs unlike anything youâve heard. This is the way Brother Noland does things: familiar, but different.
The âhitsâ on Speaking Brown were limited to âPua Laneâ, which today remains a staple in Nolandâs live performances, and âPueo, Tara and Meâ, which is currently part of Hawaiian Airlinesâ in-flight music video programming. Both songs, coincidentally, represent Nolandâs upbringing: in the urban projects of Palama Settlement in Honolulu, and among the rolling hills of Waimea on Hawaiâi Island. Another cut, âLook What Theyâve Doneâ, wouldâve made an impact if not for local radio stations banning it, fearful of repercussions from broadcasting its criticism of development of Hawaiiâs iconic (read: âprofitableâ) tourist destination, WaikÄ«kÄ«. But Noland wasnât looking to make hits or political statements â he wanted to make an album. Noland recognized the need to have recordings of his own so that he could stand alongside his industry peers.Â
By the time âKawaihaeâ kicks in on the B-side, the album has gently woven itself into your heart and soul, its roots reaching to the soil, sky and sea, its vision looking to past, present and future. But you have to let this happen. Thereâs no hurry on Speaking Brown; you need to be present to understand its power. Like the gradual unfolding of a morning at HaleakalÄ, itâs not possible to look just at the sunrise â you inherently take in the mountainâs magnificent shadow, which stretches across the cloud layers, the small towns below, the majestic sea surrounding Maui, the infinite horizon.
In a time of impossibly short attention spans, Speaking Brown might get overlooked. We hope that instead of celebrating this album simply for the cuts that eventually became Brother Noland's biggest hits, listeners can enjoy Speaking Brown for what it is: a whole greater than the sum of its parts; a cornerstone of Brother Nolandâs lifeâs work; and one of the most innovative albums of modern day Hawaiâi, which has shaped contemporary island music in a way thatâs familiar, but different.