HPR Hōʻike
Sunday, 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. on HPR-1
"HPR Hōʻike" is our weekly showcase for new music and storytelling events produced in-house here at Hawaiʻi Public Radio. It serves as the home for our "Live from the Atherton" performance series, featuring local musicians as well as a showcase for thoughtful discussions with local authors, practitioners, and artists and the place to share HPR podcasts with our broadcast listeners. We're excited to bring fresh, locally produced content to inform, inspire, connect, as well as continue to share a strong sense of place with our listeners at home and abroad.
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On February 1st, 2025, Kilia performed their show in ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian Language) celebrating Ka Mahina ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian Language Month). This launched our flagship multi-platform event series "Live from the Atherton." Sponsored by HMSA.
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Listen to a special broadcast of Dr. Jonathan Kay Kamakawiwoʻole Osorioʻs performance in our Atherton Performing Arts Studio. The author, musician, and University of Hawaiʻi professor shares a collection of songs and stories he calls, "Intimacies: Poetics of a People Beloved."
See more music and entertainment stories
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Author Kate Hosford, soprano Audrey Luna, and pianist Jonathan Korth visited Morning Café to discuss their program, "A Songbird Dreams of Singing: An Evening of Lullabies and Nocturnal Reverie" that took place at UH Mānoa's Orvis Auditorium.
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Jim Moffitt stopped by Morning Café to discuss Chamber Music Hawaiʻi's upcoming concert, "Plucked Strings," featuring the Galliard String Quartet with special guest, harpist Megan Conley. The program highlights the power of the plucked and poetic through the lush textures of Debussy and Ravel.
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Early Music Hawaii director and president Scott Fikse and special guest lutenist John Lenti stopped by Morning Café to discuss this Saturday’s "Melancholy and Mirth" program at the Lutheran Church of Honolulu, featuring music by John Dowland and contemporaries.
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Whether you’re on Team Montague or cheering for Team Capulet, you're sure to enjoy the Hawaiʻi Symphony Orchestra's month-long Shakespeare Festival. Two upcoming concerts feature the tragedy and romance of “Romeo & Juliet” in two ways – Prokofiev's ballet and Tchaikovsky's fantasy overture.