The award-winning singer and songwriter Kalani Peâa returned to his Hilo roots at Merrie Monarch this week. The four-time Grammy award winner and five-time NÄ HĆkĆ« Hanohano award winner was born and raised in Hilo.Â
On Thursday, April 24, PeÊ»a held a free concert at noon at the SCP Hilo Hotel featuring his full band and special guests Miss Aloha Hula KaÊ»iulani Carr as well as Kumu Hula Leialoha Kaula of Portland and Kumu Hula Candace Mokihana Melendez of Seattle.   PeÊ»a also has upcoming Lei Day celebrations planned for OÊ»ahu on Friday, May 2, and Saturday, May 3.Â
âI'm there to give back to the community, to give back to Hilo, my hometown, and give back this homecoming concert,â he said. âIâm just so honored to go back home.â
 PeÊ»a graduated from Ke Kula 'o NÄwahÄ«okalani'Ćpu'u, a K-12 Hawaiian language immersion school, as its third graduating class.
His father and sister still live in Hilo. He grew up on a five-acre farm on PanaÊ»ewa Hawaiian Home Lands, about a mile away from Prince Kuhio Plaza. Growing up, the kids would throw rotten guavas at each other, make Kalua pig in an imu and then shower and head to the nearby mall, he said.Â
This year, his husband, Allan B. Cool-PeÊ»a, will be taking the stage as one of eight Ê»Ćlapa, or dancers with Kumu Hula Kamaka KĆ«konaâs HÄlau o Ka Hanu Lehua.Â
âI'm excited to see my husband's debut performance,â he said. âHe loves hula so much. So do I.â
PeÊ»a has sung at Merrie Monarch for Hula HaÌlau âO Kamuela in the past, including in 2019, when the hÄlau took the overall trophy.
âI am returning to Hilo to see my husband perform with his hÄlau â dancing for the first time on stage,â he said. âItâs so nice to smell and feel the rain and feel the dirt and just be grounded again and be around Ê»ohana.â
In addition to singing, he plans to visit some of the local businesses.
 âI look forward to shopping,â he added.
He is also looking forward to the opportunity to eat at some of his favorite places in Hilo. Many of the business owners for his favorite spots have known his family for more than 50 years, PeÊ»a said. Â
âWe all have this Ê»ohana relationship,â he said. âIt's so nice to just be home. Itâs so nice to be in my hometown.âÂ
PeÊ»a comes from generations of musicians, including singers and guitar, harmonica and electric bass players. But PeÊ»a took music to the next level by writing music that won Grammy and NÄ HĆkĆ« Hanohano awards and starting PeÊ»a Records & Entertainment.Â
âIâm just amazed that I get to carry out the legacy,â he said. âPeople forget you have grandparents and parents that leave these in Hawaiian we call it hoÊ»oilinaâ it's legacies. That's the number one driving question before we depart this earth, before we leave our physical bodies: What is the legacy that we want to leave behind? ⊠My legacy is to have the biggest aspiration to be happy but being happy while doing music and healing the world through my craft â that is my legacy."
Katie Helland can be reached at katie@alohastatedaily.com.