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Russ Young


From:
Seattle, Washington, USA
Post  Posted 26 Jun 2004 12:43 pm    
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Humble Laie resident was
famous around the world
as a steel guitarist


By Mary Vorsino
Honolulu Star-Bulletin

For most of his adult life, Tau Moe was a hit abroad and an unknown at home.

It took about 60 years for word to spread to the islands that the Hawaiian musician and master steel guitarist was a star, traveling the globe to entertain world leaders and packed crowds. By the time Moe started getting accolades locally, he was already in his 80s.

Moe, who learned steel guitar from the instrument's inventor and brought Hawaiian music to dozens of countries starting in the 1920s, died Thursday at his Laie home. He was 95.

Within the last half-decade, Moe's contributions to Hawaiian music have been recognized by Mayor Jeremy Harris, Gov. Linda Lingle, the state House and Senate, and the Hawaiian Steel Guitar Association. In January the Honpa Hongwanji Mission of Hawaii named Moe a "Living Treasure."

"He never went around tooting his own horn," said family friend and Hawaiian music historian Ishmael Stagner. "He was a very humble person. ... He just didn't believe he had accomplished that much."

During his lifetime, Moe and his family played for Winston Churchill, Adolf Hitler, Aristotle Onassis, Mahatma Gandhi and Egypt's King Farouk, to name a few.

The McKinley High School graduate also helped at least 150 of his Jewish musician friends escape Germany and Austria just before the height of Adolf Hitler's reign by having them impersonate groupies, relatives and stagehands. Once, he even sneaked a few Jewish buddies over the border by hiding them in his car's trunk among the folds of his colorful stage costumes.

"He was courageous," said Stagner, who is writing a book about the Moe family. "He smuggled his friends out of Germany at great personal risk."

In an interview with the Star-Bulletin earlier this year, Moe treated the episode a bit lighter.

"I wasn't scared with anything," he said. "Hitler didn't know."

Moe was born in American Samoa and raised in Laie, where he retired in 1982.

While still in his teens, Moe joined an entertainment group -- Madame Riviere's Hawaiians -- that featured his future wife, Rose Kaohu.

The group went to Manila in 1928.

Two years later, Moe and Kaohu had branched out on their own and recorded eight albums together.

During their six decades on the road, the couple traveled the world seven times and learned more than 10 languages while doing what they loved best: playing the Hawaiian tunes they had learned as kids.

And the Moes did not slow down after having two children.

Instead, the Moe family performed as a troupe, which was a sell-out act in its heyday.

They toured Singapore, the Middle East, Germany, Italy and India.

They found fans of Hawaiian music in Egypt, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Denmark, England, Sweden and Finland.

While Moe was in charge of the steel guitar and tap dancing for the group, wife Rose took care of the singing and sprinkled in some dancing and playing of her own.

The Moe children -- son Lani, who was born in Japan, and daughter Dorian, born in India -- played instruments, danced, sang and were featured in a number of European films.

Dorian Moe said her father was a meticulous performer.

"He would always say, 'Either do it correctly or don't do it at all. If you know you can't sing, don't even bother.'"

"It helped me," she said. "It helped us improve."

Stagner said he met the Moe family in American Samoa about 42 years ago, after watching them perform.

"The greatest surprise was that here were these Polynesians that spoke something like 10 European languages, had played in these major houses," he said. "They did a continental show. ... He (Moe) was doing steel guitar that I had never heard done."

Stagner said that over the years, Moe continued to surprise him with details of the family's travels. When the war in Iraq started, Stagner said, Moe talked about the beauty of Baghdad and the cities of Basra and Fallujah -- places he had traveled to in the 1940s and '50s.

"I'm sitting there with my mouth agape," Stagner said, "because it sounds too fantastic."

In February, Debashish Bhattacharya, one of India's top steel guitarists, made a special point to meet Moe after coming to the islands for a performance.

Moe taught Bhattacharya's grandfather to play the steel guitar in 1932, Stagner said.

Bhattacharya "could not believe he was meeting the person who brought the steel guitar to India," Stagner said. "Papa Tau was the last of that first generation of steel guitar players."

Moe is survived by his daughter. Services for him are scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Sixth Ward Chapel. Visitation begins at 9:30 a.m.

"We'll miss him," said Dorian Moe, a performer at the Polynesian Cultural Center. "And a lot of the entertainment people around the world will miss him. He will never be forgotten in that sense."
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Ron Whitfield

 

From:
Kaaawa, Hawaii, USA
Post  Posted 26 Jun 2004 3:35 pm    
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With Tau's passing, goes the last great steeler(is there anyone left?) of the era prior to electricity. It's doubtful his entire story in it's complete form will ever be presented, as his life was a very full and long one, and now only his daughter Dorian is left to tell it. Suffice to say, there will never be another like Tau.

Aloha Oe, Tau Moe
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Rick Aiello


From:
Berryville, VA USA
Post  Posted 26 Jun 2004 5:38 pm    
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Paul Warnik

 

From:
Illinois,USA
Post  Posted 27 Jun 2004 8:21 am    
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Russ-thanks for posting the bio and obit about this highly esteemed pioneer of steel guitar-PW
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basilh


From:
United Kingdom
Post  Posted 29 Jun 2004 2:36 am    
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Aloha to my dear friend...
Tau was the most influential person in motivating me to higher things....

From the members of 'Aloha Dream' around the world, our sympathies go out to Dorian, and in Denmark, Lissie and all the children and grandchildren of the extended family.

Basil Henriques
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