This podcast looks at the use of ukulele in education and beyond.
Earlier in 2024, host Chris Russell was asked some questions about ukulele education, and he chose to record those thoughts in a longer format rather than to attempt to respond on YouTube.
He has been busy (see Episode 43), and did not get around to publicly sharing that Podcast, although he did share it privately with the person asking the questions shortly after recording the podcast.
Six months later (June 2024), here are the answers to the questions from that YouTube comment!
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2042%20%E2%80%94Some%20Questions%20About%20Ukulele%20Education%20.m4aMelanie Doane is quietly one of the most influential people in the world of the ukulele. Daughter of J. Chalmers Doane (the educator who introduced a systematic ukulele program that spread throughout Canada), Melanie has had a rich career as a actress in musicals, as a Juno award winning musician in the pop scene, and as the executive director of the Doane Music School, a ukulele program reaching roughly 1000 students in the Toronto area. In addition, Melanie produced and starred in a family/children’s focused short format TV series called Ukulele U. While episodes of Ukulele U are available in Canada on YouTube, a couple of episodes are available on YouTube in the USA.
In this episode, host Chris Russell visits with Melanie Doane about her musical journey—of which ukulele has and continues to play an important role.
(00:00:00) Intro
(00:01:02) About J. Chalmers Doane
(00:11:38) Northern Ukuleles
(00:14:54) Pursuing Musical Theater
(00:19:50) Experiences in Pop Music
(00:23:05) Doane Music School
(00:38:40) D6 Tuning and Linear Tuning
(00:44:51) Musical Legacy
(00:48:27) Size of the Doane Music School Program
(00:51:13) Melanie’s Mya Moe Ukulele
(00:52:17) Supporting the Doane Music School
(00:56:21) Working Through the Pandemic
(00:59:45) Doane Music School Collaborations
(01:02:03) Ukulele U Television Program
In this episode, host Chris Russell visits with music educator and YouTube creator, David Gray. David is a primary music educator in the United Kingdom who has been creating wonderful resources on YouTube, and also is an associate of Octopus Ukulele.
In this podcast, Chris and David talk about many issues, such as the differences between music education and teacher preparation in the United States and the United Kingdom, the processes they use to make YouTube videos, recorder instruction, and of course, ukulele materials.
David’s resources can be found at https://www.youtube.com/@musicwithmrgray and https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/iamsomewhere
(00:00:00) Intro
(00:01:08) Discussing Music Education in the USA and the UK
(00:18:03) The YouTube resources at Music with Mr Gray
(00:43:10) Ukulele Topics
(01:07:48) Final thoughts
Host Chris Russell has the opportunity to visit with Aaron and Nicole Keim from The Quiet American (their performing group) and Beansprout Musical Instruments (Their instrument company).
Aaron and Nicole were raised in Wisconsin, slowly landed in the world of folk music, and then professionally located in Colorado and Oregon as they established an instrument company, a performance group, and a publishing enterprise. Along the way, they also worked for/with Gordon and Char at Mya-Moe Ukulele, and introduced their son Henry to the world.
Post-pandemic, their main focus is Beansprout Musical Instruments, where you can purchase a hand-crafted instrument (literally built by hand) out of renewable North American tonewoods (or some reclaimed tonewoods) influenced by the designs of the past, yet with a modern twist. You can also buy many instructional books that were written by Aaron and Nicole, and then painstakingly created—by hand—by Nicole. Simply put, they are excellent instructional books created by self-identifying “folk musicians” who also have training and advanced degrees as music educators.
Aaron also recently received a grant from Mortise and Tenon magazine to study Kingdom-Era instruments (instruments built from 1879-1893; the first ukuleles), and he has written an article for the magazine and at the time of publishing of this podcast, has built three instruments in the style of the kingdom era instruments. Those instruments are impacting some aspects of his design including the use of some inlays and some uses of the early headstocks.
Aaron and Nicole were incredibly kind to share about of their journey on a Sunday afternoon, and the result is a wonderful podcast discussing the journey of a family that continues to provide so much for the ukulele community as builders, authors, teachers, and presenters.
(00:00) Introduction
(03:18) What was school music like for you?
(06:38) When did ukulele come into your life?
(08:17) James Hill vs. Denise Gagne (https://tinyurl.com/Uke-Vs-Recorder)
(10:06) Graduate school experiences (While in Colorado)
(13:00) Any guitar experience?
(14:43) When did the building start?
(23:22) Why do banjo ukuleles have ukulele strings?
(24:40) Do you have any of your early ukuleles around?
(26:13) What is your response when you see your early work?
(26:53) When does the collaboration with Mya-Moe begin?
(36:37) How did you transition out of Mya-Moe?
(41:10) When does the publishing begin?
(47:37) After learning chords, what is the next step for players?
(52:31) Where is Beansprout today?
(58:03) Why do you offer an “Alto” uke?
(59:57) Beansprout Artists
(01:02:27) Dave Matthews Band
(01:04:35) The Wayfinder Ukulele
(01:06:06) A quick discussion of tonewoods
(01:12:30) Vintage repairs & Kingdom Era Project
(01:28:08) Contact information
In this podcast, host Chris Russell visits with Mike McQueen, the owner of The Uke Republic in Austell, Georgia (a suburb of Atlanta).
The discussion covers a wide range of topics, including the history of The Uke Republic, some perspective from the sales side of the industry, and a lot of Mike’s entertaining personality and humor.
If you are interested in a new ukulele, The Uke Republic carries a wide range of makes and models, and can often obtain or preorder instruments that they do not currently have. You can find the Uke Repúblic at: https://www.ukerepublic.com/
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2038%20-%20Mike%20McQueen%20%28The%20Uke%20Republic%29.m4a https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2038%20-%20Mike%20McQueen%20%28The%20Uke%20Republic%29.m4aIn this episode of the UkeStuff Podcast, we visit with Pete McCarty, the world’s greatest ukulele song leader. Pete lives in Memphis, Tennessee, and helped to found the Memphis Ukulele Flash Mob.
Pete has led song/jam sessions throughout the world, including at MUFM events in Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Minnesota, Hawaii, and in the United Kingdom.
The ukulele community invites you to the 2024 Uke n’ Roll Ukulele Festival in Memphis, Tennessee (April 18-21). See more information at https://memphisukenroll.com
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2037%20-%20Pete%20McCarty.m4a https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2037%20-%20Pete%20McCarty.m4aIn this episode of the UkeStuff Podcast, host Chris Russell visits with Daniel Ho for the second of two podcasts, and the focus is more on education topics.
Daniel is an ‘ukulele virtuoso, slack key guitarist, multi-instrumentalist, composer, arranger, singer-songwriter, producer, audio engineer, and record company owner. He is a six-time Grammy Award winner, twelve-time Grammy Award nominee, six-time Taiwanese Golden Melody Award winner, and recipient of multiple Hawaiian Music awards. To learn more about Daniel Ho, visit https://www.danielho.com/
Want to make a donation towards this work? Visit https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ukestuff
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2036%20-%20Daniel%20Ho%20%28Part%202%29%20%28Education%20Questions%29.m4aIn this episode of the UkeStuff Podcast, host Chris Russell visits with Daniel Ho for the first of two podcasts.
Daniel is an ‘ukulele virtuoso, slack key guitarist, multi-instrumentalist, composer, arranger, singer-songwriter, producer, audio engineer, and record company owner. He is a six-time Grammy Award winner, twelve-time Grammy Award nominee, six-time Taiwanese Golden Melody Award winner, and recipient of multiple Hawaiian Music awards. To learn more about Daniel Ho, visit https://www.danielho.com/
Want to make a donation towards this work? Visit https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ukestuff
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast_%20Episode%2035%20-%20Daniel%20Ho%20%28Part%201%29.m4aToday was a day where I ended up discussing left handed ukulele playing as a teacher twice. First, at the Georgia Music Educators Association, and the later on Facebook.
So I am clear, I allow my left handed students (in 5th grade at the point) to decide if they want to play right handed, left handed, or to flip a right handed to be played like a left handed ukulele. I make a video covering the positives and negatives, and ask parents and students to choose how they want to learn to play.
I have never had a student choose to flip the ukulele, but I have had students choose to play left handed, and I have students that start left handed and switch after a few days to right handed, and those that stay left handed. I don’t have to recreate materials for them—they simply adapt. And as a left handed player, they’re used to adapting.
One thing I will say is that the argument (which I used to use) that left handed players have an advantage needs to stop—if that was true, then all right handed players should be playing a left handed ukulele.
Yes, if a person learns left handed, they will face some challenges:
That said, I have found that left handed players who play left handed “get it” and require very little additional support as you teach a class.
And please note, I’m not saying that a left handed player cannot play right handed, or that you should force a left handed player to play left handed. I am saying that you should let the player/student/parents make that choice.
I also wanted to share the link to my friend Paul Marchese’s website, where he also talks about this topic: http://www.ukuleleforteachers.com/blog/lefty-vs-righty-pull-out-the-soapboxrant-ahead
https://ia601007.us.archive.org/16/items/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast%200034%20-%20Best%20Practice%20with%20Left%20Handed%20Ukulele%20Players.m4a https://ia601007.us.archive.org/16/items/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast%200034%20-%20Best%20Practice%20with%20Left%20Handed%20Ukulele%20Players.m4aIn this episode of the UkeStuff Podcast, host Chris Russell visits with one of the main catalysts for the current “Third Wave” of the ukulele, Jim Beloff. Jim has created 36 music books, three other books on ukulele, twelve audio recordings, five DVDs, two classical works for ukulele, one of the oldest and most respected ukulele websites (Flea Market Music), and has worked closely with his sister and brother-in-law to create a ukulele company (Magic Fluke).
He just released his memoir, UKEtopia! Adventures in the Ukulele World. To purchase (this is a referral link), go to https://amzn.to/30TjU9w
Jim also has provided a Spotify list of the music mentioned in the book, and the list can be accessed at: https://open.spotify.com/user/jimbeloff/playlist/7ocCb5fPfhwtzmievmR6VV?si=86a64e9e3c7443aa
You are invited to visit my ukulele blog/website, ukestuff.info (a free resource). Also on social media: Twitter (@UkeStuff), Instagram (@ukestuff.info), and TikTok (@ukestuff.info)
Want to make a donation towards this work? Visit https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ukestuff
Interested in my suggested ukulele items on the UkeStuff Amazon storefront (affiliate link)? https://www.amazon.com/shop/ukeplayalongs
Check out the “merch”: https://teespring.com/stores/ukestuff
Are you a teacher using ukulele in the classroom? Check out my video based method…effective, easy, and inexpensive! https://ukestuff.wordpress.com/the-video-ukulele-method/
Looking for a FREE beginner method for the ukulele? Check out GCEA U or DGBE U at www.ukestuff.info
Thank you for supporting this work! Your support makes it possible to produce this content.
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast%20Episode%20033.m4aIn this episode of the UkeStuff Podcast, host Chris Russell visits with one of the main catalysts for the current “Third Wave” of the ukulele, Jim Beloff. Jim has created 36 music books, three other books on ukulele, twelve audio recordings, five DVDs, two classical works for ukulele, one of the oldest and most respected ukulele websites (Flea Market Music), and has worked closely with his sister and brother-in-law to create a ukulele company (Magic Fluke).
He just released his memoir, UKEtopia! Adventures in the Ukulele World. To purchase (this is a referral link), go to https://amzn.to/30TjU9w
Jim also has provided a Spotify list of the music mentioned in the book, and the list can be accessed at: https://open.spotify.com/user/jimbeloff/playlist/7ocCb5fPfhwtzmievmR6VV?si=86a64e9e3c7443aa
You are invited to visit my ukulele blog/website, ukestuff.info (a free resource). Also on social media: Twitter (@UkeStuff), Instagram (@ukestuff.info), and TikTok (@ukestuff.info)
Want to make a donation towards this work? Visit https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ukestuff
Interested in my suggested ukulele items on the UkeStuff Amazon storefront (affiliate link)? https://www.amazon.com/shop/ukeplayalongs
Check out the “merch”: https://teespring.com/stores/ukestuff
Are you a teacher using ukulele in the classroom? Check out my video based method…effective, easy, and inexpensive! https://ukestuff.wordpress.com/the-video-ukulele-method/
Looking for a FREE beginner method for the ukulele? Check out GCEA U or DGBE U at www.ukestuff.info
Thank you for supporting this work! Your support makes it possible to produce this content.
https://archive.org/download/UVPP001Intro/UkeStuff%20Podcast%20Episode%20032.m4aYour feedback is valuable to us. Should you encounter any bugs, glitches, lack of functionality or other problems, please email us on [email protected] or join Moon.FM Telegram Group where you can talk directly to the dev team who are happy to answer any queries.