Taranaki Daily News

A sound for life and death

Francis Tipene from the Casketeers keeps a family tradition alive with a special guitar.

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Music brings us together. It unites us in our happiness and most definitely in our sadness. But the main thing for us as a family is that music helps us relax and unwind, especially in the line of work we do.

My wife, Kaiora, and our six sons sit around on Monday nights and have a waiata together on our own instrument­s, and that’s important for our family unit.

The guitar is the accompanim­ent to the song or the waiata that you sing and it accompanie­s the spirit in which you sing it in.

The guitar I have is the instrument for home and work. It’s seen a lot of death and it’s also seen a lot of life, which is why this guitar is significan­t to me and my family.

We recently had our sixth son, my namesake, and so the first thing that we took to the hospital was the guitar. It was important for us to instil that sound of the waiata in our new baby.

We sang to him when he was in mummy’s tummy, and we also sang to him when he was born. It’s a family tradition I started.

This guitar was a gift from my sister, Moana. She gave it to me 15 years ago. At the time, she had no money and she was struggling.

She got it for me because I always wanted to own a nice guitar We always had a couple of guitars here and there, but they were not as beautiful as this one.

When I was a young boy, growing up in Pawarenga in Northland, my grandfathe­r played the guitar to us. We always wanted to copy him. We had no power and Pop would play the guitar to help us to go sleep.

I do the same thing with my children today. I feel like I’m watching how I was brought up

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