Jake Shimabukuro
Biography
Ukelele master Jake Shimabukuro has taken the four-string, two-octave instrument to places no one could have imagined back in the golden years of Don Ho, ranging freely across the music spectrum from jazz, blues, and funk to bluegrass, classical, and folk with the ease of a musician fully in command of the possibilities of his chosen instrument. Born November 3, 1976 in Honolulu, Hawaii, Shimabukuro was given his first ukulele and lesson by his mother when he was only four-years-old. Fascinated by the uke, he eventually began playing regularly at a local Honolulu café. He was a founding member of Pure Heart, and played on the trio's first two albums before leaving to form Colon. In 2001 Shimabukuro began his solo career, releasing Elaine Maru (In Memory Of) on Surfside Records that same year. He signed with Epic in 2002 and released Sunday Morning on the label a year later, following it with Skyline in 2003. In 2005 he found an international distributor for his own label, Hitchhike Records, and began issuing his own CDs, including Crosscurrent, Dragon, My Life, and the much lauded Gently Weeps, which included a haunting version of George Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps." Shimabukuro has completely rewritten the book on the possibilities of the ukulele, and his skill on the instrument attracted the ear and attention of Béla Fleck who has used Shimabukuro as both an opening act and as a sit in playing guest with the Flecktones. ~ Steve Leggett, All Music Guide
Selected Discography
Bela always finds new musical FREAKS to tour with the Flecktones . This guy is amazing!!!!
|
||
Just returned from Hawaii, and heard Grammy-winni n g uke players, but Jake Shimabukuro pretty well takes the cake. Amazing.
|
||
I had no friggin' idea that someone possesed these kind of skills on a uke!!!!!
Awesome..... w a y awesome dude... |
||
His video for "My Guitar Gently Weeps" got me to see my uke in a totally new light. The man is an inpiration for players everywhere and one of a number of virtuoso uke players out to earn their instrument some serious respect. If only Pandora would play some John King or James Hill...
|
||
This guy is CRAZY good with that uke. Big props Pandora.
|
||
I saw this guy at Wakarusa a few years ago and he pretty much owned the uke. If you get the chance see him, do it; he's great.
|
||
i love heartbeat!my fav!listen to him hes very talented!
|
||
saw him a couple years ago in Washington DC.... amazing, he can do anything... and so laid back and chill
|
||
Beautiful! This is what I love about Pandora! I never would have heard him anywhere else. Thanks!
|
||
I was moved by the "while my guitar gently weeps" performance that i saw on youtube. I can't wait to see more of his command on the ukulele.
|
||
I first heard of him about 5 years ago while in Hawaii. What amazed me about him and Hawaii's music is that I kept thinking "this is where folk music wound up" But what it really was, was all of the Ukele sounds on the radio in almost every song I heard while there. Plus the vocals on so many songes were mild and very harmonic. Wow! what a nice surprise that was. Everyday was like a hot lazy Sunday afternoon... It was great and Jake's music of course is at the cutting edge.
|
||
Jake was one of the first people I met when I moved to Hawaii, he is one of the truly good people I've met. After I met him I understood why the State of Hawaii named him the "Ambassador of Aloha". I've seen him play at small restaurants and big venues, once he came to a community college to play with some friends who were performing in the cafeteria.
|
||
Some of the most beautiful music you will ever hear. I will be looking for and buying all of his stuff. It's great background party music, and also great for meditation and sleeping.
|
||
I saw Jake in Hendersonvil l e , NC in a small great theater. What an incredible talent! I have never seen so much music come from such a small source. A full range of technique and virtuosity. If you ever get a chance to see him, GO! You will not be disappointed .
|
||
I saw Jake on Woodsongs Oldtime Radio Hour for the first time and then in the company of Tommy Emmanuel. He turns a Uke, usually thought of as a toy, into a real string instrument. To hear him and Emmanuel together will bring tears to your eyes. It's as if one machine is driving them both.
|
||
wow, this music is simply...wow . I was doing something and just had to stop and write a comment about his song "Heartbeat". This guy's talent is amazing to say the very least. I'm happy to know that there a some true musicians left out there in the world.
|
||
hearing jake for the first time was akin to hearing the beatles for the first time -- i remember exactly where i was, what i was doing.
i have a 'uke history' -- grew up listening to my late queens-born father getting passable singalong 'i wanna go back to my little grass shack','peg o' my heart' and suchlike out of his arthur godfrey ukelele. what jake does is just astounding -- as fearless as he is flawless...s t r u m on... |
||
MEN I JUST SAW YOU ON CONNAN, YOU MADE 2 TEARS FALL DOWN MY FACE... THANKS...
YOU TRULY HAVE A GIFT. |
||
amazing, amazing, amazing -
here is the youtube link with tommy emmanuel http://www.y o u t u b e . c o m / w a t c h ? v = J 5 q a k F I e c B U |
||
There is also a Youtube video of him doing a duet of "While my guitar gently weeps" with Tommy Emanuelle, that is exquisite! It's always gratifying finding a musician that stretches the boundaries on what many would think is a limited instrument.
|
||
There's a phenomenal video of him playing "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" available on YouTube (or at least there was a year or so ago). The guy's simply one of the greatest ever on his instrument.
|
||
That's amazing!! I just listened to "Sakura" on his album "Gently Weeps" and I honestly thought he was playing an actual guitar instead of a ukelele!!
|
||
He's awesome. I'm listening to his version of spain right now, a song I've played countless times on saxophone.
|
||
| report abuse |




