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Published October 12th, 2011
Island Music in Orinda
Cathy Dausman
A quintet of ukulele players from Al Dodge's Orinda Parks & Rec class serenaded the crowd at this year's Olive Festival at Wagner Ranch Nature Area. Photo Doug Kohen

On a warm autumn evening, over a background of cricket sounds and a waterfall, 27 students settle instruments on their laps and bring music to life, and life to their music.
These Orinda Parks and Recreation students gather to study and play what one called "the friendliest instrument in the world" - the ukulele. Instructor, musician and instrument maker Al Dodge has more than 25 years of experience and has taught in Orinda for several years. Although there are technically two levels of instruction, Dodge essentially combines the classes, allowing beginners to learn from their more experienced classmates.
The group plays traditional Hawaiian songs like Pearly Shells and Lovely Hula Hands, with simple chord arrangements and an easy, foxtrot-like meter. Dodge likes to focus on music dating from "ragtime through the 1940's." Students supply their own instruments. Ukuleles are readily available for around $60, but collectors can spend $15,000 to $40,000 on hand-crafted ukuleles or original instruments from the late 1800's.
The class attracts students from throughout the East Bay. Phil and Sandy Steele of Moraga first took ukulele lessons during a cruise to Hawaii several years ago. Their group serenaded shipmates in a performance which included hula dancers; by the end of the cruise Phil had purchased a ukulele. Sandy, sporting tiny wooden ukulele earrings, sometimes plays her father's 60 year old instrument, although not tonight. She laughs about the "danger" of what she calls "Ukulele Acquisition Syndrome" and playing "air uke" (faking it) if you can't find the right chord.
Kandy Petersen and Dawn Kurisu have attended Dodge's classes almost since the lessons began. Petersen, from Moraga, says those outside Orinda "pay extra [but] it's worth it!"
Sonny Foniomoana was born in Hawaii, and now resides in Pleasant Hill. His family moved from Oahu to Alameda in 1953, "trading one island for another," he says, and he keeps in touch with island ways through this class. Dorothy Becker, of Martinez, shows off a ukulele she won at the St. Helena Wine Country Ukulele Festival earlier this year. Becker says the stain used on the wood comes from grapes.
Now considered a traditional Hawaiian instrument, the four-stringed ukulele (tuned to G, C, E and A) was actually imported from the island of Madeira, Portugal in the late 1800's. Phil Steel built his own ukulele with the help of Berkeley luthier Mike DaSilva. His is a curly koa wood instrument made with mother of pearl and abalone inlays and a lei design near the keys. He says it took about 50 hours to make. "Monty" Montague played a ukulele he'd fashioned from a cigar box bearing his last name.
Several students performed at this year's Wagner Ranch Olive Festival, and the group is scheduled to play at the Orinda Holiday Bazaar on November 5. Music, companionship, laughter and "free" Hawaiian language lessons thrown in, make this a class No Ka Oi (the best).
Ukulele classes are on Tuesday nights from 6:45 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Community Center. A new session begins November 1. For class details, call Orinda Parks and Recreation, (925) 254-2445 or go online to www.cityoforinda.org.

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