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Ukulele Class

"The ukulele seems a part of the native
at every merrymaking. It hailed originally from Portugal,
but one seldom remembers this, so native has it become to
the islands."
Charmian London, wife of the writer Jack
London, 1907.
Beginning in 1878, contract workers and their families from
the island of Madeira- the small island west of Morocco that
is part of Portugal- escaping the poverty and political instability
of their homeland, came to Hawai`i to start a new life. Joy
in their safe arrival was expressed by impromptu musical celebrations
on the machete, a small four-stringed treble guitar that was
a native folk instrument of Madeira. The Hawaiian Gazette
reported in 1878, less than two weeks after the first arrivals
reached Hawai`i:
During the past week a band
of Portuguese musicians, composed of Madeira Islanders recently
arrived here, have been delighting the people with nightly
street concerts. The musicians are true performers on their
strange instruments, which are a kind of cross between a
guitar and a banjo, but which produce very sweet music in
the hands of the Portuguese minstrels. We confess to having
enjoyed the music ourselves and hope to hear more of it.
With their love of poetry and music, the Hawaiians took readily
to this new instrument as an accompaniment to the sweet melodies
of their native songs. In the early days it was referred to
as the 'taro patch fiddle,' but later came to be known as
the 'ukulele' the Hawaiian word for jumping flea. Ernest Kaai
wrote in his 1910 method book:
The Hawaiians have a way of
playing all over the strings at the same time, strumming
and skipping their fingers from one side of the instrument
to the other, hence the name, Ukulele (bouncing flea.)
Several of the Portuguese immigrants were skilled cabinetmakers
and began making ukuleles in Honolulu shops, using Hawaiian
hardwoods, especially koa, which were purchased by the enthusiastic
native musicians as well as visitors sailing to Hawai`i as
part of the newly emerging tourist industry. But it was not
until the opera 'Bird of Paradise' began its Broadway run
and subsequent tour that Hawaiian music found a large mainland
audience, and this was followed in 1915 by the Panama-Pacific
International Exposition in San Francisco which showcased
a Hawaiian attraction of musicians and hula dancers. The national
craze for Hawaiian music and the ukulele was underway.
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