Daniel Ho
Daniel Ho (born March 5, 1968) is an American musician, composer, producer, and educator renowned for his mastery of the ukulele and slack-key guitar, as well as his contributions to Hawaiian and world music. A native of Honolulu, Hawaii, Ho has earned six Grammy Awards and twelve nominations, primarily in the Best Hawaiian Music Album category from 2005 to 2010, establishing him as a pivotal figure in contemporary Hawaiian music. He founded Daniel Ho Creations in 1998, through which he has released over 80 albums and collaborated with artists across genres, blending traditional Hawaiian elements with global influences.[1][2][3] Ho's musical journey began in childhood in Honolulu's Kaimuki neighborhood, where he started playing the organ and ukulele at age eight, later expanding to classical guitar, piano, bass, drums, and voice. During his teenage years, he immersed himself in the local music scene, performing in various ensembles and honing his skills as a multi-instrumentalist. He pursued formal training in composing, arranging, and film scoring at the Grove School of Music in Los Angeles, which shaped his versatile career as a performer, sound engineer, and record label owner.[1][2][4] In the 1990s, Ho gained prominence as a founding member of the jazz fusion group Kilauea, releasing six albums that included two Billboard Top 10 hits on the jazz charts. Transitioning to solo work, his 2004 album Master of the Hawaiian Ukulele marked a breakthrough, followed by Grammy-winning projects like Polani (2009), the first ukulele-focused album to receive a Grammy nomination. Notable collaborations include albums with guitarist Pepe Romero (Aloha España, 2016), actress Tia Carrere (Huana Ke Aloha, 2011 Grammy winner), and B'z guitarist Tak Matsumoto (Electric Island, Acoustic Sea, 2017), as well as features in films such as The Descendants (2011) and the TV series Hawaii Five-0. Ho has also contributed to music education, co-authoring ukulele instructional books and serving as a cultural ambassador, touring countries like Japan, Australia, and Thailand to promote Hawaiian music.[2][5][6] Beyond performance, Ho is an innovator in instrument design, co-creating the Romero Creations Tiny Tenor ukulele with Pepe Romero, and a six-time winner of Taiwan's Golden Melody Awards (2013–2017) for his cross-cultural recordings. His work extends to performances with the Honolulu Symphony and production for pipa virtuoso Wu Man, earning fifteen Hawaii Music Awards overall, including three Na Hoku Hanohano Awards. As of 2025, Ho continues to release new material, including the instrumental album Timbre & Echoes, and received the Nā Hōkū Hanohano Kī Hō’alu Legacy Award for his enduring impact on slack-key guitar traditions.[2][7][8]Early life
Family and upbringing
Daniel Ho was born on March 5, 1968, in Kaimuki, Oahu, Hawaii.[9] Of Chinese-Hawaiian heritage, he grew up in Hawaii's diverse multicultural environment, where Asian, Native Hawaiian, and other influences blended to shape his early worldview and artistic sensibilities.[10][11] His father, a chemist, provided a stable family backdrop, while everyday experiences like listening to ukulele music on the radio during car rides in the family's Oldsmobile fostered a deep connection to local sounds.[12] From a young age, Ho was immersed in music amid Honolulu's vibrant cultural scene, which naturally exposed him to Hawaii's indigenous traditions, including the ukulele and slack-key guitar.[1] At around five years old, he received his first casual introduction to the ukulele when a friend taught him "Song for Anna" by Ohta-san on a Kamaka instrument, leading him to practice the piece diligently for two years; he began regular playing around age eight.[12] These formative encounters in Hawaii's rich musical landscape ignited his passion, blending familial encouragement with the island's rhythmic heritage of slack-key techniques and strumming styles. In his late teens, Ho relocated to Los Angeles, a pivotal transition that broadened his horizons beyond Hawaii's shores.[1] This move, at age 18, paved the way for deeper exploration of his early musical interests through structured learning.[12]Education and initial musical influences
Daniel Ho pursued formal musical training after high school, beginning with studies in composing, arranging, and film scoring at the Grove School of Music in Los Angeles, where he spent approximately one and a half years honing his skills in jazz and composition.[13] During this period, he engaged in early experimentation with instruments such as guitar and ukulele, integrating them into compositional exercises that blended jazz improvisation with emerging interests in acoustic styles.[14] His time at Grove exposed him to diverse musical frameworks, allowing him to develop a foundation in arranging that would later influence his multi-instrumental approach.[2] He returned to Hawaii due to his father's illness and enrolled in the University of Hawaii at Manoa's music program on scholarship, where he continued to focus on composition with an emphasis on Hawaiian music traditions.[15] At Manoa, he delved into the local curriculum, which incorporated elements of indigenous Hawaiian instrumentation and performance practices, fostering his growing affinity for the region's sonic heritage.[2] This academic environment provided opportunities for hands-on exploration of ukulele techniques and guitar fingerstyles, marking a pivotal shift toward culturally rooted experimentation. Ho's initial musical influences during his educational years were profoundly shaped by Hawaiian slack-key guitar masters and ukulele traditions, which he encountered through coursework and local performances at the university.[14] His Hawaiian cultural upbringing further nurtured this interest, immersing him in the sounds of local instruments from an early age and guiding his academic pursuits toward a synthesis of jazz structures with indigenous Hawaiian elements.[16] By the early 1990s, upon completing his education, Ho had established a versatile foundation as a multi-instrumentalist, primed for professional endeavors.[13]Career
Early professional work
After completing his studies in music composition at the University of Hawaii, having previously studied at the Grove School of Music in Los Angeles, Daniel Ho transitioned into professional music by forming the contemporary jazz group Kilauea in 1990, where he served as leader, keyboardist, composer, and producer.[2][13] His educational background provided a strong foundation in arranging and composing, enabling him to shape the group's sound from its inception.[13] With Kilauea, Ho contributed original compositions that emphasized smooth, melodic jazz infused with rhythmic elements inspired by his Hawaiian heritage, as heard in early recordings like the 1991 album Antigua Blue, which spent 19 weeks on Billboard's contemporary jazz chart.[13] The group's follow-up, Tropical Pleasures (1992), largely featured Ho's songwriting and showcased lush instrumentation blending accessible pop-jazz structures with subtle tropical influences, helping establish their commercial appeal.[13] By 1997, Kilauea had released six albums, two of which reached the Top 10 on Billboard's jazz charts, marking Ho's foundational experiences in studio production and band leadership.[2] Ho's early professional gigs with Kilauea included live performances at local venues on Oahu, where the Honolulu native first honed his stage presence amid Hawaii's vibrant music scene.[17] These initial shows provided crucial exposure to regional audiences before the group expanded to national tours, such as their 1992 summer schedule across the Midwest and East Coast, broadening their reach in the smooth jazz circuit.[13] Through these performances and recordings, Ho gained recognition for his multifaceted role, setting the stage for his evolving career in the 1990s.[18]Establishment of Daniel Ho Creations
In 1998, Daniel Ho founded Daniel Ho Creations (DHC) as an independent record label dedicated to promoting acoustic and Hawaiian-themed music, marking his transition from performer to entrepreneur in the music industry. Drawing on his prior production experience leading the contemporary jazz group Kilauea, Ho established DHC to foster creative control and artistic development for musicians in niche genres such as Hawaiian hymnody, hula, slack-key guitar, and ukulele.[2][19] The label's initial business model emphasized collaborative projects with respected Hawaiian artists, prioritizing artistic freedom over commercial constraints typical of major labels. Early releases focused on traditional and contemporary Hawaiian music, including productions centered on hymnody and slack-key guitar, which allowed Ho to leverage his skills in composition, engineering, and graphic design for comprehensive artist support. This approach enabled DHC to release over 80 albums to date, building a catalog that highlighted underrepresented voices in world and island music traditions.[2][20] Ho's relocation from Honolulu to Los Angeles further strengthened DHC's operations, capitalizing on the city's status as a music industry hub to expand distribution networks and access broader markets. This move facilitated improved logistics for production and promotion, enabling the label to reach international audiences while maintaining its roots in Hawaiian culture. As a result, DHC achieved early successes, including Na Hoku Hanohano Awards for Religious Album of the Year in 1999 and 2006, along with a third accolade, underscoring the label's impact on preserving and innovating within Hawaiian music.[2][21]Solo albums and recordings
Daniel Ho has recorded 18 solo albums since the late 1990s, marking his artistic progression from traditional Hawaiian instrumentation to innovative cross-genre fusions. His debut album, Watercolors (1999), introduced a blend of slack key guitar and contemporary acoustic elements, establishing his signature sound rooted in Hawaiian traditions while incorporating modern production techniques.[22] Early 2000s releases further explored these foundations, with albums like Beyond Blue (2001) and The Voyage Home (2002) focusing on instrumental slack key guitar to evoke serene, introspective moods.[23] A pivotal work in this period, Simple as a Sunrise (2004), highlighted themes of simplicity and renewal through original compositions featuring slack key guitar and subtle vocal elements, reflecting Ho's ability to capture everyday natural beauty in music.[24] As his career advanced, Ho's solo output evolved toward experimental fusions, incorporating ukulele as a central instrument in albums such as Pōlani (2010), which earned a historic Grammy nomination as the first solo ukulele recording recognized in the Best Hawaiian Music Album category.[25] This shift emphasized innovative fingerstyle techniques and minimalist arrangements, diverging from pure traditionalism to create intimate, meditative soundscapes. Later solo efforts, including On a Gentle Island Breeze (2012), exemplified this evolution by merging Hawaiian ukulele and guitar with global influences like Taiwanese and Indonesian motifs, underscoring themes of nature's gentle flow and cultural interconnectedness; the album received a Grammy nomination for Best World Music Album and a Golden Melody Award for Best Instrumental Album Producer.[26] Ho's self-engineering and production on these recordings, facilitated by his Daniel Ho Creations label, allowed for precise control over acoustic layering and tonal experimentation, often resulting in albums like Treasures of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar (2007), a Grammy winner for Best Hawaiian Music Album that compiled and remastered his earlier slack key works into a cohesive collection.[2] This hands-on approach persisted in subsequent releases, such as E Kahe Malie (2011), a Grammy-nominated pop instrumental album that pushed boundaries with flowing, ambient textures.[27] Overall, Ho's solo discography demonstrates a trajectory from rooted Hawaiian expressions to boundary-expanding innovations, with ukulele-focused tracks becoming a hallmark of his later creative freedom.[1]Collaborations and production work
Daniel Ho has established himself as a prolific producer through his label, Daniel Ho Creations, which has released over 80 albums featuring Hawaiian and world music artists.[2] His production work emphasizes collaborative efforts that blend traditional Hawaiian elements with diverse global influences, supporting emerging and established talents in the genre.[28] One of Ho's notable collaborations is the 2017 album Electric Island, Acoustic Sea with Japanese guitarist Tak Matsumoto of the band B'z, which merges contemporary island sounds with rock instrumentation across 12 tracks.[29] The project highlights Ho's role in bridging Eastern and Western musical cultures, resulting in a Grammy-nominated instrumental work that showcases his 'ukulele and guitar arrangements alongside Matsumoto's electric guitar.[30] In 2008, Ho partnered with actress and singer Tia Carrere on the album 'Ikena, a Grammy-winning collection of Hawaiian-language songs that incorporates bluegrass, hula, and traditional styles, including tracks like "The Spam Song" and "Welo."[31] Ho served as co-producer and multi-instrumentalist, contributing 'ukulele and arrangements that earned the album the Best Hawaiian Album award at the 51st Grammy Awards.[32] Ho's longstanding partnership with slack-key guitarist George Kahumoku Jr. includes production on the Hymns of Hawaii series, culminating in the 2025 anthology Hymns of Hawaiʻi Anthology, which remasters two Hōkū Award-winning volumes of Hawaiian Christian hymns performed with acoustic guitar and 'ukulele.[33] These works, originally released in 1999 and 2006, reflect Ho's focus on preserving himeni (Hawaiian hymnody) through intimate, culturally rooted recordings.[34] Expanding internationally, Ho produced and composed for the 2017 album Between the Sky & Prairie with Taiwan's Grasslands Ensemble, a Mongolian nomadic group from Hulunbuir, blending throat singing, morin khuur, and Hawaiian ukulele in 13 tracks that evoke prairie landscapes.[35] The album won two Golden Melody Awards in Taiwan for Best Crossover Album and Best Arrangement, underscoring Ho's ability to fuse Asian folk traditions with island acoustics.[36] In film, Ho contributed to the 2008 comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall by performing and recording as the fictional band The Coconutz, delivering Hawaiian-language covers of pop songs such as "Nothing Compares 2 U" and "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'."[37] These comedic tracks, produced under his pseudonym, integrated authentic Hawaiian phrasing and instrumentation to enhance the film's tropical setting.[38] Ho has also appeared as a guest performer with the Honolulu Symphony, incorporating his multi-instrumental skills into orchestral settings that highlight Hawaiian music's classical potential.[2]Musical style and innovations
Specialization in Hawaiian instruments
Daniel Ho's mastery of slack-key guitar, known as kī hōʻalu in Hawaiian, stems from his deep immersion in traditional techniques that originated in the late 19th century among Hawaiian paniolo (cowboys) influenced by Mexican guitar styles.[2] He employs open tunings to create resonant, full-sounding chords that evoke the landscapes of Hawaii, with the G Kilauea tuning—a hybrid of standard guitar tuning (E A D G B E) and the popular G Taro Patch (D G D G B D)—allowing for both the richness of slack-key harmonies and the clarity needed for intricate melodies.[39] His fingerpicking styles draw directly from Hawaiian traditions, incorporating alternating thumb bass lines, syncopated rhythms, and harmonic chimes to produce flowing, narrative-driven arrangements that capture the essence of island storytelling.[40] Ho's proficiency on the ukulele highlights his innovative approach to the instrument's four strings, which he leverages for melodic agility and rhythmic drive in his compositions.[41] As a virtuoso, he emphasizes techniques such as precise strumming patterns, arpeggiated picking, and chord voicings that exploit the ukulele's compact scale to deliver emotive, portable expressions of Hawaiian sentiment, often integrating it as a lead voice in solo settings. This four-string focus allows him to compose layered pieces where the ukulele's bright tone contrasts and complements deeper bass elements, enhancing the instrument's role beyond accompaniment in his original works. Raised in Honolulu, Ho's early exposure to Hawaiian music profoundly shaped his instrumental expertise, beginning with ukulele lessons in his youth.[2] In his recordings, he integrates slack-key guitar and ukulele through acoustic arrangements that prioritize unamplified authenticity, as seen in collections of instrumental tracks featuring solo and layered performances of traditional and original Hawaiian pieces.[23] These works showcase the instruments' natural timbres in intimate settings, with slack-key providing foundational grooves and ukulele adding melodic flourishes, resulting in albums that have earned him multiple Grammy Awards for Best Hawaiian Music Album.[42] In 2025, Ho received the Nā Hōkū Hanohano Kī Hō’alu Legacy Award for his enduring contributions to slack-key guitar traditions.[8] Ho extends his specialization through teaching and authoring resources that preserve and disseminate Hawaiian instrumental techniques.[41] He co-developed the Ukulele At School curriculum, a comprehensive four-string program used in educational settings, covering proper technique, chord progressions, and performance songs to build foundational skills.[43] For slack-key guitar, his book Slack Key Guitar: The G Kilauea Tuning details seven arrangement methods, including tablature for original compositions and traditional songs, enabling learners to master open tunings and fingerpicking independently.[40] These materials, published through his Daniel Ho Creations label, reflect his commitment to accessible instruction rooted in authentic Hawaiian practices.[8]Cross-cultural and experimental approaches
Daniel Ho has innovated by fusing traditional Hawaiian musical elements with diverse global styles, creating works that bridge cultural boundaries. His debut solo album Watercolors (1999) exemplifies this approach, integrating smooth jazz harmonies and improvisation with slack-key guitar techniques rooted in Hawaiian traditions.[16] Similarly, his collaborations extend to world music, including recordings with Taiwanese aboriginal musicians and Mongolian nomads, where he incorporates indigenous rhythms and melodies into Hawaiian slack-key and ukulele frameworks to evoke shared themes of landscape and heritage.[8] These efforts culminated in the 2012 album On a Gentle Island Breeze, which earned a Grammy nomination in the World Music category for its seamless blend of Hawaiian instrumentation with contemporary pop sensibilities and international influences.[44] In his experimental work with ukulele design, Ho has pushed the instrument's capabilities beyond conventional limits to accommodate cross-cultural expressions. He co-designed the Tiny Tenor ukulele with classical guitarist Pepe Romero, featuring a compact concert-sized body with a 17-inch tenor scale length and high-quality geared tuners (16:1 ratio) for precise intonation across extended ranges, enabling versatile fusions in live settings.[45] Additionally, his custom six-string ukulele, exhibited at the Grammy Museum, allows for guitar-like chord voicings and broader tonal palettes, facilitating integrations of jazz progressions and world music scales within Hawaiian slack-key foundations.[46] In 2025, Ho co-designed the three-string ʻEkolu ukulele with Romero Creations, further innovating portable Hawaiian instrumentation for educational and performance use.[47] Ho's thematic explorations often subtly incorporate natural and modern elements to enhance cross-cultural narratives. For instance, the 2017 album Electric Island, Acoustic Sea juxtaposes acoustic Hawaiian ukulele with electric textures, drawing on oceanic and island motifs to mirror global migratory influences.[48] His compositions are featured in recent choral works with Hālau Hula Kealiʻi o Nālani, including the 2024 album Lōkahi—Colors in Harmony.[47] Ho also released the instrumental album Timbre & Echoes in 2025, blending traditional and experimental sounds.[8] Through performances and lectures, Ho actively promotes these cross-cultural innovations on international stages. As an American Cultural Ambassador, he has delivered workshops and concerts worldwide, including a 2025 performance in Hong Kong blending Hawaiian, folk, and global sounds.[49] In the U.S., events like the 2020 lecture "Hawaiian Music and American Voices" at the Kona Historical Society combined live demonstrations of fused styles with discussions on cultural exchange.[50]Awards and honors
Grammy Awards
Daniel Ho has achieved significant recognition in the Grammy Awards, particularly as a producer in the Best Hawaiian Music Album category. He has won six Grammy Awards in this category, all for his production work on albums featuring traditional and contemporary Hawaiian music. These victories span from 2006 to 2011, underscoring his influence in elevating Hawaiian slack key guitar and related genres on a global stage.[3][2] His first win came at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards in 2006 for producing Masters of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar, Vol. 1, a compilation showcasing leading slack key artists. This was followed by the 49th Annual Grammy Awards in 2007 for Legends of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar – Live from Maui, a live recording that captured the genre's improvisational essence. In 2008, at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards, Ho secured another victory with Treasures of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar, further highlighting instrumental mastery. The 51st Annual Grammy Awards in 2009 marked his collaboration with Tia Carrere on 'Ikena, their debut album together, which blended original songs with Hawaiian elements and became the first artist-led project to win in the category. At the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards in 2010, Ho won for producing Masters of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar, Vol. 2. His sixth win occurred at the 53rd Annual Grammy Awards in 2011 for Huana Ke Aloha with Carrere, reinforcing his role in bridging vocal and instrumental Hawaiian traditions.[51][52][2] In addition to these wins, Ho has received nominations in the Best Hawaiian Music Album category, including for Hawaiiana (2008), The Spirit of Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar (2009), He Nani with Carrere (2010), and Polani (2011), often for productions involving other Hawaiian artists like Amy Hānaialiʻi and Hoʻokena. His overall Grammy record includes twelve nominations, extending to categories such as Best Pop Instrumental Album for E Kahe Malie (2012) and Best World Music Album for projects like On a Gentle Island Breeze (2013) and Our World in Song with Luis Conte and Wu Man (2015), as well as a 2022 nomination for East West Players Presents: Daniel Ho & Friends Live in Concert.[3][2] These Grammy successes have notably boosted Ho's career, particularly enhancing the visibility and credibility of his Daniel Ho Creations label, which has become a key platform for Hawaiian music distribution and innovation. The awards have helped promote underrepresented Hawaiian artists internationally, aligning with Ho's production efforts in preserving and modernizing the genre.[53][30]Other regional and international accolades
In addition to his Grammy achievements, Daniel Ho has earned significant recognition in Hawaiian and Asian music communities, underscoring his influence in regional traditions and cross-cultural fusion. Ho has secured three Na Hōkū Hanohano Awards, Hawaii's highest music honors presented by the Hawaii Academy of Recording Arts, primarily from his early career work with the jazz fusion group Kilauea in the 1990s. These include the 1999 Religious Album of the Year for Hymns of Hawaii, a collaboration with George Kahumoku Jr. that blended slack key guitar with traditional Hawaiian hymns. In June 2025, he received the Nā Hōkū Hanohano Kī Hō'alu Legacy Award for his enduring contributions to slack-key guitar traditions.[2][54] Ho has also received six Golden Melody Awards, Taiwan's most prestigious music honors, often likened to the Grammys. Notable among these are the 2017 wins for Between the Sky and Prairie with The Grasslands Ensemble, earning Best Crossover Album and Best Arrangement for Composer/Arranger, highlighting his innovative integration of Hawaiian ukulele with Mongolian throat singing and Chinese erhu.[8][2] Further affirming his impact on Hawaiian music, Ho has won fifteen Hawaii Music Awards, celebrating his productions, performances, and instrumental expertise from the 1990s through the 2010s. His Grammy successes have amplified this regional prominence, facilitating broader international collaborations and tours across Asia and beyond.[2]Discography
Solo discography
Daniel Ho has released 18 solo albums through his independent label, Daniel Ho Creations (DHC), typically available in both CD and digital formats. These works highlight his expertise in Hawaiian instrumentation, often delving into acoustic reflections inspired by island landscapes, personal introspection, and experimental instrumental techniques. Key themes across his solo releases include serene ukulele solos evoking natural beauty, slack-key guitar explorations of traditional melodies, and piano arrangements blending Hawaiian motifs with contemporary subtlety. Notable tracks, such as "Pineapple Mango" from its titular album, showcase his signature fingerstyle ukulele approach, emphasizing melodic clarity and rhythmic innovation unique to his unaccompanied efforts.[2] The following table presents a chronological selection of representative solo albums, illustrating the evolution of his thematic focus from early slack-key foundations to later ukulele and piano-centric explorations:| Year | Title | Label | Thematic Overview |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | The Voyage Home | Daniel Ho Creations | Instrumental slack-key guitar album drawing on Hawaiian seafaring traditions and open tunings for evocative, flowing narratives.[9] |
| 1999 | Watercolors | Daniel Ho Creations | Slack-key guitar pieces with a painterly quality, blending subtle dynamics and harmonic layers to mimic natural impressions.[9] |
| 2000 | Beyond Blue | Daniel Ho Creations | Expansive slack-key instrumentals exploring emotional depth and vast horizons, featuring intricate fingerpicking patterns.[9][23] |
| 2001 | Pineapple Mango | Daniel Ho Creations | Ukulele-driven tracks celebrating tropical vitality, with the title song as a playful, upbeat solo highlighting percussive strumming.[55] |
| 2003 | Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar: The Complete Collection | Daniel Ho Creations | Compilation of prior slack-key solos, underscoring his foundational role in the genre through 23 curated instrumental pieces.[23] |
| 2004 | Simple as a Sunrise | Daniel Ho Creations | Acoustic reflections on everyday serenity, incorporating ukulele and light percussion for warm, accessible Hawaiian soundscapes.[24][56] |
| 2010 | Pōlani | Daniel Ho Creations | All-ukulele solo album focused on purity and fingerstyle precision, marking a milestone in elevating the instrument's solo potential.[25][2] |
| 2011 | E Kahe Mālie | Daniel Ho Creations | Solo piano interpretations of traditional and original Hawaiian compositions, emphasizing gentle flows and emotional resonance.[27] |
| 2012 | On a Gentle Island Breeze | Daniel Ho Creations | Blends ukulele and guitar in breezy, contemplative instrumentals inspired by island winds, with cross-cultural subtle infusions.[57][26] |
| 2023 | Written by the Sea | Daniel Ho Creations | Ukulele-led reflections on oceanic journeys, featuring melodic solos and vocal collaborations that evoke coastal tranquility and rhythmic waves.[58] |
| 2025 | Timbre & Echoes | Daniel Ho Creations | Contemporary ukulele instrumentals emphasizing tonal variations and echoes, showcasing advanced techniques in solo performance.[59][60] |
Collaborative and production discography
Daniel Ho has been a prolific collaborator and producer, releasing over 80 acoustic and Hawaiian-themed albums through his label, Daniel Ho Creations, many of which feature partnerships with diverse artists across genres and cultures.[2] His production work emphasizes innovative fusions, often blending Hawaiian slack-key guitar and ukulele with global traditions, resulting in Grammy-nominated and award-winning projects.Key Collaborative Albums
Ho's collaborations highlight cross-cultural exchanges, including instrumental duets and ensemble recordings. Notable examples include:- Electric Island, Acoustic Sea (2017) with Tak Matsumoto, a guitarist from Japan's B'z, blending contemporary island and rock elements across 12 tracks.[29]
- Live On Tour (2023) with George Kahumoku Jr. and Tia Carrere, a live album capturing Hawaiian classics, hymns, and originals from their Masters of Hawaiian Music tour, spanning 15 songs.[61]
- Huana Ke Aloha (2010) with Tia Carrere, a Grammy-winning album fusing Hawaiian and pop influences.[62]
- Our World In Song (2014) with Wu Man and Luis Conte, a Grammy-nominated world music project incorporating pipa, percussion, and ukulele.[63]
- Between The Sky and Prairie (2017) with The Grasslands Ensemble, an Inner Mongolian group, earning Taiwan's Golden Melody Awards for Best Crossover Album and Best Arrangement.[35]
- 2 To Three Feet with Herb Ohta Jr., an instrumental album exploring surf-themed jazz and Hawaiian motifs.[64]
- Aloha España (2016) with Pepe Romero, the first classical guitar and ukulele duet album, merging flamenco and Hawaiian styles.[2]