Aerial view of Aerials.
Boy, does Hawaii know how to party. These videos don’t nearly do it any justice, but town was a-boomin’. Talk ’bout watching an ambulance drowned out by the clusterf*ck of consumer-end air bangers. On more than one occasion, glitterbombs exploded a little too close for comfort, but we welcomed it with open eyes…and a vibrating heart.
Uploading Blackberry videos is a bizznitcheroo, so follow the jump for a good time…
More views of my 2010′s beginning.
Self-determinate yourself this year. Change clothes. Then Go. A wise man once said, If nothing ever changed, there’d be no butterflies. Go out to a meadow, if you dare. Catch a monarch, and start an anarchy. Oh ten!
We Own KTUH
“Aquadust” has made its way to the top of the charts over at your favorite local College radio station, KTUH 90.3fm.
The University seems to always hold down the heat. On many occasions, even. Thank goodness for hungry adolescent ears of young sleepy-eyed students of the islands. Study in the dusty air of the Earth. And, drink more water. it solves headaches.
Here’s to the end of 2009.
DJ T.K.O. & Packo – Live on KTUH Radio (HI)
October 18th 2009
On-Air antics with PacK.O.
9pm-12am
“Inner Dimensions”
Hip Hop, Grunge, Dubstep, Glitch, Fun, Skratch!
Use your ears here:
-Online
@ http://ktuh.org
-Airwaves:
@ KTUH Radio Honolulu 90.3FM
@ KTUH Radio Windward 89.9FM
@ KTUH Radio North Shore 91.3FM
Digital
@ Oceanic Time Warner Digital Cable Ch. 866
Telecommunicate:
@ 808-956-7261
Enjoy the End of Mid October!
KAHLEE – UPTOWN SWUITE – ADIKT 1 – TORAE – free download
New Music Tuesdays!
Big ups to 2Dopeboyz
consistently holding down any and everything necessary in good music.
Alternative DOWNLOAD HERE. featuring your favorite Hawaiian skratch DJ with a mini-cameo at the end.
-packo-
Hip Hop in the HI
Wonder no more about the controversy.
Tassho Pearce x The Spacifics x Flip The Bird
FREE DOWNLOAD
Go tell a friend.
HI Hip Hop Alliance
From the Star Bulletin
Hawaii hip-hop artists partner up
By Jason Genegabus
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Oct 09, 2009
(Single Page View) | Return to Paginated View
Hawaii hip-hop fans got an early Halloween treat when De La Soul brought their “20 Years High and Rising” tour to Aloha Tower Marketplace last weekend.
The last time the legendary trio was here was 2005, when they packed Pipeline Cafe. This time around, they took the stage at a rainy Events at the Tower for a 45-minute walk down memory lane with special guest Biz Markie in tow that featured hits off “The Grind Date,” “Stakes is High” and “De La Soul is Dead” in addition to “Three Feet High and Rising.”
Another highlight of the show was an opening set by Tassho Pearce and Creed Chameleon; after releasing “SiQ of Lazy” via SiQ Records in 2008, Pearce announced that Creed had changed teams and was now part of the Flip the Bird family. A brief conversation with this columnist also revealed that a recent visit by the Blue Scholars to Hawaii resulted in a collaboration between Creed and George “Geo” Quibuyen; the two expect to release a single, “Paradise Life Relaxing,” early next year.
For additional pictures from the concert, visit HILife Online at hilife.starbulletin.com …
Livewire July 2009 (Live Set Download)
You may now download any and all sets of the entire night of July 31, 2009. More electronic goodness for those ears of yours. Listen to my other guilty pleasures of music…
Go here and follow the rules:
Be safe.
Pro Bowl Weekend for us.
Creed Chameleon & I will be in performance here…

Come thru with a gang of baby powder for the masses.
Aesop Rock in Hawaii!
Unannounced and added to the lineup:
Creed Chameleon & DJ Packo…holler to your homeboy.



These braddahs are great…and so are Oreo snack packs…chee!
Last Minute Lineup…
Mr. Diesel invades Shock

If you ever wondered what else I do besides listen to and play hip hop, then wander aimlessly no more.
2009 continues to welcome me with open arms, ears, and minds, for the polar opposite of genres in my preference can and will display and unfold as it should, tonight. Inside the revamped ‘Xyloh’.
Artists like Yoji, Kamui, Scot Project, Dark By Design ring a bell? Probably not. Come and meet them face to face with a subwoofer, tonight. Inside the Holy X.
Bring a neck brace, just in case. Heads may nod to the death.
-Pac’Shock-
The Spacifics x Honolulu Weekly x Local Music

REAL TALK: Kalani vs. Kalani
(original interview for the Honolulu Weekly 12-24-08 issue)
KALANI: What about music in general excites you?
PACKO: I’m continuously excited about the places that all music takes me. Each piece is a different journey with multiple pathways. After all is said and done, I never feel complete. I think it’s because I’m always wanting more. Not that it leaves me hanging high and dry, but the fact that it’s my musical note-worthy nicotine, my melodious medical marijuana, say, my anti-drug in the absence of love. Music’s a drug that I can never get sick of.
KALANI: What about deejaying excites you?
PACKO: Deejaying typically brings out the inner child of me. I’m infatuated with the invention of the turntable itself, but to use it as my paintbrush, it’s a great experience. It’s like audible finger painting. Controlling the sound, is like a scientist with a time machine; being lucid in a dream; a quarterback on a football team; or a kid with unlimited jellybeans. Deejaying is as a drug addiction is to crack fiends. It gives me the opportunity to set my own rules of my game and have fun with it. Being meticulous on the type of music that I would play, I often try to find a way to make the music my friend. Stubborn, in a sense. It’s probably my good ol’ Taurean attitude in defense. But, listen to what I listen to, and hopefully you can understand what I meant.

KALANI: What about scratching excites you?
PACKO: What’s so appealing to me about scratching is the ability to take something totally unorthodox, like the sound of a drill, clanging pipes, a car crash, a laser, or any word or syllable, and make music out it. Either as an accompaniment, hook, or verse, scratching can be an integral part of music. It can be treated like any other sound that a typical instrument can make. It is unique in its own behavior. Plus, it’s fun to tweek out on the turntable during the wee morning hours, for hours.
KALANI: What about hip hop culture excites you?
PACKO: As the old adage goes, Hip Hop is a way of life. It’s not just about the music, but the people you surround yourself with, the way you dress, the style you choose to equip yourself with. I can’t exactly say that I live “Hip Hop,” I just listen to a lot of it. To every individual, their concept and grasp of the word in itself has its own meaning. I choose to have it as a part of my way of life. I’m sure that over the years of its existence, it got over-saturated with new styles, different methods, contrary characteristics, and offbeat approaches that altered the traditional appearance of “Hip Hop” as a culture. Hip Hop has come a long way, and it’s scary, yet exciting to see what’s next. In order to know where it’s going, you must know where it came from. Hence, myself often digging deeper and reaching farther and farther back to understand the movement, and why it even began the way it did, back in the beginning. Hip Hop is eternally moving forward, and backwards, at once. Either move out the way, or stay in the groove. Needless to say, there’s always room to improve. Which is another reason why Hip Hop appeals to me: The artists are constantly trying to outdo each other to be the best. Which is dope, because we all rise together, especially in Hawaii.
KALANI: Tying all those aforementioned concepts together, how does it all excite you?
PACKO: Like a bumper sticker once told me, ‘Do what you love, and love what you do.’ That just about sums it all up for me. I love music, and I want people to hear my take on it. Whether through words or records. I guess traffic isn’t always so bad, so, big ups to driving in traffic.
KALANI: How did you connect with SIQ Records and the Spacifics?
PACKO: Both parties actually had separate occasions of connection. The team at SIQ Records came up together. We all knew somebody who knew somebody. The reason that I linked with SIQ Records, is because of what they are doing. I wouldn’t get down with something I was a hypocrite to. I know they all got good heads and they have great intentions. It takes a great amount of time and patience to even start a record label to begin with. So, with Hip Hop, Hawaii, and a legitimate record label, all under one roof, that’s a pretty big task, if you ask me. I’m glad that I knew some good folks who finally up and did it, which gives me the privilege to be a part of that movement.
As far as linking with the Spacifics, they had everything and all elements in place, although what was missing was a key sound to any Hip Hop act: scratching. It’s a simple equation: Live Hip Hop + MCs + DJ = the Spacifics. As they searched for someone who could cater with the cuts, I just so happened to be available at that moment. And, that moment was our biggest show, Rock The Bells at the Blaisdell Arena in September of 2007. That’s when I came aboard. We still do shows until this day. Putting in work every week at every practice session possible.
KALANI: What’s your take on the current crop of turntablists and true hip hop deejays in Hawaii?
PACKO: I believe everyone is out on their own grind. In my view, I don’t see as much of a hype as there once was. There’s no real DJ battles any more such as the DMC and ITF stopovers. Nowadays, it’s up to us as the “turntablists” to keep our head high, and continue doing what we’re doing to keep the art alive. It’s truly survival of the fittest. Shapeshifting through existence, it’s time to sift through the trends, sort out the split ends, quit pretending, and ascend through the barriers of this Turntablistic Deejay funny business. In actuality, most DJs are just that, a DJ. I hate to hate, but “DJ” is such a loosely used term. Sure, self-hatred is a bad thing. I’m a DJ myself, but truthfully, I just enjoy scratching. I got into the mixing aspect just to experiment with the incorporation of scratching into a more pleasurable and alluring audio/visual experience. So far it’s worked out to my liking. I would just like to see more scratch sessions/BBQs/get-togethers/etc., just to shoot the shit and catch up on the ‘tablist times. Hawaii’s got the talent, but the motivation is not 100%, just yet.
KALANI: What are some of your most memorable deejay moments?
PACKO: There’s a few. My biggest moment was the chance to finally Q&A with DJ Qbert. In my own home, to say the least. The whole reason I got into Deejaying, is because of the Invisibl Skratch Piklz, which Qbert was a member of back in the 90′s. My main, numero uno goal was to have a question and answer scratch session with him, or even all of the ‘Piklz. To the uneducated, Question and Answering is like it says, DJs cut in turns over a beat for 8 bars, 16 bars, 32 bars, what have you. On a separate occasion, I had the privilege to cut alongside DJ D-Styles. I’ve met Yogafrog, Mixmaster Mike, and Shortkut. All of that had a big effect on me. Knowing that I’ve once connected with them gives me unfathomed confidence. Having that under my belt, I felt like all I ever wanted as a DJ has been accomplished. That made me have to set even higher goals. That is my next challenge, to find out what’s next for me.
Another big moment, was playing at the Blaisdell for the Rock The Bells show back in 2007 with the Spacifics. It was a blessing to just be on the same bill as Wu-Tang Clan, and Bone Thugs.
Any chance I get to create a memorable experience in the DJ community, I proceed. Ain’t no half-steppin goin’ on here.
And, finally, to have met everyone I did through the deejaying world, is such a wonderful thing. As I surround myself with what I enjoy most, the attraction gets stronger and more faithful, and unbelievably believable. Every moment, good and bad, is remembered.
KALANI: How do you “live” hip hop?
PACKO: By living out my passion for life: Being a DJ. Spreading the idea of selfishly good music to good people. I say selfish, because it’s what I think is good.
KALANI: How have you grown as a dj from say a year ago?
PACKO: My main improvement stems from working with the Spacifics on a consistent basis. I’ve learned new techniques on incorporating a sharper sound of the scratch into a live Hip Hop set. As usual, there’s always ways to improve with the mixing, scratching, and production capabilities. I’m getting my feet wet on the production side of things, trying to work with different people on a regular basis. I’ve also got heavier into the mixtape game, which was intentionally a bigger project than it turned out to be. I overworked and underpaid myself with this one, sleepless nights and days, thinking, criticizing, unsatisfying myself with every click. But as any artist in general, the greatest skill they possess, is when to say “Stop.” I could go on and on, and never have something to show for it, but that’s absurdity without hope. I say cease one degree, and continue on a different slope.
KALANI: Deejays don’t put mixtapes just to put them out, what were your goals and intentions with “Mosquito Diesel”?
PACKO: Mosquitoes are insects that are universally known to transmit diseases and sip on some good blood. I’m just a human who enjoys good music. I sip on the music, and transmit bass kicks and dope bits. I feel the need to infect through positivity, with high hopefuls of creating an epidemic unheard of before. I want my phonographic craft to plague the people, with a contagious chorus of sorts. I want to cause an uproar in this downpour of soggy symmetry in music. The metaphors and analogies are endless, really. The main intention here is to spread good music and inflame heads with a vinyl virus. I feel the need to infect people with what pacifies me from time to time. Through the sodden society of today’s main stream of music, it’s becoming harder to find a true classic, a gem, a diamond with perfect reflectivity. I’m trusting that my display of affection with a well thought out compilation will create some sort of a ‘time-honored, vintage piece’ for each selection on this collective.
Furthermore, there’s a handful of DJs that have been dropping product. I expect it’s my turn to show what I got boiling under ground, this time ’round. I’ve been releasing mixtapes every now and then, but I decided to lay low for a bit, and drop fire on the public when the rain poured its hardest. Heartless as it may seem, it’s the complete opposite. Nothing but heart in this one.
I’m proud to say the least, but always peaking behind the next door that opens.
KALANI: Is there a difference between a mixtape and a glitchtape?
PACKO: No difference at all. The hackneyed thought of labeling it as a mixtape just bored me to death. It’s a glitch-inspired mix, with heavy scratching and blending. It could have been called ‘the skratchtape’, ‘the blendtape’, ‘the gimmicktape,’ it wouldn’t matter, it is what it is. Glitch (IDM) music had a big influence on me in recent accounts so I thought that it was only appropriate. Plus it’s the closest relative that rhymes with “mix”.
KALANI: Where can people purchase the cd?
PACKO: -Prototype (Pearl City)
-Exclusive Hawaii (Kapiolani Ave.)
-Stylus (University Ave.)
-DIG Lifestyles (Victoria Ward Center)
-Kicks/HI (Ward/Makaloa St.)
-Higher Ground Coffee & Music Café (Wahiawa)
-Or shoot me an eMail, and I would be glad to mail a copy – djpacko@gmail.com
-Also at any events that I’m at, I will have copies. For wholesale price, that is. With a signature if needed.
KALANI: Where can people hear you the next few weeks?
PACKO: Every Friday @ Metro Park Ala Moana. Spinning live from 4-8pm.
-DJ Swamp Show @ The Loft on Friday January 9th, 2009
DJ Swamp in Hawaii

This should be a show of epic proportions, to say the least.
Checklist for the evening:
Fire Extinguisher
Gasmask
Loin cloths
Bottles Water.
All shall be well in the neighborhood.
The Diesel Day After
Dear “12-13 Reader“,
It’s the day after the storm, quite literal to say the least. Thanks to those of you that enjoyed the festive mainstream murderation at the Loft last evening. The Release Party was very glitchified, enough to say some in the audience surely died trying to abide by the efforts to dance. I seen it in their eyeball system! Although, Chinatown is filled with good people, and homeless people, as a matter of fact, I’m glad we all got to coexist peacefully. The night started exactly as expected, and ended on a good note. Thanks again for the incentive to keep Hip Hop/Hope alive in our little hearts in Hawaii. Let’s rise together. Bypass the rain, and stain the bad weather with a fist full of red feathers. Shine the lies into the sun, and tell the media we won.
Here’s a little way of saying thank you. Your continued support aids me on my quest to higher knowledge.
Download the Mind Tactics / Mosquito Minimix on this jumperooni:
Mind Tactics / Mosquito Minimix
Sip an ice cold beverage and listen to the distance between you and I.
Til then, enjoy the melancholy handclapping of a 1975 audience as a backdrop to Joan Baez, the folk phenom:
Boy! That guitar solo @ 1:55 is just pure gold.
Happy hearing!
See yall at the Q-Tip Show
-Pacsquito-
First Friday for the Fifth of December
–It’s the last First of ’08, so wear your favorite TShirt today
–
Places of Performances for today — December 5, 2008:
Metro Park (Ala Moana-near Nordstrom 2nd Floor)
-4:00-8:00pm
-Four consecutive hours of beats and lyrics that will nearly
nod your head off. On two turntables, might I add…with real vinyl.
-Hit the jump for the Blog – - > MetroBlog
________________________________________________________
Loft (Chinatown)
-First Friday LIVE with the Spacifics,
featuring SIQ Records Recording Artists: Creed Chameleon & Meiso

________________________________________________________
Your daily Disc Jock jabble,
Peacember
________________________________________________________
Don’t forget December 12, 2008

–packopackopackopackopackopackopackopackopackopackopackopacko–
________________________________________________________
Meiso Go – Boueihonnou (video)
Check out my main mans, Meiso Go. Japanglitch rap at its finest.
Track : Boueihonnou
Lyrics : meiso
Beat : ion mike
Video : earl williams (noob saibot/ lionz of zion)
Additional Info:
Meiso @ Myspace
SIQ Records
DJ Packo Midweek Interview with Melissa Moniz
Midweek – The Lowdown
By: Melissa Moniz
November 21, 2008

Kalani Pokipala
Aka:
DJ Packo
Age:
24
High School graduated from:
Kealakehe, class of 2002
Where Living Now:
Oahu
How long have you been DJing?
Got my first pair of turntables in September of 1999, so just about nine years. But, of course, I’ve been fascinated by the art for a bit longer.
What is your favorite genre of music to listen to?
I’m attracted toward the jazzy sides of just about any genre. I mean, if it sounds good and my head can nod to it, then I can dig it. As for any specifics, urban/underground hip-hop, jazz, downtempo, reggae, and drum ‘n’ bass. I think they all go hand-in-hand.
What do you feel you have to offer to the music scene?
To push the art of the turntable and to shed more light on it as an actual instrument. I personally like the scratch aspect of the DJ most, and I feel I should be a part of the movement here in Hawaii. I’ve studied it for years and was privileged to learn from the most influential DJs of my time, but the majority of people in Hawaii don’t look at it the way I do. It’s just a silly thing some would call a passion. The average person cannot listen to scratch music hours on end like myself, so I use the idea of mixtapes as my outlet. It gives me a chance to slice and unite recordings and make it unique to myself while achieving a subtle, exclusive composition. I feel others should be given more options to the immense pool of music out there, without having to sift and sort through all the crud. At the same time, I get to add a more pleasing and amiable sound to the scratch itself, that I initially set out to do. My job is to give my audience what I believe is necessary.
What projects are you currently working on?
I have a few projects in the work as we speak. Firstly, I will be dropping a new Hip Hop mixtape that will be out in early-mid December titled Mosquito Diesel. It has a basic mosquito theme behind it — They transfer to the victim blood and diseases, which then infects them. Same concept applies in an optimistic way, of course. I am attempting to infect the blind world with a pinch of musical malaria, while fueling the media with good vibes.
Another promotional mixtape I also released to the public a few months ago entitled “Metrognome in the Meadow.” Distribution still going strong.
Furthermore, I am the DJ for a live Hip Hop band called “The Spacifics.” We are currently working on a studio album, and also opening up the Atmosphere show at Pipeline Café this Saturday, November 22. We do have an EP out now, featuring 3 MCs from Hawaii’s SIQ Record label.
Where are your mixtapes available?
Prototype, Stylus Honolulu, Urbanz Toys, Exclusive HI and through myself directly.
What are your goals musically?
To immortalize myself with more product and achievements. To travel because the music said so. To share knowledge and presence with the greatest of musical minds on this Earth. And to always be half way there.
Website/contact info?
http://www.myspace.com/djpacko
http://skratchmore.com
Another Mosquito Blogbite…

I am human, unlike yourself, you unappealing demon, you. I bleed red, but I often regurgitate the bullshit I’m fed. Music is as music does, as a metaphor, of course. Come hither to my tomb, discover the puzzling similarities of Hiphop and Insects, or rather get high in HI. Realize why the six-legged seraphim and the turntable technician fly together on this mix mission. Let this be the cure for the itch. I exist, to remedy the world by fueling the foul-sounding noise that most call “Hip Hop.” Do yourself a favor and medicate the media alongside of me on our continuous journey to rehabilitate the uninformed, the innocent, the insensible, and the inexperienced. Let’s fix the itch with a quick glitch mix, kids!
What’s all the buzz, you wonder…? It‘s exactly that. This is not about the mass knowledge of music out there already, or what’s popular and prominent, or promoted and preferred, or what’s pacifying you on your iPod. It’s about the privileged and the pleasing; the polyphony of perfected paragraphs through rhythm and rhyme; the undiscovered music in existence. These unimagined classics are in need of an outlet.
OK, OK. Enough bullcornin‘…
Be on the lookout for a new hip hop mix for the masses. Some of the most favored and hard labored artists from Aesop Rock to Zion I, just to to be an alphabeta-grammatical socialite.
My personal favorite is the exclusive “Memory Lane Freestyle” by Hawaii’s own Seph1. The heads will nod, and the macro verse will be applaud. I like to label this as an interpretation of vinyl vanity, for the sheer swagger that my whimsical ego has to offer I’m finally relieved to make something worth my time, and yours, of course. December 12th is the departure mark. Deploy and enjoy the noise.

-121208-
Dr. Packo, M.D.
a.k.a. “The Dengue Fever-flavored Level Meter Lemur”
10-23-08 Direct Descendants in Chinatown
Performances by some of Hawaii’s underground at the elevated and remodeled, Loft, in Chinatown
On the mic tonight:
Creed Chameleon
Jonah The Whale
Risup
with I, on the cut
Bring a headband, just in case.
peace.
Spacifics on Monday Night Live
Dear friends,
Monday Evening September 29, 2008, DJ Catwings presents Monday Night Live featuring The Spacifics, blessing the airwaves on Hawaii’s only college radio station that matters, KTUH 90.3 FM.
Live 6-piece Hip Hop band On Air from 10-11pm.
Featured MCs of the evening include Hawaii’s favorites:
-Tassho Pearce-
-Creed Chameleon-
Divided sets of certified, live organic Hip Hop.















