Mama Loa Danced with The Ray Kinney Orchestra. She was one of his "Aloha Maids." Several photos of her are featured on album covers and promotional material.
Ray Kinney
(1900-1972)

Born in Hilo, of Irish-Hawaiian parents, Ray's musical
destiny was predictable early. At fifteen he was a skilled `ukulele
player and sang a fine tenor. He was sent to high school in Salt Lake
City, along with his six older brothers; his Irish father wanted his
sons to be as well-read and educated as he was. It wasn't long before
the brothers formed a band and toured the Rocky Mountain States.
In 1920, on the death of his Hawaiian mother, Ray
returned to the Islands and to his deeply rooted love for his Hawaiian
heritage. Ray Kinney's reputation as a singer gained public attention
when Charles E. King selected him as part of the cast of King's opera
"Prince of Hawai`i" in 1925. He was chosen to play the lead when the
opera toured California in 1926. The path to stardom began.
In 1928 Ray was chosen by band leader Johnny Noble as
one of three entertainers to promote Hawai`i as a visitor destination
via an hour-long national radio show originating at station KPO in San
Francisico. In the same year, Brunswick Record Company contracted
Noble, with Ray Kinney as one of the singers, to record 110 singles.
All are collectors' items today.
In 1934 singer Kinney joined Harry Owens for his
orchestra's opening at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. Owens had learned of
Ray's talents and had no trouble locating Ray at a Taro factory day job
because Ray sang all day while he was working. Owens hired him on the
spot.
Ray appeared on the first broadcast of Webley Edwards'
"Hawai`i Calls" radio show in 1935, and continued to perform there for
many years. In 1936, he was singled out by Decca Records as vocalist
with Johnny Noble, to provide a series of Hawaiian records. It sold so
well that the contractual relationship lasted for four years resulting
in "phenomenal" sales for the record company.
National recognition for Ray Kinney began in 1928 when
he went on tour, first to New York, then, for eleven months at the
Palace Hotel in San Francisco. His reputation as a singer - a "high
tenor" with a vocal register that ranged from bass to falsetto with ease
- skyrocketed with his four year record of continuous performance in
the Hawaiian Room of New York's Hotel Lexington, from 1938 to 1942.
The "Hawaiian boy with an Irish name" scored higher than
Rudy Vallee and Guy Lombardo in a popularity poll of American singers
taken in New York in 1938. Because of his early training in Hawaiian, he
knew the language well and was one of the few Hawaiian singers on the
U.S. mainland who took great pains to articulate each sound of the
Hawaiian text. During this same period, Ray and his "Aloha Maids" also
performed in the Olsen and Johnson Broadway revue "Hellzapoppin'". It
was the first time a Hawaiian entertainer had been in a major Broadway
production.
Ray Kinney returned briefly to Hawai`i in 1940,
discovered Alfred Apaka, and hired him as his vocalist at New York's
Lexington Hotel "Hawai`i Room". During WWII, he toured 157 military
bases and clubs, and was a favorite of audience members from Hawai`i's
442nd . Unwavering in his support of new Hawaiian talent, leader Kinney
took Eddie Kamae with him on tour in 1949, adding him to his Royal
Hawaiian Hotel orchestra in 1959.
At the age of 65 when he signed his last contract with
RCA, Ray Kinney called it "somewhat of a miracle" that his recording
career stretched over nearly forty years, unmatched at the time by any
other Hawaiian singer. By his own count, he had made over 598 record
sides.
Ray Kinney was charismatic, and a born musician,
dedicated to presenting the music of his Hawai`i. He sang in Hawai`i's
best hotels until he died early in 1972, still in possession of the
beautiful tenor voice and unique falsetto styling that imprinted
Hawaiian music in the United States for all time.
Sources: "Hawaiian Music and Musicians", the Kinney family, and Harry B. Soria, Jr., Hall of Fame Advisory Board archivist
Aloha, Mahalo, very important for our Ohana, there is very much need to remain neutral. To remain neutral is to not take sides, why, in order for the facts to be presented for observance of the facts of the matter to be"onipaa". To stand firm based on understandings of the reasoning and based on the accurate knowledge of the "truth" of the facts not get involved in the conflict, "kohiko". Also to see or/and not to be in the state of hostility accompanied by actions to subjugate or to destroy those viewed as the enemy. What does the Hawaiian word subjugate mean? Ua mau Kau kau, aloha.
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