So a few months ago I decided to go to Hawai'i in the hopes of upgrading my main ukulele (a Big Island Honu solid koa tenor) to one of the K brands or a similarly handmade-in-Hawai'i ukulele. The plan was to look at lots of ukes with the hope of finding one I loved at Larry's Music on Kauai, mostly because of all the positive things people have said abnout Sam at Larry's and because it seemed like Larry's would have the biggest selection of K brands. My adventure began in Oahu and continues on Kauai. Here's where I've been so far.
Bob's Ukuleles, Waikiki. I was staying in Waikiki, so I looked at ukuleles there first. Bob's Ukuleles is in the Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center. The proprieter (I forgot to ask if he was Bob), was friendly, and we bonded over the fact that we both owned a Kala thinline travel tenor. His was signed recently by Darryl Hall (Hall & Oates), who had been in the shop looking at ukes a few weeks earlier. Bob's had a range of ukes from Kalas, Lanikais and Ohanas, to Kamaka, KoAlohas, Kanileas and ukuleles with the letter "A" on the headstock. I played a bunch of them as Bob sold an entyry-level uke to a teenager, a percussionist who wanted to learn to play the ukulele. Then a friend of the proprieter's showed up and they jammed a little. I didn't buy an uke there because it was the first place I'd been, but he was selling a Kamaka HF-3 for $1090, which I believe is the list price at Kamaka.
Ukulele PuaPua. This is not the one in the Sheraton but the other one. I talked to a guy named Tyler. He really likes Kanileas, and he let me play a deluxe Kanilea that was selling for close to $2,000. Great sound, beautiful uke, but the neck's a little bigger than I like. He didn't have any Kamakas, but he said he was getting a bunch in soon and offered to email me photos and sound samples. Not sure I want to spend $1,000 on an instrument without playing it first, but maybe seeing and hearing it would be enough.
Kamaka Factory. On Thursday, I took the Kamaka tour. There were two of us on the tour (the other guy was from San Jose, so we talked a bit about the local NorCal uke scene). I'll post more about the tour and post photos in a separate thread when I get home, but for now I'll just say that Fred Kamaka was delightful. He told great stories and provided lots of interesting insight, and he showed off some new machines Kamaka will be using to build its ukes. At least now I know why there are two Ks on the headstock and logo.
After that it was off to Kauai.
Larry's Music. So far, this has been disappointing, especially since I pretty much came to Kauai to come to this shop. I got there on Friday afternoon and the place was closed. There was a sign on the door that said the store was open by appointment only, so I called the number on the sign and Sam graciously agreed to meet me on Saturday at 11:30. Except that he apparently forgot. I called about 15 minutes before my appointment, as he had asked, and got his voicemail. I called again at noon and left a second message. He had explained to me that he was really busy with shipping, and I understand that he might have forgotten to come to the shop, but I'm diisappointed that he hasn't returned my messages (9 hours later). Maybe he'll call on Sunday; I told him I'd be willing to come to his shop whenever was convenient for him, but I leave on Monday afternoon, and I may end up not being able to try any of the K brand ukes I can see on the wall throiugh the window of his store. He also has those Kamoa hard cases, and I wanted to look at them too.
Strings and Things. This is a little shop in Hanalea that sells ukuleles, guitars and yarn. The proprietor, Will, is enthusiastic about Island Ukes, built on Kauai by a luthier named Rapozo. I hadn't heard of these ukuleles before. I tried two of the three tenors he had (cedar soundboard with mahogany sides and back, and koa; the one I didn't try was curly koa), and I was impressed. The koa one, which had a dolphin MOP inlay at the 2-4 frets, sells for a little more han $1,000.
Scotty's Music. Because I wanted to see Larry's Music on Friday (I'm staying about a mile away from Larry's), by the time I'd finished dealing with Sam and with picking up my registration stuff for a 5K race in Puipo on Sunday, it was too late to go to Scotty's (which closes at 4:00 p.m.) I'm planning to be on that part of the island on Sunday, but Scotty's is closed on Sunday. I may go on Monday morning if I don't hear back from Sam or if I can go to Larry's on Sunday.
The upshot so far is that I may end up not buying a K brand uke or any uke at all. I could order a Kamaka from the factory or through Ukulele PuaPua, but as I mentioned, I'm not sure I want to spend upward s of $1,000 on an ukulele I haven't actually played myself, and other stores have few, if any, Kamakas or KoAlohas in stock right now. I may take the KoAloha factory tour on Tuesday, but KoAloha seems to require a minimum of 4 for a tour and I'm only one, so I'd have to be added to people already scheduled to take the tour.
Sorry the post was so long, but I thought my experiences with different ukulele sellers on Oahu and Kauai might be interesting and possibly helpful. Aloha from Kapa'a!
Bob's Ukuleles, Waikiki. I was staying in Waikiki, so I looked at ukuleles there first. Bob's Ukuleles is in the Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center. The proprieter (I forgot to ask if he was Bob), was friendly, and we bonded over the fact that we both owned a Kala thinline travel tenor. His was signed recently by Darryl Hall (Hall & Oates), who had been in the shop looking at ukes a few weeks earlier. Bob's had a range of ukes from Kalas, Lanikais and Ohanas, to Kamaka, KoAlohas, Kanileas and ukuleles with the letter "A" on the headstock. I played a bunch of them as Bob sold an entyry-level uke to a teenager, a percussionist who wanted to learn to play the ukulele. Then a friend of the proprieter's showed up and they jammed a little. I didn't buy an uke there because it was the first place I'd been, but he was selling a Kamaka HF-3 for $1090, which I believe is the list price at Kamaka.
Ukulele PuaPua. This is not the one in the Sheraton but the other one. I talked to a guy named Tyler. He really likes Kanileas, and he let me play a deluxe Kanilea that was selling for close to $2,000. Great sound, beautiful uke, but the neck's a little bigger than I like. He didn't have any Kamakas, but he said he was getting a bunch in soon and offered to email me photos and sound samples. Not sure I want to spend $1,000 on an instrument without playing it first, but maybe seeing and hearing it would be enough.
Kamaka Factory. On Thursday, I took the Kamaka tour. There were two of us on the tour (the other guy was from San Jose, so we talked a bit about the local NorCal uke scene). I'll post more about the tour and post photos in a separate thread when I get home, but for now I'll just say that Fred Kamaka was delightful. He told great stories and provided lots of interesting insight, and he showed off some new machines Kamaka will be using to build its ukes. At least now I know why there are two Ks on the headstock and logo.
After that it was off to Kauai.
Larry's Music. So far, this has been disappointing, especially since I pretty much came to Kauai to come to this shop. I got there on Friday afternoon and the place was closed. There was a sign on the door that said the store was open by appointment only, so I called the number on the sign and Sam graciously agreed to meet me on Saturday at 11:30. Except that he apparently forgot. I called about 15 minutes before my appointment, as he had asked, and got his voicemail. I called again at noon and left a second message. He had explained to me that he was really busy with shipping, and I understand that he might have forgotten to come to the shop, but I'm diisappointed that he hasn't returned my messages (9 hours later). Maybe he'll call on Sunday; I told him I'd be willing to come to his shop whenever was convenient for him, but I leave on Monday afternoon, and I may end up not being able to try any of the K brand ukes I can see on the wall throiugh the window of his store. He also has those Kamoa hard cases, and I wanted to look at them too.
Strings and Things. This is a little shop in Hanalea that sells ukuleles, guitars and yarn. The proprietor, Will, is enthusiastic about Island Ukes, built on Kauai by a luthier named Rapozo. I hadn't heard of these ukuleles before. I tried two of the three tenors he had (cedar soundboard with mahogany sides and back, and koa; the one I didn't try was curly koa), and I was impressed. The koa one, which had a dolphin MOP inlay at the 2-4 frets, sells for a little more han $1,000.
Scotty's Music. Because I wanted to see Larry's Music on Friday (I'm staying about a mile away from Larry's), by the time I'd finished dealing with Sam and with picking up my registration stuff for a 5K race in Puipo on Sunday, it was too late to go to Scotty's (which closes at 4:00 p.m.) I'm planning to be on that part of the island on Sunday, but Scotty's is closed on Sunday. I may go on Monday morning if I don't hear back from Sam or if I can go to Larry's on Sunday.
The upshot so far is that I may end up not buying a K brand uke or any uke at all. I could order a Kamaka from the factory or through Ukulele PuaPua, but as I mentioned, I'm not sure I want to spend upward s of $1,000 on an ukulele I haven't actually played myself, and other stores have few, if any, Kamakas or KoAlohas in stock right now. I may take the KoAloha factory tour on Tuesday, but KoAloha seems to require a minimum of 4 for a tour and I'm only one, so I'd have to be added to people already scheduled to take the tour.
Sorry the post was so long, but I thought my experiences with different ukulele sellers on Oahu and Kauai might be interesting and possibly helpful. Aloha from Kapa'a!
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