Click Title to Access Melody
He mele no ka Lani kēia
No ka Sumeramikoto
Hoʻomalu ʻo ia me ke aloha
Mai ka Noho Aliʻi Wailuku
Hānau ʻia i ka wā Showa
I ka ʻāina o ka pukana lā
ʻO ka hoʻoilina mōʻī ʻo ia
Ua piʻi i ka noho aliʻi
Noho Tennō Heika iā Koukyo
Me kana Kōugōu nani nō
Haku lāua i ka waka
A hoʻokani i ka waiolina kū
Hoʻomalu ʻo ia i ka wā Heisei
Pūlama ʻia me ka haʻaheo
E kēlā me kēia poʻe Kepanī
Mai Hokkaido a Ryukyushoto
Kau ʻia i ka hanohano nui
Ua Tennō hoʻokahi wale nō
Ma nā wahi like ʻole a pau
ʻAʻohe Kōutei i ka honua
He paʻipunahele nō kēia
He mele no ka Tennō Heika
Ke aliʻi o ke aupuni pae ʻāina
Ke aliʻi maikaʻi o Nīpona Japan
Haʻina ʻia mai ka puana la
No ka Sumeramikoto
Hoʻomalu ʻo ia me ke aloha
Mai ka Noho Aliʻi Wailuku
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This is a song to honor the royal chief
Honoring the heavenly ruler above the clouds
He governs with love
From the Chrysanthemum Throne
Born in the Showa era
In the Land of the Rising Sun
The heir apparent
He ascended to the throne
His majesty the emperor lives in the Imperial Palace
With his lovely Empress
They compose a classical form of poetry
And he plays the cello
He rules in the era called universal peace
Cherished with pride
By all the Japanese people
From Hokkaido to Okinawa
Placed in a position of great honor
He is the only Emperor
Anywhere
There are no other emperors in the world
This is an expression of great aloha
A song for His Majesty, the Emperor
The chief of the Island nation
The benevolent chief of Japan
The story is told
Honoring the heavenly ruler
He governs with love
From the Chrysanthemum Throne
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Source: Keith Haugen: hakumele@aol.com - Believed to be the first song or musicial
tribute written to honor a specific Japanese emperor, Keith Haugen
composed the mele after he returned from a Sept. 2007, concert performance
in Japan, to honor Japan's emperor in the typical Hawaiian tradition.
Released to coincide with the emperor's arrival in Hawaiʻi on Tuesday,
July 14, 2009, Haugen wrote the melody for the new song in a pentatonic
(5-tone) scale to give it a more Japanese "sound, blending ʻukulele and shamisen, art forms from two genre and two distinctive
ancient cultures, Hawaiian and Japanese. It was also recorded as a
chant featuring Kumu Hula Kahaʻi Topolinski with kakegoe, (Noh drama
vocalization) and the traditional sounds of Japanese taiko drumming
(kozutsumi and odaiko) added by Taiko Master Kenny Endo. For more information
see Keith Haugen's website: hakumele@aol.com
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