Making the “Radio Tenor”
Thursday, November 11th, 2010
Two summers ago the girls and I went to Hawaii for a family reunion. I had a little time on my hands so I thought I would get around to some of the Uke shops and check things out. Probably one of the most impressive shops on the island is Pua Pua, http://ukulele.pua2.com/ and its right down town Waikiki in the Pacific Beach Hotel. It’s a small little shop but totally packed with ukes! Wall to wall ukes. I met the manager there, Tyler Gilman. A really super nice guy and a super great player . He gave me a couple of books he thought would be of interest interested to me. They chronicled the Tony Ku Collection. One book showed his uke collection and the other his Hawaiian style guitars. My understanding is that this collection is no longer together so it is so cool that they chronicled his collection because it was truly impressive. I was immediately wowed by the vintage pieces he had by Santos, Diaz and of course Nunes. The inventors of the Ukulele. These ukes are so rare you never get to see them. They are mostly all in collections. This was the first time I had ever seen a “Radio Tenor” model built by Leonardo Nunes. Before that I had never even heard of one.It was such a beautiful and cool uke I really had to make a reproduction of it. In my research of this uke I eventually met Jeff Turner, a collector, who has several really fine examples of them in his collection. He told me that of the “Radio Tenors” He only nows of maybe 20 of them. They are that rare! Jeff was a wealth of information, and very encouraging about my project. He gave me drawings and measurements from the original instruments he owns. Needless to say I couldn’t have done it with out his help.
I building the Radio Tenor the first thing I decided to do was to use original construction methods.That meant using the “Spanish style” of construction which historically was how all the ukes from the islands were built. In this style of construction the neck and body are built together as one and not separate pieces. All ukes from the main land were made with the body and neck separate. The majority of people who build instruments these days build with the separate body and neck construction method so building in the “Spanish style” was a bit of a learning curve for me. Switching over required making some new jigs and molds as well as a bit of recalculating. The rest of it was pretty straightforward.
I made the rope bindings from Mahogany and Holly. Everything else was Koa. I decided to French Polish it for a finish instead of Lacquer. I wanted to give it that lovely patina that those old ukes have.
Surprisingly the most frustrating, and most expensive!, thing in this project was getting the decal and badge made. First I had to get someone to recreate the decal based off of a photo. Then there was finding some one to make the decal. The first company I contacted gave me a quote of $1,600.00! It took me about six months to finally find someone to make me a decal at a somewhat reasonable price. The badge wasn’t too bad. Its not a real acid etched badge but I think its acceptable.
I am traveling to Hawaii next week to participate in the 9th Annual Ukulele Guild of Hawaii Exhibition and I will bring my “Radio Tenors” to show. I think that sounds very fitting.
