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Earthsongs Si Manu La'iti'iti (Little Bird) - Samoan/Rapana - SATB
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Music: Traditional Samoan Nursery Song
Arranger: Steven Rapana
Format: Choral Octavo
Language: Samoan
Voicing: SATB a cappella
Si manu la'iti'iti is a Samoan rendering of the song Little Birdie In The Tree, which was written by P. P. Bliss and published in his collection of Sunday School Music titled The Charm (Chicago, 1871). Birds have always been a popular theme of many Samoan folk songs, so it comes as no surprise that this piece was adopted and taught widely in pre-schools and church Sunday schools. Even though there is no knowing when this song entered into the Samoan culture, it has been made available as a singing resource for use in New Zealand schools as early as the 1980's, where--according to official government records--there are over 86,000 Samoan speakers (Ministry of Pacific Peoples, 2017). The version used in this arrangement was taught to the composer by his grandmother, Fa'aiuga So'oalo Palelei, who remembers this song from her childhood growing up and around the village of Fale'ula found on Samoa's main island, Upolu.
- Karen Grylls, editor
Arranger: Steven Rapana
Format: Choral Octavo
Language: Samoan
Voicing: SATB a cappella
Si manu la'iti'iti is a Samoan rendering of the song Little Birdie In The Tree, which was written by P. P. Bliss and published in his collection of Sunday School Music titled The Charm (Chicago, 1871). Birds have always been a popular theme of many Samoan folk songs, so it comes as no surprise that this piece was adopted and taught widely in pre-schools and church Sunday schools. Even though there is no knowing when this song entered into the Samoan culture, it has been made available as a singing resource for use in New Zealand schools as early as the 1980's, where--according to official government records--there are over 86,000 Samoan speakers (Ministry of Pacific Peoples, 2017). The version used in this arrangement was taught to the composer by his grandmother, Fa'aiuga So'oalo Palelei, who remembers this song from her childhood growing up and around the village of Fale'ula found on Samoa's main island, Upolu.
- Karen Grylls, editor
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