Contact

I would love to hear from you! Feel free to e-mail me with questions, comments, or requests. Contact me:

  • Directly at: liveukulele[at]gmail.com
  • In the comment box below

Aloha,

Brad

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Toki Noguchi January 4, 2012 at 6:28 am

Aloha Brad,
It’s me, manapualabs, Liko Puha’s girlfriend. Well, for Christmas I bought Liko a Kanile`a T1 satin finish with a Fusion Tenor Limited Edition Gigbag. That’s all good. But I also got him a Honeytone and and a Fish and Chips EQ to play with and now he needs a cable (because he is using mine and he’s already lost one of them before). My cables are old, so I’ve been looking for info on what to get him now. I haven’t found any info on what `ukulele players use. Do you have any suggestions? Mahalo for your kokua. regards, Toki

steb January 29, 2012 at 9:40 pm

Aloha Brad,
Have a Lanikai concert, not real good from yrs back. Just bought a Ko’olau Tenor, with hopes of picking up the skill. I can’t put the darn thing down! Have taken a couple of lessons years ago and recently have been doing the picking tabs on the sites. Tell mee please, what are the (5)…numbers that are kind of connected with an arch…numbers with slashes etc. I have gotten some of the tunes pretty good, but am missing something. Yes, I plan on taking lessons with my Ko’olau, but I really want to wow the teacher with some type of skill. I’m 51 and I know that some teachers hate to teach adults. I bought my Lanikai 12 yrs ago, If I would have taken lessons relgiously, my level would be so much higher now. Like you and others, never playing anything, then 7-9 yrs some are performing! Gotta make up for lost time. Congrats on the position at the college!

David February 4, 2012 at 10:32 am

Brad,

This site rocks! I just picked up a concert ukulele that my mom had lying around the house about 3 weeks ago, and I’ve made a lot of progress. I’ve never played a string instrument, although I played both oboe and alto sax when I was in high school. I’m looking for a good method to use both for concert uke (traditional GCEA) and tenor uke tuned in low GCEA. Thanks and keep rocking!

Regards,
David

Ali February 6, 2012 at 11:01 am

Hello. Great website! Any plans to produce a book with all this information? I prefer print! Ali

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