JOHNNY ALOHA PHOTO GALLERY & PRESSKIT
The "Lavapalooza" CD includes a full-color 12-page booklet inside! Here are images from the album artwork, the jacket art by SHAG, and more photos from Johnny Aloha.
► Johnny Aloha "Lavapalooza" Artwork Slide Show:
► Johnny Aloha "Lavapalooza" Artwork Slide Show:
► Download the Johnny Aloha "Lavapalooza" CD Artwork PDF:
http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/jdocs/JohnnyAloha-Lavapalooza-artwork.pdf
http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/jdocs/JohnnyAloha-Lavapalooza-artwork.pdf
► Johnny Aloha "Lavapalooza" Presskit Images and Documents
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JOHNNY ALOHA "LAVAPALOOZA" ALBUM COVER
http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/rc-lvp-cover-premaster.jpg JOHNNY ALOHA "BEACH" PHOTOGRAPH http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/johnnyaloha-beach-giant.jpg JOHNNY ALOHA "LAVAPALOOZA" INFO SHEET http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/jdocs/johnnyaloha-lavapalooza-sheet.pdf JOHNNY ALOHA "LAVAPALOOZA" PRINT AD http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/jdocs/johnnyaloha-postcard.jpg JOHNNY ALOHA "LAVAPALOOZA" COVER ARTWORK BY SHAG http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/jdocs/johnnyaloha-shagprint-cropped.jpg JOHNNY ALOHA "DRINK TO HAWAII" SHEET MUSIC http://www.johnnyaloha.com/jimg/jdocs/johnnyaloha-drinktohawaii-sheetmusic.jpg JOHNNY ALOHA "DRINK TO HAWAII" MUSIC VIDEO https://youtu.be/UYTq-V7uP_s |
► Johnny Aloha Photo Gallery:
JOHNNY ALOHA PRESS REVIEWS

► "Lavapalooza" Takes A Turn On "Tiki" Sound
Honolulu Star-Advertiser, November 26, 2010
Richard Cheese & Lounge Against The Machine have enjoyed at least a decade of success reworking pop and hip-hop hits as cocktail lounge music — imagine how, say, “Me So Horny,” “She Hates Me” and “Smoke Two Joints” would have sounded if recorded by Frank Sinatra or Tony Bennett. As one decade nears its end and another is but weeks away, Cheese is now introducing a protégé “tiki culture” entertainer Johnny Aloha, who plans to do to hapa-haole music what Lounge Against The Machine has been doing to mainstream pop.
Aloha’s vision of “tiki culture” music is ukulele, bongos and steel guitar rather than the complex “exotica” arrangements of Martin Denny, but the concept is an imaginative alternative to Denny tribute bands. His best choices are songs that somehow fit a tropical resort context — “Vacation” (Go-Go’s), “Cruel Summer” (Bananarama) and “Paradise City” (Guns ‘N’ Roses) are three. All fit surprisingly well and are much more interesting than straight remakes would be.
There are other good ideas. Bongo drumming and a chorus of faux-Hawaiian chanting add a frenetic “exotic” edge to “Last Resort.” Steel guitar, ukulele, percussion and “hula narrator” Olena Heu are the keys to an imaginative makeover of Will Smith’s “Summertime” that owes nothing to the original hit but the lyrics. “Gangsta’s Paradise” worked well for Cheese, and it works well for Aloha, too.
There is one new song, “Drink to Hawaii.” Written by producer Mark Jonathan Davis and project musician Sage Guyton, it’s an imaginative hapa-haole number that mixes and matches the names of exotic drinks with Hawaiian place names — “I’ll take a Chi Chi to Waikiki/And a Zombie to Ka‘anapali” is a verse that actually rhymes reasonably well. Some of the other pairings don’t rhyme, but the idea carries them through.
Two other ideas should not be repeated. Adding stereotypical dialect bits to Cisqo’s “Thong Song” doesn’t improve on the song or the Johnny Aloha “tiki culture” format. Having Richard Cheese and Corey Taylor sing “Almost Paradise” to each other is silly at best.
Honolulu Star-Advertiser, November 26, 2010
Richard Cheese & Lounge Against The Machine have enjoyed at least a decade of success reworking pop and hip-hop hits as cocktail lounge music — imagine how, say, “Me So Horny,” “She Hates Me” and “Smoke Two Joints” would have sounded if recorded by Frank Sinatra or Tony Bennett. As one decade nears its end and another is but weeks away, Cheese is now introducing a protégé “tiki culture” entertainer Johnny Aloha, who plans to do to hapa-haole music what Lounge Against The Machine has been doing to mainstream pop.
Aloha’s vision of “tiki culture” music is ukulele, bongos and steel guitar rather than the complex “exotica” arrangements of Martin Denny, but the concept is an imaginative alternative to Denny tribute bands. His best choices are songs that somehow fit a tropical resort context — “Vacation” (Go-Go’s), “Cruel Summer” (Bananarama) and “Paradise City” (Guns ‘N’ Roses) are three. All fit surprisingly well and are much more interesting than straight remakes would be.
There are other good ideas. Bongo drumming and a chorus of faux-Hawaiian chanting add a frenetic “exotic” edge to “Last Resort.” Steel guitar, ukulele, percussion and “hula narrator” Olena Heu are the keys to an imaginative makeover of Will Smith’s “Summertime” that owes nothing to the original hit but the lyrics. “Gangsta’s Paradise” worked well for Cheese, and it works well for Aloha, too.
There is one new song, “Drink to Hawaii.” Written by producer Mark Jonathan Davis and project musician Sage Guyton, it’s an imaginative hapa-haole number that mixes and matches the names of exotic drinks with Hawaiian place names — “I’ll take a Chi Chi to Waikiki/And a Zombie to Ka‘anapali” is a verse that actually rhymes reasonably well. Some of the other pairings don’t rhyme, but the idea carries them through.
Two other ideas should not be repeated. Adding stereotypical dialect bits to Cisqo’s “Thong Song” doesn’t improve on the song or the Johnny Aloha “tiki culture” format. Having Richard Cheese and Corey Taylor sing “Almost Paradise” to each other is silly at best.
JOHNNY ALOHA
® "JOHNNY ALOHA" IS A REGISTERED U.S. TRADEMARK #85081736.
(C) Copyright 1994-2021 Johnny Aloha / Coverage Records / World Art Supply.
All rights reserved. Unauthorized use, duplication, performance, or other copyright/trademark infringement is
a violation of applicable laws, and violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
www.johnnyaloha.com
® "JOHNNY ALOHA" IS A REGISTERED U.S. TRADEMARK #85081736.
(C) Copyright 1994-2021 Johnny Aloha / Coverage Records / World Art Supply.
All rights reserved. Unauthorized use, duplication, performance, or other copyright/trademark infringement is
a violation of applicable laws, and violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
www.johnnyaloha.com