Kaulana Nā Pua Acordes

por Misc Traditional
664 vistas, añadido a favoritos 48 veces
Traditional Hawaiian song written for the flowers of Hawai'i.¿Te ha sido útil esta información?
Dificultad: principiante
Afinación: E A D G B E
Cejilla: sin cejilla
Autor: damienawai [pro] 10. Última edición el 22 ene 2023

Acordes

C
F
G7

Rasgueo

Aún no existe un patrón de rasgueo para esta canción. Crear y obtén +5 IQ
[Intro]
C  F  C  G7
 
[Verse]
C                    F   C
Kaulana na pua a`o Hawai'i
                     F C
Kupa`a ma hope o ka `aina
                               G7
Hiki mai ka `elele o ka loko `ino
                          C
Palapala `anunu me ka pakaha
 
                        F  C
Pane mai Hawai`i moku o Keawe
                      F C
Kokua na Hono a`o Pi`ilani
                      G7
Kako`o mai Kaua`i o Mano
                         C
Pa`apu me ke one Kakuhihewa
 
                      F C
`A`ole a`e kau i ka pulima
                         F C
Ma luna o ka pepa o ka `enemi
                      G7
Ho`ohui `aina ku`ai hewa
                            C
I ka pono sivila a`o ke kanaka
 
                     F C
`A`ole makou a`e minamina
                      F C
I ka pu`u kala o ke aupuni
                       G7
Ua lawa makou i ka pohaku
                          C
I ka `ai kamaha`o o ka `aina
 
                      F C
Ma hope makou o Lili`ulani
                        F C
A loa`a e ka pono o ka `aina
                         G7
Ha`ina `ia mai ana ka puana
                        C
Ka po`e i aloha i ka `aina
X
Ayudando a UG haces un mundo mejor... y ganas CI
Crear corrección
Valora esta tablatura
 
×
Kaulana Nā Pua – Misc Traditional
How to play
"Kaulana Nā Pua"
Fuente
Transposición
1 comentario
yahoshua91
This is not a song that is by miscellaneous. It was written by Ellen Keho`ohiwaokalani Wright Prendergast. It is not about flowers. It was written in protest of the illegal annexation of the Kingdom of Hawaii by “greedy messengers,” to quote the lyrics. And show support Her Royal Highness Queen Lili’u’okalani and her rightful place on the throne. The song is sung today to remind the “flowers,” children of Hawaii who they are and where they come from.
+2