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In 1997, Kalapana released the Hawaii version of Captain Santa Island Music with liner notes by international radio DJ Kamasami Kong. More recently, Kalapana released, in Japan, another CD titled The Very Best of Kalapana, a compilation of twenty songs. After battling drugs, drug treatment programs, and relapses, Mackey Feary was sentenced to ...
When Honolulu Magazine took polls of "Greatest Hawaii Albums and Songs", they ranked Feary's 1975 composition "Nightbird" as the 50th best Hawaiian song. [22] The magazine ranked Kalapana's debut album as the 10th Greatest Hawaiian album.
Jane Kristen Marczewski (December 29, 1990 – February 19, 2022), better known by her stage name Nightbirde, [1] was an American singer-songwriter.. Previously having released two EPs and several singles, Nightbirde auditioned on America's Got Talent in 2021, where she received a Golden Buzzer for her original song "It's OK". [2]
Nightbirde, who at the time of her audition had been given a 2% chance of survival, thankfully did get to hear Mzansi Youth Choir's cover of "It's OK" before her death.
Nightbird may refer to: Strisores, a group of birds sometimes called "nightbirds" "Nightbird" (song), a 1983 song by Stevie Nicks "Nightbird", a 1975 song by Kalapana "Nightbird", a song by SZA released on Soundcloud alongside "I Hate U" (2021) Nightbird (Paul Carrack album), released in 1980; Nightbird (Yanni album), released in 1997
Dennis Pavao (July 11, 1951 – January 19, 2002), [1] was one of several Hawaiian musicians who, during the 1970s, led a Hawaiian music renaissance, reviving Hawaiian music, especially "ka leo ki'eki'e," or Hawaiian falsetto singing. Along with his cousins, Ledward and Nedward Kaʻapana, Pavao started the group Hui ʻOhana.
President Donald Trump's administration told the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday that Tennessee's Republican-backed ban on gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors is not unlawful ...
"Nightbird" is a 1983 song by the American singer/songwriter Stevie Nicks, written by Nicks with Sandy Stewart. It was the third single from Nicks's second solo album, The Wild Heart . The song, a duet with Stewart, peaked at No. 33 on the Billboard Hot 100 on January 28, 1984 and reached No. 32 spot on the Billboard Top Rock Tracks chart.