Ukulele Explained

Image Capt:Martin 3K Ukulele
Background:string
Classification:Stringed instrument (plucked, nylon-stringed instrument usually played with the bare thumb and/or fingertips, or a felt pick)
Hornbostel Sachs:321.322
Hornbostel Sachs Desc:Composite chordophone
Developed:19th century in Hawaii (introduced by the Portuguese)
Range:C4–A5 (C6 tuning)
Related:
Sound Sample:


Soprano ukulele being played

The ukulele (; from Hawaiian: {{okina pronounced as /haw/, approximately), also called a uke, is a member of the lute family of instruments of Portuguese origin and popularized in Hawaii. It generally employs four nylon strings.[1] [2]

The tone and volume of the instrument vary with size and construction. Ukuleles commonly come in four sizes: soprano, concert, tenor, and baritone.

History

Developed in the 1880s, the ukulele is based on several small, guitar-like instruments of Portuguese origin, the machete,[3] cavaquinho, timple, and rajão, introduced to the Hawaiian Islands by Portuguese immigrants from Madeira, the Azores and Cape Verde.[4] Three immigrants in particular, Madeiran cabinet makers Manuel Nunes, José do Espírito Santo, and Augusto Dias, are generally credited as the first ukulele makers.[5] Two weeks after they disembarked from the SS Ravenscrag in late August 1879, the Hawaiian Gazette reported that "Madeira Islanders recently arrived here, have been delighting the people with nightly street concerts."[6]

One of the most important factors in establishing the ukulele in Hawaiian music and culture was the ardent support and promotion of the instrument by King Kalākaua. A patron of the arts, he incorporated it into performances at royal gatherings.[7]

In the Hawaiian language the word ukulele roughly translates as "jumping flea", perhaps because of the movement of the player's fingers. Legend attributes it to the nickname of Englishman Edward William Purvis, one of King Kalākaua's officers, because of his small size, fidgety manner, and playing expertise. One of the earliest appearances of the word ukulele in print (in the sense of a stringed instrument) is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Catalogue of the Crosby Brown Collection of Musical Instruments of All Nations published in 1907. The catalog describes two ukuleles from Hawaii—one that is similar in size to a modern soprano ukulele, and one that is similar to a tenor (see).[8]

Canada

In the 1960s, educator J. Chalmers Doane dramatically changed school music programs across Canada, using the ukulele as an inexpensive and practical teaching instrument to foster musical literacy in the classroom.[9] At its peak, 50,000 schoolchildren and adults learned the ukulele through the Doane program. "Ukulele in the Classroom", a revised program created by James Hill and Doane in 2008, is a staple of music education in Canada.[10]

Japan

The ukulele arrived in Japan in 1929 after Hawaiian-born Yukihiko Haida returned to the country upon his father's death and introduced the instrument. Haida and his brother Katsuhiko formed the Moana Glee Club, enjoying rapid success in an environment of growing enthusiasm for Western popular music, particularly Hawaiian and jazz. During World War II, authorities banned most music from the West, but fans and players kept it alive in secret, and it resumed popularity after the war. In 1959, Haida founded the Nihon Ukulele Association. Today, Japan is considered a second home for Hawaiian musicians and ukulele virtuosos.

United Kingdom

See also: Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain. British singer and comedian George Formby was a ukulele player, though he often played a banjolele, a hybrid instrument consisting of an extended ukulele neck with a banjo resonator body. Demand surged in the new century because of its relative simplicity and portability.[11] Another British ukulele player was Tony Award-winner Tessie O'Shea, who appeared in numerous movies and stage shows, and was twice on The Ed Sullivan Show, including the night The Beatles debuted in 1964.[12] The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain tours globally, and the George Formby Society, established in 1961, continues to hold regular conventions.

George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon all played the ukulele.[13] Harrison, who was a Formby fan, was a great lover of the instrument and often gave them to friends, including Tom Petty, whom he taught to play it.[14]

United States mainland

Pre–World War II

The ukulele was popularized for a stateside audience during the Panama–Pacific International Exposition, held from spring to autumn of 1915 in San Francisco.[15] The Hawaiian Pavilion featured a guitar and ukulele ensemble, George E. K. Awai and his Royal Hawaiian Quartet,[16] along with ukulele maker and player Jonah Kumalae.[17] The popularity of the ensemble with visitors launched a fad for Hawaiian-themed songs among Tin Pan Alley songwriters.[18] The ensemble also introduced both the lap steel guitar and the ukulele into U.S. mainland popular music,[19] where it was taken up by vaudeville performers such as Roy Smeck and Cliff "Ukulele Ike" Edwards. On April 15, 1923, at the Rivoli Theater in New York City, Smeck appeared, playing the ukulele, in Stringed Harmony, a short film made in the DeForest Phonofilm sound-on-film process. On August 6, 1926, Smeck appeared playing the ukulele in a short film His Pastimes, made in the Vitaphone sound-on-disc process, shown with the feature film Don Juan starring John Barrymore.[20]

The ukulele soon became an icon of the Jazz Age.[21] Like guitar, basic ukulele skills can be learned fairly easily, and this highly portable, relatively inexpensive instrument was popular with amateur players throughout the 1920s, as evidenced by the introduction of uke chord tablature into the published sheet music for popular songs of the time (a role that was supplanted by the guitar in the early years of rock and roll).[22] A number of mainland-based stringed-instrument manufacturers, among them Regal, Harmony, and especially Martin, added ukulele, banjolele, and tiple lines to their production to take advantage of the demand.[23]

The ukulele also made inroads into early country music or old-time music[24] parallel to the then-popular mandolin. It was played by Jimmie Rodgers and Ernest V. Stoneman, as well as by early string bands, including Cowan Powers and his Family Band, Da Costa Woltz's Southern Broadcasters, Walter Smith and Friends, The Blankenship Family, The Hillbillies, and The Hilltop Singers.[24]

Post–World War II

From the late 1940s to the late 1960s, plastics manufacturer Mario Maccaferri turned out about 9 million inexpensive ukuleles.[25] The ukulele remained popular, appearing in many jazz songs throughout the 1950s, '60s, and '70s.[26] Much of the instrument's popularity (particularly the baritone size) was cultivated by Arthur Godfrey on The Arthur Godfrey Show on television.[27] Singer-musician Tiny Tim became closely associated with the instrument after playing it on his 1968 hit "Tiptoe Through the Tulips".

Post-1990 revival

After the 1960s, the ukulele declined in popularity until the late 1990s, when interest in the instrument reawakened.[28] During the 1990s, new manufacturers began producing ukuleles and a new generation of musicians took up the instrument. Jim Beloff set out to promote the instrument in the early 1990s and created over two dozen ukulele music books featuring modern music and classic ukulele pieces.[29]

All-time best-selling Hawaiian musician Israel Kamakawiwo'ole helped repopularize the instrument, in particular with his 1993 reggae-rhythmed medley of "Over the Rainbow" and "What a Wonderful World", used in films, television programs, and commercials. The song reached number 12 on Billboards Hot Digital Tracks chart the week of January 31, 2004.[30]

The creation of YouTube helped revive the popularity of the ukulele. One of the first videos to go viral was Jake Shimabukuro's ukulele rendition of George Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". The video quickly went viral, and as of September 2020, had received over 17 million views.[31]

Construction

The ukulele is generally made of wood, though variants have been composed partially or entirely of plastic or other materials. Cheaper ukuleles are generally made from plywood or laminated woods, in some cases with a soundboard of a tonewood such as spruce. More expensive ukuleles are made of solid hardwoods such as mahogany. The traditionally preferred wood for ukuleles is a type of acacia endemic to Hawaii, called koa.

Typically, ukuleles have a figure-eight body shape similar to that of a small acoustic guitar. They are also often seen in nonstandard shapes, such as cutaway and oval, usually called a "pineapple" ukulele (see image below), invented by the Kamaka Ukulele company, or a boat-paddle shape, and occasionally a square shape, often made out of an old wooden cigar box.

These instruments usually have four strings; some strings may be paired in courses, giving the instrument a total of six or eight strings (primarily for greater strumming volume.) The strings themselves were originally made of catgut. Modern ukuleles use strings made from nylon polymers, synthetic gut, or fluorocarbon or wound strings composed of a (typically) nylon core wound with metal or polymers,[32] including aluminium and silver-plated copper.[33]

Instruments with six or eight strings in four courses are often called taropatches, or taropatch ukuleles. They were once common in the concert size, but now the tenor size is more common for six-string taropatch ukuleles. The six-string, four-course version, has two single and two double courses, and is sometimes called a lili'u, though this name also applies to the eight-string version.[34] Eight-string baritone taropatches exist,[35] and 5-string tenors have also been made.[36]

Types and sizes

Common types of ukuleles include soprano (standard ukulele), concert, tenor, and baritone. Less common are the sopranino (also called piccolo, bambino, or "pocket uke"), bass, and contrabass ukuleles.[37] Other types of ukuleles include banjo ukuleles and electric ukuleles. Of the standard ukuleles, the soprano, often called "standard" in Hawaii, is the second smallest and was the original size. The concert size was developed in the 1920s as an enhanced soprano, slightly larger and louder with a deeper tone. Shortly thereafter, the tenor was created, having more volume and a deeper bass tone. The baritone (resembling a smaller tenor guitar) was created in the 1940s, and the contrabass and bass are recent innovations (2010 and 2014, respectively).[38] [39]

+ Size and popular tunings of standard ukulele types
TypeAlternate
names
Typical
length
Scale
length
[40]
FretsRange[41] Common
tuning[42]
Alternate
tunings
Pocketpiccolo, sopranino, sopranissimo16inches11inches10–12G4–D6 (E6)D5 G4 B4 E5C5 F4 A4 D5
Sopranostandard, ukulele21inches13inches12–15C4–A5 (C6)G4 C4 E4 A4[43] A4 D4 F4 B4
G3 C4 E4 A4
Concertalto23inches15inches15–18C4–C6 (D 6)G4 C4 E4 A4G3 C4 E4 A4
Tenortaro patch, Liliu[44] 26inches17inches17–19G3–D6 (E6)G4 C4 E4 A4 ("High G")
G3 C4 E4 A4 ("Low G")
D4 G3 B3 E4
A3 D4 F4 B4
D3 G3 B3 E4
Baritonebari, bari uke, taropatch[45] 29inches19inches18–21D3–A5 (C 6)D3 G3 B3 E4(Guitar tuning)C3 G3 B3 E4
BassU-Bass, Rumbler[46] 32inches21inches16 E1–B3E1 A1 D2 G2D1 A1 D2 G2 ("Drop D")

The following chart shows the range of notes of standard ukulele types. Note that the range varies with the tuning and size of the instruments. The examples shown in the chart reflect the range of each instrument from the lowest standard tuning to the highest fret in the highest standard tuning. Additionally, the contrabass below aligns with the bass in the above table.

ImageSize = width:700 height:250PlotArea = left:0 right:0 top:0 bottom:20AlignBars = justify

Colors = id:legend value:gray(0.94) # background of top and bottom legend bars id:legendtext value:gray(0.1) # text in top and bottom legend bars id:sp value:gray(1) # spacer between bars and content id:h1 value:rgb(0.99,0.2,0.90) # light violet = top of hierarchy id:h2 value:rgb(0.99,0.1,0.1) # light red-violet id:h3 value:rgb(0.99,0.2,0.30) # light red id:h4 value:rgb(0.99,0.4,0.30) # light red-orange id:h5 value:rgb(0.99,0.6,0.20) # light orange id:h6 value:rgb(0.99,0.75,0.60) # light yellow-orange, bottom of hierarchy id:gridlines value:gray(0.7) # vertical gridlines

BarData = bar:pitch bar:Hz barset:ranges bar:pitch2 bar:Hz2

Period = from:0 till:651ScaleMajor = increment:72 start:2 gridcolor:gridlinesTimeAxis = orientation:horizontal

  1. positions points used by the bars
  2. Cx4 = middle C
  3. Cs4 = middle C sharp

Define $Cx0 = 6 # 16.35HzDefine $Cs0 = 12 # 17.32HzDefine $Dx0 = 18 # 18.35HzDefine $Ds0 = 24 # 19.45HzDefine $Ex0 = 30 # 20.6HzDefine $Fx0 = 36 # 21.83HzDefine $Fs0 = 42 # 23.12HzDefine $Gx0 = 48 # 24.5HzDefine $Gs0 = 54 # 25.96HzDefine $Ax0 = 60 # 27.5HzDefine $As0 = 66 # 29.14HzDefine $Bx0 = 72 # 30.87HzDefine $Cx1 = 78 # 32.7HzDefine $Cs1 = 83 # 34.65HzDefine $Dx1 = 89 # 36.71HzDefine $Ds1 = 95 # 38.89HzDefine $Ex1 = 101 # 41.2HzDefine $Fx1 = 107 # 43.65HzDefine $Fs1 = 113 # 46.25HzDefine $Gx1 = 119 # 49HzDefine $Gs1 = 125 # 51.91HzDefine $Ax1 = 131 # 55HzDefine $As1 = 137 # 58.27HzDefine $Bx1 = 143 # 61.74HzDefine $Cx2 = 149 # 65.41HzDefine $Cs2 = 155 # 69.3HzDefine $Dx2 = 161 # 73.42HzDefine $Ds2 = 167 # 77.78HzDefine $Ex2 = 173 # 82.41HzDefine $Fx2 = 179 # 87.31HzDefine $Fs2 = 185 # 92.5HzDefine $Gx2 = 191 # 98HzDefine $Gs2 = 197 # 103.8HzDefine $Ax2 = 203 # 110HzDefine $As2 = 209 # 116.5HzDefine $Bx2 = 215 # 123.5HzDefine $Cx3 = 221 # 130.8HzDefine $Cs3 = 227 # 138.6HzDefine $Dx3 = 233 # 146.8HzDefine $Ds3 = 239 # 155.6HzDefine $Ex3 = 244 # 164.8HzDefine $Fx3 = 250 # 174.6HzDefine $Fs3 = 256 # 185HzDefine $Gx3 = 262 # 196HzDefine $Gs3 = 268 # 207.7HzDefine $Ax3 = 274 # 220HzDefine $As3 = 280 # 233.1HzDefine $Bx3 = 286 # 246.9HzDefine $Cx4 = 292 # 261.6HzDefine $Cs4 = 298 # 277.2HzDefine $Dx4 = 304 # 293.7HzDefine $Ds4 = 310 # 311.1HzDefine $Ex4 = 316 # 329.6HzDefine $Fx4 = 322 # 349.2HzDefine $Fs4 = 328 # 370HzDefine $Gx4 = 334 # 392HzDefine $Gs4 = 340 # 415.3HzDefine $Ax4 = 346 # 440HzDefine $As4 = 352 # 466.2HzDefine $Bx4 = 358 # 493.9HzDefine $Cx5 = 364 # 523.3HzDefine $Cs5 = 370 # 554.4HzDefine $Dx5 = 376 # 587.3HzDefine $Ds5 = 382 # 622.3HzDefine $Ex5 = 388 # 659.3HzDefine $Fx5 = 394 # 698.5HzDefine $Fs5 = 400 # 740HzDefine $Gx5 = 406 # 784HzDefine $Gs5 = 411 # 830.6HzDefine $Ax5 = 417 # 880HzDefine $As5 = 423 # 932.3HzDefine $Bx5 = 429 # 987.8HzDefine $Cx6 = 435 # 1047HzDefine $Cs6 = 441 # 1109HzDefine $Dx6 = 447 # 1175HzDefine $Ds6 = 453 # 1245HzDefine $Ex6 = 459 # 1319HzDefine $Fx6 = 465 # 1397HzDefine $Fs6 = 471 # 1480HzDefine $Gx6 = 477 # 1568HzDefine $Gs6 = 483 # 1661HzDefine $Ax6 = 489 # 1760HzDefine $As6 = 495 # 1865HzDefine $Bx6 = 501 # 1976HzDefine $Cx7 = 507 # 2093HzDefine $Cs7 = 513 # 2217HzDefine $Dx7 = 519 # 2349HzDefine $Ds7 = 525 # 2489HzDefine $Ex7 = 531 # 2637HzDefine $Fx7 = 537 # 2794HzDefine $Fs7 = 543 # 2960HzDefine $Gx7 = 549 # 3136HzDefine $Gs7 = 555 # 3322HzDefine $Ax7 = 561 # 3520HzDefine $As7 = 567 # 3729HzDefine $Bx7 = 572 # 3951HzDefine $Cx8 = 578 # 4186HzDefine $Cs8 = 584 # 4435HzDefine $Dx8 = 590 # 4699HzDefine $Ds8 = 596 # 4978HzDefine $Ex8 = 602 # 5274HzDefine $Fx8 = 608 # 5588HzDefine $Fs8 = 614 # 5920HzDefine $Gx8 = 620 # 6272HzDefine $Gs8 = 626 # 6645HzDefine $Ax8 = 632 # 7040HzDefine $As8 = 638 # 7459HzDefine $Bx8 = 644 # 7902HzDefine $max = 650

PlotData= align:center textcolor:black fontsize:10 mark:(line,black) width:16 shift:(0,-4) barset:ranges

color:h1 from:$Dx2 till:$Cx6 text:classical guitar color:h3 from:$Ex1 till:$Ex6 text:all ukuleles color:h6 from:$Gx4 till:$Ex6 text:sopranino color:h5 from:$Cx4 till:$Cx6 text:soprano color:h6 from:$Cx4 till:$Ex6 text:concert color:h5 from:$Gx3 till:$Ex6 text:tenor color:h6 from:$Dx3 till:$Cs6 text:baritone color:h5 from:$Ex2 till:$Cs5 text:bass color:h6 from:$Ex1 till:$Bx3 text:contrabass

color:legend textcolor:legendtext align:left fontsize:7 mark:(line,white) width:12 shift:(3,-4)

bar:pitch from:0 till:$max at:$Cx0 text:C0 at:$Cx1 text:C1 at:$Cx2 text:C2 at:$Cx3 text:C3 at:$Cx4 text:C4 (middle C) at:$Cx5 text:C5 at:$Cx6 text:C6 at:$Cx7 text:C7 at:$Cx8 text:C8

bar:Hz from:0 till:$max at:23 text:20 Hz at:65 text:30 at:105 text:44 at:153 text:70 at:190 text:100 at:232 text:150 at:262 text:200 at:304 text:300 at:344 text:440 at:392 text:700 at:430 text:1000 at:472 text:1500 at:502 text:2000 at:544 text:3000 at:583 text:4400 Hz

bar:pitch2 # exact copy of bar:pitch from:0 till:$max at:$Cx0 text:C0 at:$Cx1 text:C1 at:$Cx2 text:C2 at:$Cx3 text:C3 at:$Cx4 text:C4 (middle C) at:$Cx5 text:C5 at:$Cx6 text:C6 at:$Cx7 text:C7 at:$Cx8 text:C8

bar:Hz2 # exact copy of bar:Hz from:0 till:$max at:23 text:20 Hz at:65 text:30 at:105 text:44 at:153 text:70 at:190 text:100 at:232 text:150 at:262 text:200 at:304 text:300 at:344 text:440 at:392 text:700 at:430 text:1000 at:472 text:1500 at:502 text:2000 at:544 text:3000 at:583 text:4400 Hz

Tuning

One of the most common tunings for the standard or soprano ukulele is C6 tuning: G4–C4–E4–A4, which is often remembered by the notes in the "My dog has fleas" jingle (see sidebar).[47] The G string is tuned an octave higher than might be expected, so this is often called "high G" tuning. This is known as a "reentrant tuning"; it enables uniquely close-harmony chording.

The table below shows a pitch's name found over the four strings of a ukulele in standard tuning, from the nut (zero) to the fifteenth fret.

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
AB B C C D E E F F G A A B B C
EF F G A A B B C C D E E F F G
CC D E E F F G A A B B C C D E
GA A B B C C D E E F F G A A B

More rarely used with the soprano ukulele is C6 linear tuning, or "low G" tuning, which has the G in sequence an octave lower: G3–C4–E4–A4, which is equivalent to playing the top four strings (DGBE) of a guitar with a capo on the fifth fret.

Another common tuning for the soprano ukulele is the higher string-tension D6 tuning (or simply D tuning), A4–D4–F4–B4, one step higher than the G4–C4–E4–A4 tuning. Once considered standard, this tuning was commonly used during the Hawaiian music boom of the early 20th century, and is often seen in sheet music from this period, as well as in many method books through the 1980s. D6 tuning is said by some to bring out a sweeter tone in some ukuleles, generally smaller ones. D6 tuning with a low fourth string, A3–D4–F4–B4, is sometimes called "Canadian tuning" after its use in the Canadian school system, mostly on concert or tenor ukuleles, and extensive use by James Hill and J. Chalmers Doane.[48]

Whether C6 or D6 tuning should be the "standard" tuning is a matter of long and ongoing debate. There are historic and popular ukulele methods that have used each.[49]

For the concert and tenor ukuleles, both reentrant and linear C6 tunings are standard; linear tuning in particular is widely used for the tenor ukulele, more so than for the soprano and concert instruments.

The baritone ukulele usually uses linear G6 tuning: D3–G3–B3–E4, the same as the highest four strings of a standard 6-string guitar.

Bass ukuleles are tuned similarly to the bass guitar and double bass: E1–A1–D2–G2 for U-Bass style instruments (sometimes called contrabass), or an octave higher, E2–A2–D3–G3, for Ohana type metal-string basses.

Sopranino ukulele tuning is less standardized. They are usually tuned re-entrant, but frequently at a higher pitch than C; for example, re-entrant G6 tuning: D5–G4–B4–E5.

As is commonly the case with string instruments, other tunings may be preferred by individual players. For example, special string sets are available to tune the baritone ukulele in linear C6. Some players tune ukuleles like other four-string instruments such as the mandolin,[50] Venezuelan cuatro,[51] or dotara.[52] Ukuleles may also be tuned to open tunings, similar to the Hawaiian slack-key style.[53]

Related instruments

Ukulele varieties include hybrid instruments such as the guitalele (also called guitarlele), banjo ukulele (also called banjolele), harp ukulele, lap steel ukulele, and the ukelin. It is very common to find ukuleles mixed with other stringed instruments because of the number of strings and the easy playing ability. There is also an electrically amplified variant of the ukulele. The resonator ukulele produces sound by one or more spun aluminum cones (resonators) instead of the wooden soundboard, giving it a distinct and louder tone. The Tahitian ukulele, another variant, is usually carved from a single piece of wood,[54] and does not have a hollow soundbox, although the back is open. The Tahitian ukulele generally has eight strings made from fishing line, tuned the same as a Hawaiian ukulele in four courses, although the middle two courses are an octave higher than its Hawaiian cousin. Inspired by the Tahitian ukulele, there is the Motu Nui variant, from France, which has just four strings made from fishing line and the hole in the back is designed to produce a wah-wah effect. Mario Maccaferri invented an automatic chording device for the ukulele, called Chord Master.

Close cousins of the ukulele include the Portuguese forerunners, the cavaquinho (also commonly known as machete or braguinha) and the slightly larger rajão. Other relatives include the Venezuelan cuatro, the Colombian tiple, the timple of the Canary Islands, the Spanish vihuela, the Mexican requinto jarocho, and the Andean charango traditionally made of an armadillo shell. In Indonesia, a similar Portuguese-inspired instrument is the kroncong.[55]

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Erich M. von Hornbostel & Curt Sachs, "Classification of Musical Instruments: Translated from the Original German by Anthony Baines and Klaus P. Wachsmann." The Galpin Society Journal 14, 1961: 3–29.
  2. Web site: Ukulele. Merriam-Webster. 22 January 2016.
  3. Book: Tranquada and King. The Ukulele, A History. Hawaii University Press. 2012. 978-0-8248-3634-4.
  4. Book: Nidel , Richard . World Music: The Basics. Routledge. 2004. 312. 978-0-415-96800-3.
  5. Book: Roberts , Helen . Ancient Hawaiian Music. Bernice P. Bishop Museum. 1926. 9–10.
  6. Web site: King. John. Prolegomena to a History of the 'Ukuleley. Ukulele Guild of Hawaii. 2003. https://web.archive.org/web/20040803005054/http://www.ukuleleguild.org/history.php. 2004-08-03.
  7. Web site: David Kalakaua (1836–1891), Inaugural Hall of Fame Inductee, 1997. 2008. Ukulele Hall of Fame Museum. 2008-06-11.
  8. Book: Catalogue of the Crosby Brown Collection of Musical Instruments of All Nations. 1907. Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York. III. Instruments of Savage Tribes and Semi-Civilized Peoples, Part 2. Oceania. 51.
  9. Encyclopedia: Karr. Gary, and McMillan, Barclay. J. Chalmers Doane. Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. University of Toronto Press. 1992. 2008-06-09.
  10. Web site: Ukulele in the Classroom . 31 May 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180723102636/http://www.ukuleleintheclassroom.com/index.htm . 23 July 2018 . dead .
  11. News: Fladmark. Judy. Ukulele sends UK crazy. BBC News . 2010-02-19.
  12. Book: Tranquada , Jim . The Ukulele: a History. University of Hawaii Press. 2012. 152. 978-0-8248-3544-6.
  13. Web site: Jackson . Blair . How The Beatles' George Harrison Turned His Love of Ukulele into a Personal Crusade . Ukulele Magazine . August 5, 2021 . April 20, 2023.
  14. Web site: Whatley . Jack . The Beatles' George Harrison believed everyone should have a ukulele . Far Out Magazine . April 20, 2020 . April 20, 2023.
  15. Book: Lipsky , William . San Francisco's Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Arcadia Publishing. 2005. 36. 978-0-7385-3009-3.
  16. Book: Doyle , Peter . Echo and Reverb: Fabricating Space in Popular Music Recording, 1900–1960. Wesleyan. 2005. 120. 978-0-8195-6794-9.
  17. Web site: Jonah Kumalae (1875–1940), 2002 Hall of Fame Inductee. Ukulele Hall of Fame Museum. 2007. 2008-06-02.
  18. Book: Koskoff , Ellen . Music Cultures in the United States: An Introduction. limited. Routledge. 2005. 129. 978-0-415-96588-0 .
  19. Book: Volk, Andy . Lap Steel Guitar. Centerstream Publications. 2003. 6. 978-1-57424-134-1.
  20. Book: Whitcomb , Ian . Ukulele Heaven: Songs from the Golden Age of the Ukulele. Mel Bay Publications. 2000. 11. 978-0-7866-4951-8.
  21. Book: Whitcomb , Ian . Uke Ballads: A Treasury of Twenty-five Love Songs Old and New. Mel Bay Publications. 2001. 4. 978-0-7866-1360-1.
  22. Book: Sanjek , Russell . American Popular Music and Its Business: The First Four Hundred Years. registration. Oxford University Press . 1988. 95. 0-19-504311-1.
  23. Web site: Famous Ukulele songs . 2023-04-13 . Ukulele-Tabs.com . en.
  24. Web site: "Just a few penny dreadfuls": the Ukulele and Old-Time Country Music. Rev. Lil'. www.oldtimeherald.org. 2018-06-27. 2012-06-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20120615233057/http://www.oldtimeherald.org/archive/back_issues/volume-9/9-5/uke.html. dead.
  25. Web site: Wright . Michael . Maccaferri History: The Guitars of Mario Maccaferri . . 2008-06-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090625165925/http://www.vguitar.com/features/brands/details.asp?AID=1071 . 2009-06-25.
  26. Web site: The Ukulele . Peterborough Music . 3 March 2002 . 2011-09-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111103171108/http://www.peterboroughmusicltd.com/ukulele.irs . 3 November 2011. The Ukulele
  27. Web site: Arthur Godfrey (1903–1983), 2001 Hall of Fame Inductee. Ukulele Hall of Fame Museum. 2007. 2008-06-02. 2015-05-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20150508003707/http://www.ukulele.org/?Inductees%3A2000-2001%3AArthur_Godfrey. dead.
  28. Book: John Shepherd. Continuum encyclopedia of popular music of the world: VolumeII: Performance and production. 16 April 2011. 27 February 2003. Continuum International Publishing Group. 978-0-8264-6322-7. 450–.
  29. Mighty Uke, Interview with Jim Beloff, 2010
  30. Billboard, for the survey week ending January 18, 2004.
  31. Web site: Ukulele weeps by Jake Shimabukuro. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/puSkP3uym5k. 2021-12-11 . live. Catholic Laitinen. 6 September 2020. 3 April 2019. YouTube.
  32. Book: Jeppson, Mim . The ukulele owner's manual . String Letter Publishing, Inc. . 2021 . 978-1-936604-42-5 . Jackson . Blair . 28–31 . Things about strings.
  33. Web site: Ukulele Strings . C.F. Martin & Co.. 30 November 2016.
  34. Web site: Ukulele . The Stringed Instrument Database . 30 November 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130621113819/http://stringedinstrumentdatabase.110mb.com/u.htm . 2013-06-21 . dead.
  35. Web site: Kamaka Baritone 8 String HF-48. 30 November 2016.
  36. Web site: Kala -KA-ATP-CTG Solid Cedar Top Tenor Slothead -Gloss Finish. 30 November 2016.
  37. Web site: Lamorinda Music. 30 November 2016.
  38. Web site: The story behind the wildly popular Kala U-Bass. 7 January 2015. 30 November 2016.
  39. Web site: Uke Baritone Bass w/Preamp Tattoo . Luna Guitars. 30 November 2016.
  40. The "scale" is the length of the playable part of the strings, from the nut at the top to the bridge at the bottom.
  41. Exact range depends on the tuning and the number of frets.
  42. On the soprano, concert, and tenor instruments, the most common tuning results in a "bottom" string that is not the lowest in pitch, as it is tuned a 5th higher than the next string (and a major 2nd below the "top" string). This is called re-entrant tuning.
  43. Book: Tamberino, Philip . Uke can do it! Developing your school ukulele program . Rowman & Littlefield . 2014 . 9781475804164.
  44. Tenor ukuleles exist in a variety of styles, with 4, 5, 6, and 8 strings. What the tenor is called depends on which style it has been designed in.
  45. Eight-string "taropatch" baritone ukuleles have been made; however, they are very rare. See, for example, the Kamaka HF-48
  46. U-Bass and Rumbler are trade names of the Kala ukulele company
  47. Web site: Ukulele in the Classroom. 30 November 2016.
  48. Web site: FAQ . James Hill Music . 30 November 2016.
  49. Tranquada, J.; The Ukulele: A History; University of Hawaii Press; Honolulu: 2012. 0824-83634-0 According to Tranquanda, "This is an old and seemingly never-ending argument. While the pioneering methods of Kaai (1906) and Rollinson (1909) both use C tuning, a sampling of the methods that follow give a sense of the unresolved nature of the debate: Kealakai (1914), D tuning; Bailey (1914), C tuning; Kia (1914), D tuning; Kamiki (1916), D tuning; Guckert (1917), C tuning; Stumpf (1917), D tuning."
  50. Web site: How to Play a Ukulele Like a Mandolin. Robert. Russell. 15 September 2017. Our Pastimes. 19 November 2019.
  51. Web site: Cuatro Tuning On a Ukulele. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/KHF_g96Es3Q. 2021-12-11 . live. Ken. Middleton. 2 May 2018. 19 November 2019. YouTube.
  52. Web site: Ukulele Dotara Style Tuning - ইউকালেলি দোতারা স্টাইল টিউনিং. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/Fyr1iT27MzE. 2021-12-11 . live. Rahatul Islam. Ovi. 24 April 2017. Rahatul & Dukulele. 24 April 2017. YouTube.
  53. Book: Kimura , Heeday . How to Play Slack Key Ukulule.
  54. Book: University of the South Pacific. Institute of Pacific Studies. Cook Islands culture. 15 September 2012. 2003. Institute of Pacific Studies in Association with the Cook Islands Extension Centre, University of the South Pacific, the Cook Islands Cultural and Historic Places Trust, and the Ministry of Cultural Development. 978-982-02-0348-8.
  55. Book: Jeremy Wallach. Modern Noise, Fluid Genres: Popular Music in Indonesia, 1997–2001. registration. 15 September 2012. 22 October 2008. Univ of Wisconsin Press. 978-0-299-22904-7. 268–. Jeremy Wallach.