Tag Archives: Live

Where To Go Waikiki Oahu : March 19th Weekly Hawaii Update.mp4

WhereTraveler.com and WhereTV create weekly updates highlighting just a taste of things to do and where to go in and around Hawaii. Videos cover everything from beaches, main attractions, restaurants, surfing and local outings. Here’s our update for the week of March 19, 2012. To find out more about what to do in beautiful Hawaii you can go to www.wheretraveler.com or find us on Facebook at: www.facebook.com Royal Hawaiian Center Farmers Market – www.royalhawaiiancenter.com Perfect for the “locavore” foodie in the heart of Waikīkī, Royal Hawaiian Center will launch its new farmers market, showcasing twenty Hawaii vendors with locally grown produce, ‘ono (delicious) dishes, freshly cut flowers, specialty food gift items, and vendor demonstrations. Enjoy an assortment of locally made delicacies and beverages such as Pipikaula ‘O Kahalu’u beef jerky, Malie Kai chocolate made from Hawaiian cacao grown on O’ahu’s North Shore, Nalo Mele “just from the hive” honey, Pacifikool fresh and all natural island ginger ale, Happy Cakes’ pineapple macadamia nut fruit cake, Big Wave Tomatoes’ grilled pesto pizza, and more! Kahuku Farms, Ho Farms and Khamphout Farms will showcase a variety of fresh produce grown in the country including cherry and grape tomatoes, Japanese cucumbers, farm harvested vanilla beans, seasonal fruits, and taro leaves. Visit the Ka ‘Ohana O Kalaupapa Art Exhibit – www.kalaupapaohana.org A traveling photo exhibit, “Kalaupapa: E Ho`ohanohano a E Ho`omau…To Honor

Yvonne Elliman – If I Can’t Have You Live 1978

“If I Can’t Have You” is a disco song written by Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb of the Bee Gees. The song was intended to be included in the follow-up album to Children of the World (1976), but was given to singer Yvonne Elliman when the Bee Gees became involved in the production of the movie Saturday Night Fever (1977) in which the song, and also in the subsequent soundtrack, appeared. Elliman’s version became an international smash hit, and reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100, and #4 in the UK. The song, as sung by the Bee Gees, was released as the B-side to the single “Stayin’ Alive” in 1978 and also appeared in the 2001 compilation Bee Gees Their Greatest Hits: The Record. A remixed version of The Bee Gees recording was released on the remastered version of Bee Gees Greatest in 2007 and marked the return of The Bee Gees to the US Hot Dance Tracks charts after 28 years. ______________________________________ Elliman’s singing career began in the early 1970s in London where she performed as a vocalist at various bars and clubs. This led to a recording contract and later in Miami a close association as a backing vocalist for Eric Clapton. She performed on many of his 1970s hits including “I Shot the Sheriff” and was his girlfriend for several months in 1974. She sang the role of Mary Magdalene in the original album of Jesus Christ Superstar and in the subsequent Broadway and film versions, and achieved her first hit single with the ballad “I Don’t Know How to Love

Marvin Gaye on piano in Belgium – Come Get To This, Distant Lover

Born in 1939 in DC to a father from Kentucky and a mother from North Carolina, Marvin Gaye blazed the trail for the continued evolution of popular black music. But by the winter of 1981, Marvin Gaye was in a personal and professional doldrums. Weakened by a debilitating drug problem, an increasing debt to the IRS, two failed marriages and losing his homes, cars and recording studio, Marvin had moved away from the continental United States by 1979 first settling in a bread van in Hawaii. In 1980, he settled in London and fortook on a European tour with British promoter Jeffrey Kruger. Settling in Oostende, Belgium thanks to an offer by boxing promoter Freddy Couseart, the singer began sobering up from years of drug abuse cutting usage of marijuana and cocaine while working out in an ancient gym and jogging daily at the beaches in Ostend. By the summer of 1981, the 42-year-old Gaye decided to launch a tour of Europe again around areas of London – where he was received more favorably than the previous year’s embarrassing no-show for Princess Margaret – and areas of Belgium. Afterwards, Marvin was inspired to get back in the studio to record his final album in Belgium “Come Get to This” is a 1973 hit for American soul singer Marvin Gaye, released on the Tamla (Motown) label. The song, released a few months after his seminal anthem of seduction, “Let’s Get It On”, was built among a fast-paced doo-wop-like recording. This record was one of few recordings Gaye began recording

Duke Kahanamoku Statue Waikiki Beach Hawaii Live Camera Tuesday 10 July 2012 9:00 PM

Duke Kahanamoku Statue Waikiki Hawaii Webcam recorded on Tuesday 10 July 2012 at 9:00 PM. Next Recording time Wednesday 11 July 2012 at 9:00 PM. Be there and wave at the camera. Aloha. ‘Tropical Baby’ by The Brothers Cazimero and ‘Rhythm of the Ocean’ by Hawaiian Style Band. Music Courtesy of Mountain Apple Company.

Hawaii’s 1st Annual Rice Fest

HAWAII’S BELOVED GRAIN TO BE CELEBRATED AT FIRST EVER HAWAII RICE FESTIVAL ON SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11TH Get your chopsticks ready and bring your appetite as we prepare to celebrate the grain that bonds us all at the first ever Hawaii Rice Festival. Presented by HPELive, this cherished grain will be honored at a daylong event on Saturday, September 11th at Aloha Tower Marketplace on the Waterfront from 12 pm to 8 pm September is officially designated National Rice Month by the USA Rice Federation. In this place we call “the melting pot” of cultures, we are bringing together different customs and people to commemorate this unique little grain that unites us. Whether you like fried rice , sushi or risotto, to name a few, your favorite rice dishes from around the globe will be featured. The Hawaii Rice Festival will give you a one-day taste trip around the world. The festival will include food demonstrations with samplings to satisfy your taste buds, games, contests and great family fun. The lineup of activities includes a celebrity meet & greet, celebrity & chef cooking demonstrations, Da Spam Musubi eating contest, the 1st annual ‘Ricepie’ contest, games for the kids and more. There will be an activity and flavor for every palate from every culture and you will surely leave the festival with a whole new understanding and appreciation for our beloved rice. Of course, the day wouldn’t be complete without a chance to give back to those who are less fortunate. Lanakila Pacific