Nā Mea Haʻa Paʻahana - Hula Instruments
Contributed and researched by Kalani N. Poʻomaihealani
- Hano: nose flute
- Hōkeo kani: wind instrument
- Hōkiokio: gourd whistle
- ʻIliʻili: small, smooth, black stones sometimes call Hawaiian castanets. 2 stones are placed in each hand and struck together to make a clicking sound
- Ipu: drum consisting of a single gourd or made of two large gourds of unequal size joined together
- Ipu heke: gourd drum with a top section
- Ipu heke ʻole: single drum gourd without a top section
- Ipu hoehoe: gourd whistle
- Ipu hula: dance drum made of two gourds sewed together
- Ipu paʻi: gourd drum
- Ipu uai, ipu uwai, ipu wai: movable gourd drum
- Kā: drum beater made from dried ti-leaves, usually braided, used on the pūniu
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Kāʻekeʻeke: bamboo pipes, varying in length from 20 to 60 inches. The longer the length, the, deeper the tone. The diameter may be one inch or larger; with one end open and the other closed by the node. A player holds one vertically in each hand, tapping down on a mat or the ground. Several musicians might play at the same time for harmony.
Measurements for "tunings" established by Nona Beamer
F 19 1/2" E 21" D 23 3/4" C 26" B flat 29 1/4" A 30 5/8" G 34 1/8" F sharp 38 3/4" F 39 1/8" C 52" B flat 58 1/8" - Kālāʻau: dancing sticks varying in length. The shorter sticks are approximately 12-14 inches. Another type is a longer stick about 6 inches taller than the dancer, held in the left hand, with a much shorter stick, about 14 inches in length, held in the right hand. The ancient kālaʻau were made from hau, kauila or milo wood with tiki carvings on one end. The advent of christianity removed the tiki, but retained simple carvings. One stick was struck on the other, then rolled along the other stick to make a clacking sound. Today, there are no carvings and the sticks are simply struck, one upon the other
- Nīʻau Kani: A true Jew's harp, made of a thin strip of wood, about 4 inches long and 1 inch wide, with a coconut midrib (niau) or bamboo strip lashed length wise; played almost like the ʻukēkē
- Pahu: drum usually made from trunk of the coconut tree varying in size from about 1 foot to 3-4 feet, with a sharkskin covering. The skin is taken from the right side of the shark
- Pahu Paʻi: small sharkskin hula drum
- Pahūpahū: same as kāʻekeʻeke
- Papa Hehi: footboard, used for dancing; treadle
- Pū: large triton conch shell
- Pū Lāʻī: ti leaf whistle
- Pūʻili: bamboo rattles about 20 inches long and about 1 and 1/2 inches in diameter, with node at one end used as the handle. Bamboo is slit lengthwise, slivers between strands removed, that allows the bamboo to rattle or rustle.
- Pūniu: small knee drum made from half a coconut shell. The drum skin is usually from the Kala fish
- ʻUkēkē: a variety of musical bow, fifteen inches to two feet long and about an inch and a half wide, with two or commonly three strings, drawn through holes at one end. The strings were strummed. The old experts made no sound with the vocal cords, but the mouth cavity acted as a resonance chamber. The resulting sound suggested speech and trained persons could understand this language. It was sometimes used for love making
- ʻUlili: A musical instrument consisting of 3 laʻamia pierced by a stick; a string is attached to the center gourd, wound around the stick and when pulled, twirls the gourds and makes a whirring sound. The outer gourds usually contain aliʻipoe seeds or shells
- ʻUlīʻulī: gourd rattle, containing aliʻipoe seeds with colored feathers at the top, used for the hula ʻulīʻulī; to rattle