Monday, June 13, 2011

Tidbit written by Roger Bong from Aloha Got Soul

Aloha Got Soul
THE AUTHORITY ON HAWAIIAN FUNK, JAZZ, AND SOUL MUSIC.


EVENTS, FUNK, LIVE!, PHOTOGRAPHY, SOUL
Something to Shout About: The Final 70s Night Club Reunion
POSTED BY ROGER BONG ⋅ JUNE 13, 2011

FILED UNDER 70S NIGHT CLUB REUNION, 70S NIGHTCLUB REUNION DVD, ALA MOANA HIBISCUS BALLROOM, AURA HAWAII BAND, AURA MENDOZA FAMILY, AURA REUNION, HAWAIIAN DISCO, HAWAIIAN FUNK, HAWAIIAN MUSIC BLOG, HAWAIIAN SUPERMAN, LIL ALBERT HAWAII, NUEVA VIDA HAWAII, PAULINE WILSON 70S REUNION, PHASE VII REUNION, POWER POINT HAWAII MUSIC, WAIKIKI 70S CLUBS, WAIKIKI DISCOS
Forty years in the making, the last reunion concert featuring Hawaii’s biggest disco, funk, soul and R&B acts from the seventies finally came to an end Saturday night at the Ala Moana Hotel Hibiscus Ballroom.

Pauline Wilson captivated the crowd.

It was a blast, every band went all out, everyone was in high spirits. The dancefloor was jam-packed from the very first song to the last!

For now, some thoughts on this year’s 70s Night Club Reunion (the last of its kind, although we hope that isn’t totally true!). More photos and more stuff soon.

Nueva Vida was a surprise hit (for me, at least). Triple threat of singers, including Carla Young, Lil Albert and Pauline Wilson. Young did a stellar version of Us3′s “Cantaloop.”
Remember when I said Babadu was the Hawaiian Stevie Wonder? I was only partly correct. Lil Albert powered the house with smashing, Wonder-ful vocals. He was good.
And Pauline Wilson. Of the handful of songs she performed with Nueva Vida, the crowd went wild for her.
Power Point: another unexpected hit (probably because I had no idea what to expect in the first place). Super high energy, all smiles, very very funky.
Greenwood: first band up. Tight as ever. Dance floor filled in seconds.
Aura rocked the ballroom and it was almost impossible to move toward the stage. It was packed.
I met a lot of cool ‘club’goers who wondered why a 23-year-old was hanging out at the reunion show. The stories they told me about Waikiki’s clubs—like The Point After and Hula Hut—packed every night with outstanding house bands that kept the night going on and on.

Makes me wish my generation had something at least close to 1970s Honolulu. Of course, it wouldn’t be the same if it happened today.

Lil Albert belts it out.

Memory lane aka a half dozen display boards filled with memorabilia from tons of bands were out in the hotel lobby, featuring newspaper clippings, flyers and posters from: Natural High, Mackey Feary Band, Greenwood, Phase VII, Power Point and so many others that I need to go back and look through my photos again.

When Natural High reunited for the 70s NCR a few years back, tickets sold out in 5 minutes. No joke: all tickets were gone in 5 minutes. Can somebody please play me one of their records?

And Phase VII. Last band up. The ‘horniest’ band around I heard someone saw. Every person in the crowd watched them with smiles of nostalgia while singing along to the songs of their youth.

Everyone had a good time, so much that the performance went over 30+ minutes—maybe an hour? Hotel staff eventually turned on the house lights for the last two songs of Phase VII, but people kept dancing and Phase VII kept singing!

Nobody wanted it to end…


Aura brought the funk.

Power Point funked it up big time.
Big thanks to Irwin aka ‘Supes‘, Candy Au of Ala Moana Hotel and Rob Kimura of Greenwood for organizing these reunions for the past seven+ years.

Missed out on the action? Buy the live DVD set of the 70s Night Club Reunion!

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