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Opetaia Tavita Foa’i was born
in Alamagoto, a small village in Apia, Western Samoa. His father
is from Tokelau his mother from Tuvalu, they met while attending
school in Samoa. His early upbringing was in a small Tokelauan
settlement in Alamagoto. The houses were the traditional
thatched roof kind, no walls and only one room for the whole
family and everyone slept on the floor.
The houses or fales (as they are called in Samoa), were arranged
in a circular formation with a playing field in the center,
there was a river that ran just behind the village providing
heaps of fun for the children and luckily fruit trees were
everywhere. You could just reach up and pick a banana or a mango
or a coconut, they were there for everyone. The children had a
lot of freedom and pretty much did their own thing while the
parents worked. Opetaia’s family were very poor and his parents
would spend most of their time tending the plantations and
catching fish or whatever else they could find for the evening
meal. Although life on a pacific Island is considered by most to
be paradise, those were hard times and the adults had many
stresses and pressures to contend with on a daily basis.
Although the family was poor financially, it was a vibrant
environment to grow up in especially when the community came
together to celebrate an occasion. It could be somebody’s
arrival, departure or an event of some kind but the whole
village would come to life. It was an atmosphere that was joyous
and free spirited, a huge change from the seriousness of doing
mundane everyday work - it was like the reason for living and
everybody took part. The beauty of the Island way is that it
doesn’t matter if you don’t have a good voice or if you can’t
keep a beat - everyone joins in and everyone’s contribution is
accepted and valued. In that environment any self-consciousness
or shyness is quickly forgotten as everyone becomes one,
performing as a group.
Because most of the people in the community that Opetaia grew up
in were Tokelauans the main songs and dances performed at these
events were the Tokelau fateles, or sometimes Tuvalu fateles if
the people were from his mother’s Island. A fatele consists of a
group of people in several lines one behind the other doing a
set of actions expressing the words contained in the song. There
is a whole line of dancers - children, men, women, grandparents
etc, females in one row, males in the other and behind the
dancers there is a wooden box affectionately called the Pusa,
(which means the box). A group of men sit around the Pusa and
play an accompanying beat to the song and everyone sings. It
starts off slow and gets faster and faster as it repeats and the
dancers get lower and lower and the singing gets louder and
louder as everyone gets into it. The vibrations of the Pusa
together with the harmonised singing is something very special
to experience. It was just about heaven for Opetaia who,
whenever he could, would sneak in and join in the beating of the
Pusa and sometimes be bold enough to join in the dancing as
well. The whole atmosphere was one of music and rhythm and
togetherness and it created a lifelong impact on him.
There was another style of music sometimes performed at these
gatherings - the Samoan Siva. As soon as the igi or the
Samoan-style picking started, usually done on the guitar or the
ukulele, for people that know the Siva and particularly if you
are Samoan, something turns on inside you - there is no way that
you can ignore the pride that swells up inside and you
immediately jump up and dance. The Siva is a traditional Samoan
dance – it is an absolute pleasure to watch it performed because
the people dancing radiate this huge pride which is simply
infectious to all those around and it doesn’t take long before
everyone joins in.
When Opetaia was growing up, there was music and rhythms
everywhere. It was part of everyday life. For example there were
large bamboo sections with holes in them that were used to play
beats on (a variation of the Pate or the lali) and of course
there was the Apa or the biscuit tin, which would feature when
the village played “Kilikiti” or cricket. Regularly there would
be events where one village would play against another village
and often there was about 100 people playing per side. Whenever
someone was out the Apa or biscuit tin would be played with
everyone clapping along. When you had somebody playing the apa
that knew how to play it and would vary the beats each time
thoughout the game it certainly made the game a lot more
interesting and for Opetaia provided a great deal of inspiration
that he later put to good use in songwriting. As a youngster
growing up in this environment, he just sat there and soaked it
all in. He never learned to read music or had any formal
training in music but this exposure to real traditional music
and rhythms set the foundation for all his upcoming work.
It was fortunate for Opetaia that he had an uncle who was more
like an older brother, who came to live with the family in
Alamagoto. Uncle Foa’i played the ukulele. Opetaia found myself
very interested and started spending a lot of time, watching him
play. He began imitating him by playing sticks and later when he
started playing the guitar, the stick got bigger. Uncle Foa’i
also passed on some bad habits like how to break the ends off
the finely woven mats to use as a guitar picks which didn’t
please his mother or aunties at all.
In 1965 at the age of 9 in the middle of winter, dressed in a
light summer suit, Opetaia and Uncle Foa’i arrived at Auckland
Airport alone and neither of then spoke a word of English. The
sudden transition from hot and friendly Alamagoto village to a
cold Auckland city was a big shock. Before this trip Opetaia had
never even worn a pair of shoes let alone a suit. No-one had
explained anything about this trip and for a while he was very
homesick for his Island home. For the next three years he lived
in Greylynn, Auckland an inner city environment vastly different
to the freedom and family environment that he had come from in
the Islands. The whole family and extended family were squeezed
into a 3 bedroom flat. The family struggled through some very
hard times to get established in New Zealand but they did it all
so that the children, Opetaia is the eldest of 8, could have a
good education and they hoped a chance for a better life.
There was no formal set up available at the time for those who
had English as a second language so he struggled through primary
and intermediate school picking up the language here and there
by ear. When he hit intermediate school he found himself getting
very interested in all the new musical styles around him and
starting performing at school talents quests with his cousin
Esera. By this time he had discovered conventional tuning and
conventional chords which differed from the opening tuning style
of guitar playing in the Islands. One of the most important
influences on his musical development happened on his first day
in high school. Another student offered him an album for a
dollar and he bought it. It turned out to be a double album -
Electric Ladyland by Jimi Hendrix and so began a major musical
phase of his life.
He was so enthusiastic about this music that he would force
people to sit down and listen to it. He loved it so much and was
confused when others couldn’t hear what he could hear. He would
dance around the house with a broomstick, pretending it was an
electric guitar and make his younger brothers and sister sit and
watch while he did concerts for them. Luckily another of his
uncles bought him an electric guitar and within two years, at
the age of 15 he had a band and a residency in a nightclub in
K’rd performing mainly Jimi Hendrix material. In later years he
got in to other styles of music such as Jazz, Blues, Reggae and
began admiring works of various songwriters along the way
including Joan Armatrading and Peter Gabriel which all served to
reinforce his interest in songwriting but Jimi Hendrix still
remained his major influence along with his continuing
involvement with traditional song and dance through community
and family functions.
There were some serious lifestyle clashes that came about due to
trying to operate within two very different cultures. Clashes
between the cultures was a problem and adjustments were called
for and many compromises made. For example on Sundays when the
family expected everyone to go to church he would be invited to
a jam session or would have a gig to go to. And of course slowly
but surely the gigs won out. His parents were not at all
impressed, especially as he was the oldest in the family and
supposed to be the one setting a good example.
One of the most unexpected difficulties he encountered was due
to being bought up in a community that encouraged performing in
a community or as a group but didn’t encourage individual
performance so to do your best or to try to do your best could
be construed as trying to be better than those around you and
you were made to feel uncomfortable for doing this. Also, in the
European culture, artists are viewed with high regard, whereas
in the Pacific culture music is something to celebrate with, to
enjoy, it’s a natural part of life, it’s no big deal. He was
always caught out playing guitar and told to go study or do
something constructive with the message “your guitar won’t feed
you or your family”. His playing music was considered a waste of
time and became a source of disappointment to his parents. They
came all the way to New Zealand to give their children a better
education and then to see their eldest child pursuing music
enthusiastically instead of pursuing a reliable career was a
little disappointing to put it mildly. Nevertheless, he
continued and ended up playing in bands on and off for twenty
years playing varying styles of music before finally discovering
where he musically felt most at home and hence the beginning of
Te Vaka.
Before Te Vaka, Opetaia had been writing and recording music but
it was always in styles that belonged to other cultures and this
was always something that nagged at him as it didn’t feel quite
right. He set up a small recording studio at home and in 1994
started experimenting with a Traditional Tokelauan song, one
that he had always had a strong affinity with. He changed it
round considerably using the traditional song as a kind of
introduction and then writing a percussion piece with verses and
a chorus to go with it. This he found exciting - it ignited
something inside him and he knew there was no turning back. He
recorded this track with the band he had at the time, with the
addition of his cousin Sulata and the Tokelauan choir. This was
the early beginnings of Te Vaka. Julie, his wife loved the song
and although he tried to persuade her not to she started playing
it to people, as it turned out they also liked it. In fact much
to his surprise people in the music industry started getting
quite excited about it. Then someone made the suggestion that it
be sent it to Peter Gabriel at Real World studios in England .
Now those of you who know anything about the music industry will
know that something like this is easier said than done
especially when you are sitting on the opposite side of the
globe. For a start an unsolicited demo tape doesn’t even get
opened just thrown straight into the bin, but everyone was so
excited about this idea that even though those in the know said
it was all more or less impossible, Julie started scheming ways
to make it happen. In 1995, Opetaia’s cousin, Sam Panapa, who
was playing rugby league for the Wigan club in the UK at the
time was able to get the demo tape straight into Real World
Studios and the result was positive - they wanted to hear more
so everything snowballed from here. By 1997 the first Te Vaka
album was released and signed worldwide with ARC music and the
band began touring the world starting with 3 months on the road
in Europe – where they rapidly gained a following amongst world
music enthusiasts being named favourites at most of the
festivals they performed at that year.
1998 saw many invitations for the band to return to Europe and a
trip to Texas to showcase at South by South West. There were 800
bands performing and Te Vaka was featured on the 6.00pm &
10.00pm news, got an hour live on the radio and a mention in the
New York times. The world was starting to wakeup to Te Vaka
music. This time the tour to Europe was for 5 months starting in
Spain and ending at a charity pop concert in the UK with Ringo
star and the Allstars – Peter Frampton, Bob Geldof, and other
music legends. This was a great finale to an incredible five
months of taking Pacific Music to the world.
Opetaia’s songwriting to date is really the product of his great
interest in Polynesia and love of traditional music and it’s
marriage with other influences. He was lucky enough to be
exposed to authentic traditional music in the Islands and
authentic rock, pop, jazz etc via the radio, live concerts and
albums. That allowed him to take it all in and interpret it for
myself rather than learning somebody else’s interpretation.
Musically, Opetaia has traveled full circle, from traditional
music to many other styles and musical influences and now feels
he is back home. He is enjoying the satisfaction of doing
something that he’s really proud of, something that comes from
his own roots and he is constantly encouraging others to explore
and create from their own roots instead of always looking toward
other peoples cultures.
One of the things that has made his music different is the
language. Although he speaks Samoan, Tuvaluan and English
fluently, he has chosen Tokelauan because it is not only the
most comfortable language for him to work with but also the most
rhythmic. It is close to the original Polynesian dialect, due to
Tokelau’s isolation geographically but aside from that it’s a
unique language. It has a musical sound and rhythm all of it’s
own and this is a plus point when you’re writing a song.
Opetaia has now written, recorded and co-produced five Te Vaka
albums and the work to date has been documented with 2 live
DVDs. He has toured the world with Te Vaka taking the message of
the Pacific Islands – the people, the culture, the music and the
dance. Amongst numerous awards and nominations he has won the
Senior Pacific Artist award for his contribution to Pacific
Music and has been instrumental in getting the music and culture
of the South Pacific to a much wider international audience.
Although the group has already been touring internationally for
10 years it still feels like only the beginning with Opetaia
already working on album number 6 and many more tours in the
pipeline.
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