Around the beginning of the 20th century,
stringed instruments, such as the
ukulele and the
steel guitar, overtook traditional
wind instruments as the ones most commonly used by Hawaiian musicians. During this time, the phrase "hapa haole" first began to be used in reference to any Hawaiian song that had mostly English lyrics and influence from American genres. Hapa haole music was introduced to the mainland United States at multiple points through the 1910s. The 1912
Broadway musical
The Bird of Paradise contained multiple songs from the genre. "On the Beach at Waikiki", a hapa haole composition by
Henry Kailimai which was performed at the exposition, went on to become a major hit in the mainland, one of the first of the genre to do so. Following these initial introductions of the genre in the mainland, hapa haole and Hawaiian music as a whole began to find a large amount of attention and commercial success across the country. Later on, during the
Hawaiian Renaissance of the 1970s, the genre was the subject of criticism due to its perceived inauthenticity. Although it had beginnings in Hawaiian traditional music and ragtime, the genre evolved alongside American popular music, and now comprises other styles, including
swing,
rock and roll, and
rap. == References ==