NAMM 2012 Wrap-up
January 24, 2012 at 4:07 am | Posted in Events, General, Shows | 7 CommentsTags: fest, festival, jamming, Kala, learning, NAMM, Play, posts, Solid, tuners, tuning pegs, uke, ukulele
As I sit here on the last day of the winter NAMM 2012 show trying to make sure I have all the information I need to write the wrap-up, I have had 3 trips back in to confirm stuff, It is all such a blur. So many people, so many products, they start to blend over time.
I am so happy I had Colin and Nick with me on this trip. Colin took 99.999% of the pictures that I have posted (About 1000 shots), while Nick seemed to know every uke person out there and was key in getting some of the vendors warmed up so I could talk to with them. Also Nick and Colin are awesome uke players, so that was an added bonus to have them around to play the ukes and made wondering the halls a ton more fun.
I truly credit my current surge in visitors (60,000 in the past 3 days) to them being around and helping me get all the ukes and other fun stuff out to you. On our first day we walked a little over 11 miles, and day after day they were very excited and willing to follow me aimlessly. For their hard work I am eternally grateful.
The show was absolutely insane. So many people trying to walk around and get information, make deals, and figure out what they want to do. Covering the show from the perspective of the ukulele player to some would seem very limiting, but those are not ukulele players. If I had to say what the hot instrument of the show was, it would be the ukulele, but I may be a little biased.
I am going to break this down into a few sections: New and exciting, Weird, and WTF?. I figured that a long drawn out article would get boring. I also have some pics that I am not going to talk about, but put captions on them so you know what is in them.
NEW and Exciting
I would have to say that the biggest story would have to be the Taylor Uke (Story). I was lucky to be able to play it before the show started, and as expected it was really nice. A lot of uke players thought it was nice, but maybe not worth the price tag of $9000 for the uke and guitar.
Kamoa would have to have my top new ukulele for NAMM. The Steel string electric ukes are just out of this world, along with all their other ukes. I was standing outside the hall before they let us in and caught a glimpse for just a second and I knew they were my first stop. It is a tenor hollow body steel string uke and Kamoa does it better than anyone with the multiple bridge configurations and choice of colors. They also came out with a steel string uke bass, it is cool but I am not in love, some of my friends think it is the bee’s knees.
Over in the Gold tone booth they had a small builder called Beard guitars. They had a really cool Reso-Uke that sounded so nice. I happened to be sitting in the press area when the daughter of the guy that made it was sitting at the same table and told me they used a bass baffle to give it a much deeper tone, and I would say it does for sure.
Kiwaya Sopranano (super small uke), honestly I have no idea what to call it be side crazy small. At the Kiwaya booth they had 3 tiny ukes and they all played!! I really like the Hello kitty one. As you can see I look like a giant holding it. It is so small they had to use custom tuners on it. Don’t expect them to come to market any time soon. They range from $1100 – $1600 to make, Still on my list of ukes I would love to have.
From Flea market Music we saw 3 new things. The first being the polycarbonate fretboard on the firefly banjo uke. Not super new, but still… I like it. Another new option for the fire fly is a skin head option. It just gives it a little more punch. Also they just announced that they can do custom laser etched designs on the flea and Flukes. They showed one with a custom sound hole and also some custom flames. I may have to make an Ukeeku.com Fluke someday.
With the popularity of the ukulele it sometimes takes time for technology to catch up. There have been a few ukulele pickups on the market, but for the most part they are just acoustic guitar pickups with the wire wrapped up so it does not get all wrapped up. Now there are a couple pickups made specifically for the Ukulele. Mi-Si has one that is nice and small and can have volume and tone added, it uses L.R.Baggs new element that they use for their ukulele pickup. Both are pretty cool. Not sure which one is better. The only real difference is that the Mi-Si uses a rechargeable element, while L.R. Baggs uses a small watch battery.
The last really interesting product that I ran into was PegHeds. I love mine on my Boat Paddle uke. He will be offering the tuners with real wood buttons and looking into really pretty hand carved tuner buttons. I hope that more makers would use them since they are so much lighter and I also think they look so classy.
One of the most fun things about the NAMM show would have to be all the “Famous” people that you meet. I stumbled in to the Taylor booth and saw the winner of the voice, Javier Colon, sing a few songs. On the ukulele side I was able to see Aldrine from UkuleleUnderground.com play a few times at the Kanile’a booth, also Rick Turner from Compass Rose was making a ukulele at the show. I also met Mike DaSilva and Tiki King. One of the biggest celebrities that we ran into was Mya walking around with her friends.
Weird
One of the things that blew our minds while walking around was the crazy amount of no-name ukes that are available from china. We kept running into so many weirdly named ukes from china. Many of the companies are looking for American distributers. My favorite named one was Strong Wind. For the most part they reminded us of the different ones that we know under different names. I wonder if the slow economy has driven them to try to up their sales or is the community so hot that these companies are trying to cash in on it. I found that a lot of them are just cheap crap-a-leles that you find in department stores and being peddled online as real ukes.
A really fun uke was the Fishuku. The body is shaped like a fish. What I could hear it was OK. Maybe a little expensive, but the novelty of it may be worth the extra money. Hoping to get a review one some time.
The weirdest uke would have to be the Tuna Uke from Lanikai. The idea is that the nut and bridge are adjustable. Not sure if it is such a good idea. I figure that if you buy a uke it should be right from the get go. They will offer the ukes in both the tuna uke and the regular bridge. Time will tell if it will be something.
A few people have commented on the new Mahalo surf ukes, a set of ukes and a lap steel all with the same surf board look and color scheme. I like the look and the fact that one is a nylon string and the other is a steel string uke. Not sure why they decided to do the lap steel, but hey, maybe a group could buy it and look the part at least.
WTF?
Not that many crazy things that I thought were totally out there at this show. I saw a few ukes that are just toys, and I find that kind of stupid to have at a show with musicians. The other product that I would give the WTF award to would be the iPhone holder that looks like a uke. The neck does not do anything, it is just there for show. You use whatever app you want.
The last thing that made me do a double take would have to be an ad from Eddy finn, it just seems wrong coming from them. They are not that kind of company. By no means would I say they are some wholesome Christian company, nothing wrong with that, they are just a company that sells instruments that people buy as a first ukulele, not some hard core rock shop.
Non-Uke
The NAMM show covers a lot of instruments like drums, guitars, violins, kazoos to name a few. We saw a few products that we liked and thought ukulele people would think are cool.
The first new product comes from Blue Mics, it is there new higher end Mic called the Spark Digital. It can be plugged into an iPad (or iPhone) or USB. It has both connectors. It is a step above the Yeti that many of us love and currently use. The stand also has some isolation to help reduce noise when it is on a desk with a humming computer.
Another product that I have been receiving a few e-mails on was the footdrums. Very cool foot operated drum kit. It has a snare, tambourine, shaker, and a bass drum. You control it all with your feet so you can be a one man band. They also have individual items too, like a tambourine or shakers. Just a really fun idea.
There were many other things that were cool, just not cool enough to stick in my brain after 3 days of walking around
Over All
I would have to say that there were a few things that we saw that seemed to keep recurring, the first would have to be that there were a few more steel string ukuleles. Some were good, but mostly they were bad. Kamoa is the only one that I thought got it right. The other thing that we saw where all the Chinese ukes from so many companies that we never heard of. One would not let us take pictures, it looked like an Ohana without a label on the heads stock.
The last thing would have to be the dude that seemed to be everywhere. He played at every booth it seemed like and ended up in a few shots that Colin took, It was just weird. Guy seemed nice, just kind of strange.
If you are looking for more NAMM 2012 coverage Head over to UkuleleUnderground.com’s coverage
- Willie K Oscar Schmidt 5-string tenor
- Pretty
- Ukulele Ray
- TV Guitar Jimmy Hendrix channel
- TV Guitar Flintstones channel
- Rob playing the Taylor
- Nick at taylor
- Gotoh Stealth tuners on the Taylor
- Stagg Crap-o-lele
- Hmmmm
- Crazy patriotic case
- Rick Turner
- Reunion Blues Gigbag
- Pegheds
- Would love if PegHeds made tuners like this
- Ohana
- Mi-Si Uke pickup with volume and tone
- Luna travel Amp
- L.R.Baggs uke pickup
- lanikai Tuna Uke bridge
- Wait, what? didn’t they stop making these?
- Tim Playing the tiny kiwaya
- Kiwaya Tiny Hello Kitty Uke
- Kiwaya Tiny Ukes
- Ukulele Ray at Komoa
- Awesome kid playing at Kamoa
- Kamoa Electics
- Colin rocking out at Kamoa
- Kamoa steel string Bass
- Kamoa maple
- Fish kamaka
- Kala Design contest winners
- Daniel Ho at Kala
- Kala’s
- WHY?
- Gotoh Stealth, used on taylors uke
- Gotoh micros
- Goldtone Smile Uke?
- Walnut top Fluke
- New Firefly Head
- Lute for Uke book
- Jumping Jim from Fleamarket music
- Fishuku
- Mim With her boys
- Elton John and me
- Cheap Eleuke
- Ukulele Bart
- WHAT?
- The Dude again
- The Dude
- Colin holding Dasilva fish uke with The Dude in back
- Mike DaSilva and his fish uke
- Tap guitar bass thing
- Collings
- China Uke back
- China Uke?
- China Uke toy
- China Ukes
- China Uke?
- Marble wood China Ukes
- Marble wood China Ukes
- China Ukes
- China Ukes
- China Ukes
- China Ukes
- China Ukes
- China Ukes
- String Wind China Uke
- China Uke, ripped off from http://www.derekart.com/
- China Uke
- China Uke maker
- China Uke
- Blue Spark Digital
- Beard Reso uke
- Anuenue U900
- Aldrines signature uke
- Aldrines logo on his signature uke
- Aldrine
- Carved back of an Akulele
- Akulele
- Akulele
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NAMM 2012 Day 3
January 22, 2012 at 7:14 am | Posted in Events | 3 CommentsTags: fest, festival, learning, NAMM, Play, posts, uke, ukulele
Last day of what We needed to cover. I will be writing a very full article about what we say and thoughts.
NAMM 2012 Day 1
January 20, 2012 at 7:57 am | Posted in Shows | 13 CommentsTags: fest, festival, NAMM, Play, posts, uke, ukulele
I figured I would just do giant Photo dumps and do an end post with all the cool stuff
Here is day 1
- Nick at Mahalo
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Ukulele Event Calendar
December 29, 2011 at 2:09 am | Posted in General | 3 CommentsTags: fest, festival, jamming, posts, uke, ukulele
A few weeks ago I added a ukulele events calendar. The idea was originally to have a place to put the Normal Ukulele Fun Jams that happen the first Saturday of every month in Normal, IL. When I figured it out and how to share it I decided to add all the other events that I find and know of. I thought about putting performances up also but figured it would get a little cluttered with all of Jake’s, Victora Vox, and the many other touring acts. If they hold a workshop I will post that. Also I am hoping that people who are going to put on ukulele events will look at it so they can make sure they are not planning their event over another that might compete with theirs.
You will find the Events Calendar in the Events tab at the top of the site, or by going to http://ukeeku.com/events/
I will trying to keep up with all the events as I find them, but please feel free to e-mail me any that are missing. Tim@ukeeku.com
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Mighty MO Uke Fest Recap
May 16, 2011 at 3:47 am | Posted in Events, General, Shows | 11 CommentsTags: fest, festival, Giveaway, jamming, learning, posts, uke, ukulele
I got home at 4:30 am today, and it took me until now to be able to sit down and write this. I was beat after such a great event.
For those who are confused; The first annual (At least I hope it happens again) Mighty MO Uke fest happened this past weekend in New Have, MO. Not a huge turn out, 40 people for the work shops and then a bunch for the open mic on friday and then concert Saturday. I did not get a lot of pictures. I was just having too much fun, sorry.
When I pulled up I had no idea what to expect. the area looked like a ghost town next to the river, very rustic. Hell my phone did not work unless I went next to the river and stood on a park bench and even then it was hit or miss.

Boat Paddle wall of ukes and a mandolinNew model. No official Name. Look at the 5 string Tenor. LOVED it
It started out slow with a few people showing up at 12 on friday and our first workshop was under way. Jerry, of Boat Paddle ukes, had us come by his shop to talk about what to look for in a ukulele and showed us a good one and one that had issues. It was awesome being able to talk to someone who really studies and understands about every little detail that makes up a good instrument.
From there it was a crazy ride of jamming and talking, eating and open mics and workshops. The one thing I really dug was the fact that we were given time to just hang out and jam as we pleased. Maybe next year they will have more rooms done in the Riverfront Cultural Society area for a “Jamming” area when you don’t want to learn mouth trumpet (Been to it 2 other times with Victoria, figured 3rd time would really kill my skills)
The people who put it on really did an amazing job of making it really laid back and fun. never felt like I had to be anywhere at any time, except for the 3 meals, but really that was pretty relaxed also.
I met a tone of people and had a really great time.
The concert was fun. We learned who won the different silent auctions, Lisa from Florida won the Firefly. Victora stole it and played a song. Also the St. Louis Ukulele Fight Club did a set, along with the Flea Bitten Dawgs performed. all in all it was so much fun.
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Ukulele events coming up
September 9, 2010 at 3:32 pm | Posted in Events, Shows | 1 CommentTags: fest, festival, jamming, Open Mic, Play, posts, uke, ukulele
Just thought I would post a quick thing about 2 events I am really excited about that are coming up soon.
The first one is the MilwaUKEe Ukulele festival on September 25, 2010
www.mufest.com
There are going to be a ton of great classes and people to jam with. I learned a ton last year and met so many great people. Beside the classes there are vendors and giveaways. Honestly the best bang for your buck.
The other is the Southern Illinois Ukin’ in the Woods campout and uke fest! October 15-17, 2010
Here is the link to the Ukulele Underground post
I am really excited because this is kind of a UWC thing where people come, camp, and there is an open mic. Should be a blast! I am helping with the shirts on this one, so buy your shirts a head of time and I will give it to you all washed and ready to wear when you show up! (Also you will save a few bucks if you pre-order). I will have some at the event also if you did not buy one before hand. Pre-orders end October 1, 2010.
Hope to see you at both. I will have little ukulele case tags with me also (Free) that I like to hand out. come and say hi if you see me.
David S. Gill Ukuleles
July 19, 2010 at 8:05 pm | Posted in Brands, Concert, D.S.Gill | 4 CommentsTags: cheap, Concert, D.S.Gill, Divid Gill, fest, festival, Gill, Pineapple, Play, posts, Solid, Spalted, uke, ukulele
Every so often you find something that seems too good to be true. You may find $20 on the ground or you get something for half off and you feel lucky. When I found D.S.Gill ukes at Weed Patch Music in Nashville, IN I could not believe that there was a guy making ukuleles in his garage out of solid wood for only $350, and they sound awesome.
Please don’t get me wrong, they are not made of super high grade lumber that is purchased from a high end luthier woodshop, but they still look, sound, and play like most any high end ukulele that you will find. At $350 I am hard pressed to find anything in the $1200 range that has the quality and sound that his ukes have. I will get into more about the wood, but first a little about David S. Gill.
I first met David during the Ukulele World Congress (UWC). It was kind of by chance that I was able to meet him. The Saturday morning of the UWC is left open so people can explore Nashville and buy ukes from Mike at Mainland. I decided to go into town to eat breakfast and to find Weed Patch Music; I was told that there were these great ukuleles that they had that are made in Columbus Indiana. So after some searching I found the place and was absolutely amazed. I played a soprano and then picked up a mahogany concert pineapple; I said to myself “this would be great if it had a spruce top”. Also at the time I did not have $350 to spend on a new ukulele (that and my wife would kill me, 15 ukes is her limit). I went back to UWC and ran into a few friends that also played a few of the Gill ukes and told them that I love the concert pineapple but would love it with a spruce top. By chance one of my friends had called David Gill to see if he made tenors (He does not……Yet) and said I should call and ask, so I did, and he did have a concert pineapple with a spruce top at his shop. Now I did not have $350 to buy it and I figured that he would not have one, but I had to at least see it. I asked if my two friends and I could come and see it and also his shop, he said “Yes, I love when people come by and talk uke” and away we went on our 45 minute drive. We get there and we see a sign that says Handmade Ukuleles and an electric car out front.
We had heard that David is very unique. When we got there we did not know what to expect. We heard that he had not purchased gas in several years and he drove a golf cart everywhere, and both are true. David has not purchased gas in 3 years. He has geothermal heating and cooling and his “car” runs on electric, and this works for him just fine. He does not need to go very far for anything. Mostly people come to visit him, like us. David is a retired injection engineer which makes sense why his ukuleles are so spot on in every way. Every piece is precisely measured and he has jigs for every part to make sure that it is made just right, down to the micro-meter. His 2 car garage is filled wood working equipment, jigs, and wood. One of the tools he uses to make the dovetail joint for the necks and cut the body pieces is this weird looking router thing that he used to own the patent on that he invented in the 80’s. How it works is still a mystery to me, I could have asked but figured that I had too many other things I wanted to ask.
One thing that many do not know about Gill ukes is that they use to be sold by Bushman under the name of Bluebird and a few other models. They were new wood ukes unlike the ones he makes currently. I actually played a bluebird and loved it, but I could not afford a $400 ukulele at the time and had to pass. But it was very nice. In the end John Hall did not want to sell them anymore and stopped.
That brings me to my ukulele. Yes I did buy it; it just was another trip a few weeks later. But we went to his basement that he has the ukuleles that he has finished. I picked up the spruce top concert pineapple (They are rareish, you can find them from a few makes like Mele and Oscar Schmidt, but you will not see many concert pineapples) It was love at first play. It is light as a feather even though it has geared tuners and it sings. Basically I love it. I am hard pressed to find anything wrong with it. What you will notice is that it is not super decorated with nice purfling or binding; this is because David feels that it weakens the joint. He also does a few other things that most builders do not do. The lining is put in backwards to add stability and he also has thinned out the bracing so that it will vibrate more with the top. Also he makes a 3 piece neck. Not in the way that most do, but it is one continues neck out of one piece but he cuts it in half and puts a strip of walnut between to reinforce the neck. He builds like an engineer and less like an artist like Geoff Davis of Hoosier ukes and the Bluestone Folk School (BSFS). Geoff will make a Ukulele and fine tune as he goes, always adjusting and trying to work with the wood. David knows every aspect of what the size will be and how each part fits and can guarantee it is made exactly to spec.
As I mentioned earlier, the wood that David uses for his ukuleles is a little bit different than most ukulele builders. For the most part David does not buy wood for his ukes, it is all recycled or reclaimed in one way or another. The mahogany that my uke was made with comes from old patterns. (A pattern is a large piece of
wood that is carved to make molds for casting things. Mahogany was popular since it is so stable) the spruce is from some furniture, I think, and the walnut stripe in the neck if from another pattern. Some of the other woods I saw were the aromatic cedar (That uke smells awesome) that he gets from a place that makes veneers and he gets the pieces that cannot be sawn any thinner due to limitations of the machine, and they come about 1/8 of an inch thick, so perfect start for any instrument. Another place he gets wood is from is friends who happen to find really neat pieces like the spalted maple that he is looking at making into the sides and back of a pineapple.
One of the funny things about David is that there are no models per say. Yes he makes sopranos, concerts, and concert pineapples but the woods that he uses are on a whim. He loves to experiment with woods, like the spalted maple, to see how it will sound. Good or bad that is how it is. For the most part you will find he works in African mahogany and is currently on an aromatic cedar kick.
In the end if you are looking for an awesome one of a kind ukulele that is made in the USA, then this is the one I would recommend. Visit Weed Patch in Nashville, IN ASAP to experience a true gem for very little money.
HD Sound Sample:
More Pics
July Ukin’
June 29, 2010 at 1:48 pm | Posted in Events, Shows | 2 CommentsTags: Bluestone, fest, festival, jamming, Open Mic, posts, uke, ukulele
Although I dont know of any ukulele fests for the midwest in July, it is still going to be a good begining for ukulele playing.
Miss Joni is writing for Nuvo again and has a great post about what is going on at the Bluestone Folk School in the next week or so. A short list is the Meat and Taters Ukulele intensive (July 5-9, 2010), Bi-monthy Bluestone uke meet-up (July 8, 20100), and a Uke only open mic (July 9, 20210). I will be there on the 9th around 7pm.
Here is the link to her article: Independence Week: All ukes, all the time By Miss Joni
I hope to see all of you there!
Ukulele World Congress 2010
June 9, 2010 at 3:51 am | Posted in Events, Shows | 4 CommentsTags: fest, festival, home made, jamming, learning, Martin, Open Mic, Play, posts, uke, ukulele
What do you get when you have a bunch of ukulele players come to an old hippy commune to play a 8 hour open mic, camp, eat and jam all day long?
A FRICK’N GOOD TIME!!
I missed last year’s UWC and I was really bummed and I am so happy that I was able to go this year. The atmosphere is like nothing else. The thing is that it is not a festival but more of a large party to celebrate the ukulele and its community. There are no formal classes, but you learn a ton if you want to. There are no headliners waiting backstage to go on and wow the crowd. Trust me there were plenty of people there that could be the headline act at most any ukulele festival (Dominator, Ukulele Zoey and Jodi AKA Gigapus, Flea Bitten Dawgs, Shani Fawni, and Mike from Mainland Ukes to name a few)The great thing about the UWC is that the performers are everyone there. Everyone has a chance to go and play and get a big round of applause no matter how they did. I am a little embarrassed that I screwed up my set on Friday night. I got up there sang a Flaming lips song then tried to do doc of the bay and could not remember it at all and I really wanted to go back on Saturday to redeem myself but by the time I got back to camp the signup sheet was way to full. When I got off the stage I was greeted by Ukulele Zoey and a bunch of others who made me feel like I was not a total screw up and everyone applauded just as loud for me as every other person that went up there. It is a great place to get up and sing for people if you have never done it before.
Things to know about the UWC, a lessons learned if you will.
1. Come Friday; There are a lot of people there on Friday and the potluck is amazing. Also if you show up Friday you can explore Nashville and all that fun stuff Saturday.
2. Bring some food and plenty to drink, not just beer. At this year’s, like last years, there was a potluck that is made up of food that the locals bring. it was good. Saturday you will more than likely spend away from camp exploring so you can eat in town. So there is no need to bring full meals, just bring snacks and stuff to share with everyone.
3. Be prepared for any weather. If you are camping make sure that you have clothes for Hot, cold, and wet.
4. Sign up for open mic as early as you can. If you wait you will go on at 1am. People are allowed to stay up there as long as they like, most did 3-4 songs.
5. Be prepared to buy a new ukulele. You may tell yourself that you don’t need it. It is hard to not go to Weed Patch or Mainland and fall in love.
6. Be prepared to stay until 4 pm on Sunday. There was a ukulele class from 11 -4. I heard it was pretty cool
7. Get on Ukulele Underground and start participating in it. The UWC is also a place for many people who communicate on the forums to actually meet and have a “family reunion” of sorts. It will help when you get there.
I had a great time and hope that it happens again next year. One of my big highlights was going to David Gills house to see his workshop. That story is coming soon.
Please comment below with your experiences or go to the Ukulele Underground forum where people are already posting their favorite moments.
More pics on the facebook group page
WINNER of the Eleuke
May 6, 2010 at 1:51 am | Posted in Eleuke, General, Giveaway, Products | 5 CommentsTags: Electric, Eleuke, fest, festival, Giveaway, posts, uke, ukulele
Meet David from Rochester, MN. He is the winner of the Eleuke!
I must thank all 354 of you that entered, many people commented many times, and that was the real point of this. I really wanted to just get people to my site and get people involved in spreading the ukulele love. I will have more in the future.
I will be at the Ukulele World Congress and Milwaukee Uke fest (and Windy City if it happens) this summer giving others away. Also I will have some on the site.
OH, and if you are ever in need of a pick-me-up, hold a contest to give away a ukulele. People are extra nice and say some of the craziest stuff! Way better than Prozac.
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