Tiny
Tim’s Ukulele Part 1
The other day I came across a
photograph of one of our instruments while searching for something else
entirely - a photograph of a very strange resonator ukulele: it was the shape
of a small banjo uke but made of nickel plated brass.
It was in the early 1990s, while Beltona Resonator
Instruments was based in the UK ,
that we made a resonator uke for Peter Brooke-Turner who is a founder member of
the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain. At that time, the Orchestra whilst being
little known in the UK or in
fact anywhere else, was very big in Japan but this situation was
changing for it rapidly and they would soon become widely popular.
A
A couple of years later,
Peter phoned me to say that Tiny Tim was in London playing a few gigs but was without a
ukulele. Someone had suggested he visit
Peter as he was known to have one or two lying around the house. The one that took Mr Tim’s eye and ear was
the Beltona uke that Peter owned. Tiny
Tim used the uke for his gigs after it was retuned to play left handed. A few weeks later, I received a call from
Herbert Khaury, aka Tiny Tim asking me to make him a ukulele exactly like
Peter’s.
Peter Brooke-Turner and TT. I think on the day he visited Peter (photo courtesy of Peter) |
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You have to remember that at
that time the ukulele was not a the wildly popular instrument it is today and
Tiny Tim had kept it in the public eye almost single handedly since his heyday
in the late 60’s and early 70’s. He was
the biggest living thing in the ukulele world to me. I remembered him being on TV when I was young.
He was famously (or infamously) married
on TV to Miss Vicki. His version of the
old Nick Lucas tune “Tiptoe Thru the Tulips” was widely loved. Eccentric and lavishly over-dressed he may
have appeared but he carried in his mind a vast repertoire of tin pan alley
songs of love and romance unmatched today. He was a walking archive of crooning tunes
previously lost but revived and passed on to a new generation by Mr Tim.
We were thrilled to have
received a commission from this colossus of the ukulele world.
When I was speaking with him
he addressed me constantly as Mr Evans despite me being 30 years younger than
himself. An old world politeness so rare today and indicative of his charming
manner.
A Still from a Tiny Tim video "Songs and Stories of the Crooners" Available from www.ukediner.comTo be continued |
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