Ukulele Manifesto

While most ukuleles look like mini guitars, other popular forms have emerged--the Bell, the Pineapple, the Fluke. The variety may be due to the uke's reputation as a whimsical, "fun" instrument, inspiring non-conformity in design; and the uke's small size makes design experiments cheaper and easier.

For someone like me who likes to design and make things of wood, and who also likes ukulele music, the uke's design possibilities have proven irresistible. I have not been immune to the whimsy factor either. The results, you see here on this blog.

I make ukuleles at 2nd Chance Wood Co. in Durand, MI (https://www.facebook.com/pg/2ndchancewood/posts/?ref=page_internal) . The ukes are made entirely of recycled wood from old Michigan barns and urban reclaimed wood. The instruments are for sale at the 2nd Chance store in Durand, MI. Individuals or dealers may also contact me at raberdavid@yahoo.com.

Friday, December 15, 2023

The Michi-lele Saga


This my latest Michi-lele, number 25, all of them sold. 

It's my most popular ukulele, representing almost a quarter of my output over the past 6 years plus.  I guess I know why--because it is something truly unique and special in a marketplace where you need to offer something something like that when you are an individual craftsman competing against factory producers.  It has to be something unique and special because you have to charge at least a few hundred dollars for it to justify your labor on it, while a decent, playable mass-produced instrument can be had for fifty bucks or less.  

With this uke, there is also the Michigan angle:  A lot of us Michiganders love our state, and we are oddly proud of its distinctive shape (the "mitten"), which happens to be very suitable for a ukulele body--and whattya know, this clever uke very cleverly includes our Upper Peninsula as well, as the head stock.

To be honest, I'm not sure if the idea of making a Michigan-shaped ukulele is totally original with me or not.  I have seen a picture of at least one electric guitar with a Michigan mitten body, and I'm not sure if I saw that before or after I made the first Michi-lele.  I do know that after I started them, I happened upon a picture of a small collection of ukes that looked pretty much like my Michi-lele, made by someone in northern Michigan.  But I did not steal this person's idea--for all I know, he stole it from me.  I don't think it matters all that much, because ideas and themes in the wider world of design get stolen and swapped and adapted, etc., all the time. 






NOTE:  Since I wrote this, some months ago now, there have been more Michi-leles.  I love making them, if only because every Michi-lele proves the thesis of my alternative ukulele philosophy:  Body shape does not matter, and any wood can be a "tone wood." That is, if one is open is variety in sound and appearance of the musical instrument we call the ukulele.

History has shown--over more than a century now--that the uke player has embraced this attitude--and this is why I love designing and making ukuleles.

Mighty Uke Day 2023


 It was a new venue for MUD 2023, but the same event in terms of opportunities for uke enthusiasts to meet and bask in the joy of uke-mania with fellow enthusiasts.  

Thanks to Ben Hassenger and the volunteers who made this great Mid-Michigan ukulele event possible.  I look forward to it every year.