Ilanda were an Australian-based vocal harmony and dance group which formed in 1991 as Past to Present. Initially a four-piece, with Leighton Hema, Frank Laga'aia, Lennie Keller and his brother, Norman Keller. They are all New Zealand-born, though their heritage is Samoan. Past to Present teamed with Peter Andre to feature on his single, "Get Down on It", which peaked at No. 5 on the ARIA Singles Chart and No. 1 on the New Zealand Singles Chart. When Hema left the group in 1998 they went into hiatus for a year and reconvened as a three-piece under the name, Ilanda, which had three top 40 Australian singles. Their last release was in May 2000.
History
All four Past to Present members: Leighton Hema, Frank Laga'aia, Lennie Keller and his brother, Norman Keller, were born in New Zealand of Samoan heritage. They grew up together and attended the same church choir. Laga'aia's older brother, Jay, is an Australian-New Zealand actor and singer. The Keller brothers migrated to Melbourne in 1980. In 1991 the quartet formed there, after Hema and Laga'aia had also migrated, as a vocal harmony and dance group. Samoan band, the Katinas, were a major inspiration. As Past to Present, they signed with Mushroom Records and issued their debut single, "Crazy", which reached the top 50 on both the ARIA Singles Chart and the New Zealand Singles Chart. The track was co-written by the four band members. In the following month they issued an album, Four Noble Truths, which was produced by Ant Dale and Vince Deltito. In February 1996 they appeared on Peter Andre's cover version of Kool & the Gang's single, "Get Down on It", as featured vocalists. It peaked at No. 5 on the ARIA Singles Chart and No. 1 on the New Zealand Singles Chart. On the ARIA end of the year charts it peaked in the top 50. Their next single was a cover version of Earth, Wind & Fire's "September", which reached the ARIA Singles Top 50. Their album track "Sexuality", co-written by producers Dale and Deltito with M Stevens, was used on the soundtrack for the TV soap, . A non-album single, "Ready Willing & Able", was issued in August 1997, which reached the top 40 in New Zealand. The group left Mushroom Records in late 1997. According to Frank, "we had come to a crossroad . We just felt that if we were to carry on, we needed a 100per cent control of our careers and felt like we knew how we wanted to be marketed from the promotional side of things – we'd been in the industry a good five years by then. We sat down with our management one day and decided to form APO records and APO International and then we got together our own production team." APO International ran recording studios, a record label, a management company and modelling agency. Leighton Hema left the group, citing personal reasons. Laga'aia and the Keller brothers resumed performing in early 1999 as a three-piece band under the name, Ilanda, – a reference to their Samoan heritage. The new line-up's first single, "It's Our Time", peaked at No. 30 in Australia and No. 21 in New Zealand. In June of that year, Norman told Christie Eliezer of Billboard that "the music of Ilanda is obviously a statement of what we are. The Pacific feel is integral to our sound. The harmonies come from church choirs, and the way we play acoustic guitar reflects the fact that, at any Maori party, there's a tussle to grab the guitar for the inevitable sing along." Ilanda had further top 40 chart success in Australia with their next two singles "Tasty" and "Breakin'... There's No Stopping Us" featuring Joanne Accom. In August 2000 the group were working on their next album, Experience, which Frank described, "It's very eclectic to say the least... we've also got a touch of pop music in there as well as R&B, dance, ballads and up-tempo songs – so it's a very diverse album."