Jump to content

Aloha Oé: Difference between revisions

From SpongeBob Wiki
>ItzSpongeBob 1999
No edit summary
>Cokic na Xic
No edit summary
Line 7: Line 7:
|introduced = "[[Help Wanted]]"
|introduced = "[[Help Wanted]]"
|label=Carmen|label2=Selected Sound|year=1969<br />1985 (remastered)|album=Carmen-2006 - The Aloha Hawaiians - Beautiful Isle of Somewhere|album2=ST 175 - Hawaii & South Pacific}}
|label=Carmen|label2=Selected Sound|year=1969<br />1985 (remastered)|album=Carmen-2006 - The Aloha Hawaiians - Beautiful Isle of Somewhere|album2=ST 175 - Hawaii & South Pacific}}
This arrangement of "'''Aloha Oé'''" (''Farewell to Thee'') was composed by George Kulokahai, and licensed and released to Selected Sounds (APM Music) by Hans Haider. It was originally released in 1969 and remastered by Haider in 1985. The song was written by Hawaii's last monarch, {{W|Liliʻuokalani|Queen Liliʻuokalani}}, after her arrest and imprisonment, and has become perhaps the most famous song of Hawaiian composition. In the context of ''SpongeBob'', it seems to be semi-associated with the morning and characters sleeping.
This arrangement of "'''Aloha Oé'''" (''Farewell to Thee'') was composed by George Kulokahai, and licensed and released to Selected Sounds (APM Music) by Hans Haider. It was originally released in {{Time|1969}} and remastered by Haider in {{Time|1985}}. The song was written by Hawaii's last monarch, {{W|Liliʻuokalani|Queen Liliʻuokalani}}, after her arrest and imprisonment, and has become perhaps the most famous song of Hawaiian composition. In the context of ''SpongeBob'', it seems to be semi-associated with the morning and characters sleeping.


==Usage==
==Usage==

Revision as of 15:20, 10 August 2022

Template:Infobox PM This arrangement of "Aloha Oé" (Farewell to Thee) was composed by George Kulokahai, and licensed and released to Selected Sounds (APM Music) by Hans Haider. It was originally released in 1969 and remastered by Haider in 1985. The song was written by Hawaii's last monarch, Queen Liliʻuokalani, after her arrest and imprisonment, and has become perhaps the most famous song of Hawaiian composition. In the context of SpongeBob, it seems to be semi-associated with the morning and characters sleeping.

Usage

Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list Template:PM-list

Trivia

Template:Associated Production Music