Jake Shimabukuro

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Jake Shimabukuro
Hawai’i, U.S.
GenresJazz, blues, funk, rock, classical, bluegrass, folk, flamenco
Instrument(s)Ukulele
Years active1998–present
LabelsJapan Sony
United States Hitchhike
Music Theories Recordings
Websitewww.jakeshimabukuro.com

Jake Shimabukuro (born November 3, 1976) is a ukulele virtuoso and composer from Hawaii[a] known for his fast and complex finger work.[2] His music combines elements of jazz, blues, funk, rock, bluegrass, classical, folk, and flamenco.[3] Shimabukuro has written numerous original compositions, including the entire soundtracks to two Japanese films, Hula Girls (2007) and Sideways (2009), the Japanese remake of the same name.[4]

Well known in Hawai’i and Japan during his early solo career in the early 2000s, Shimabukuro became famous internationally in 2006, when a video of him playing a virtuosic rendition of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" was posted on YouTube without his knowledge and became one of the first viral videos on that site.[5] His concert engagements, collaborations with well-known musicians, media appearances, and music production have snowballed since then. In 2012, an award-winning documentary was released tracking his life, career, and music, titled Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings; it has screened in a variety of festivals, aired repeatedly on PBS, and been released on DVD.

Career

Early training and career as a band member

In concert 2010

Shimabukuro was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, a fifth-generation descendant of Japanese and Okinawans who immigrated to Hawaii.[6] His mother gave him a ukulele at age four and he quickly took an interest in the instrument, playing it many hours a day. His mother, an accomplished ukulele player and singer, was his first teacher, and he also took lessons for seven years under Tami Akiyami at Roy Sakuma Studios.[7]

Shimabukuro initially gained attention in Hawaii in 1998 as a member of Pure Heart, a trio with Lopaka Colón (percussion) and Jon Yamasato (guitar/vocals).

Honolulu Magazine.[9]

The following year, they released Pure Heart 2, which earned them another Hoku award for Island Contemporary Album of the Year. Yamasato left the group, and Shimabukuro and Colón formed another group, Colón, named in honor of Colón's father, famed percussionist

Augie Colón
. The new guitarist/vocalist to replace Yamasato was Guy Cruz, and Andrew McLellan joined on bass. The new group Colón released one album, The Groove Machine (2000), and won the Hoku Award for Favorite Entertainer of the Year in 2001.

Solo career

Signing with Sony Japan

Shimabukuro decided to pursue a solo career as Colón disbanded in early 2002.

Sony Music Japan International. Shimabukuro toured extensively in Japan – a practice he still continues – and from the start his albums received extensive airplay on various Japanese radio stations.[11] He has also released numerous Japan-only CDs: Skyline (2002), Haruyo Koi (2007), Yeah (2008), Ichigo Ichie (2008), Annon (2009), The Music of Sideways (2009), Across the Universe (2009), Aloha To You (2011), Ukulele X: 10th Anniversary Collection (2011), Ukulele Disney (2012). In 2008, a 120-page biographical photo-book on Shimabukuro was published in Japan.[12]

Sony Japan, however, only releases Shimabukuro's music in Japan, and to release the music in Hawaii, he created the Hitchhike Records label.[13] Between 2002 and 2005, Shimabukuro released four U.S. albums as a solo performer: Sunday Morning (2002), Crosscurrent (2003), Walking Down Rainhill (2004), and Dragon (2005). All of them except Dragon won both Na Hoku Awards and Hawaii Music Awards, and Dragon won the Hawaii Music Award for Best Rock Album and peaked at #5 on Billboard's Top World Music Albums in 2005.[14] As a solo artist, Shimabukuro experimented with using effect pedals to make new sounds that few would associate with an ukulele.

In 2005, he secured a nationwide U.S. distribution deal for his Hitchhike Records label, which had previously been confined to the Hawaii market.[15] In 2005 he also did his first nationwide mainland U.S. concert tour, and released a DVD of instructional segments, concert footage, and interviews called Play Loud Ukulele.

Breakout success

Performing at Stockholm Jazz Festival 2009

In April 2006, Shimabukuro came to national and international attention when, unbeknownst to him, someone posted a virtuosic video of him playing

Live in Anguilla. Shimabukuro also began receiving many invitations to perform on major U.S. talk shows
and other well-known media ventures, and began touring worldwide eight or nine months a year.

Shimabukuro released his fifth U.S. album,

spa resort
as its primary theme and setting.

In 2009, Shimabukuro released his concert CD,

Queen Elizabeth
and shook her hand.

2011 to present

Peace Love Ukulele, Shimabukuro's 2011 CD, reached #1 in Billboard's Top World Music Albums in 2011 and 2012.[20] It won the 2012 Na Hoku Hanohano Award for Instrumental Album of the Year, and also garnered Shimabukuro the Na Hoku Hanohano award for Favorite Entertainer of the Year.[21] Shimabukuro created an original piece "Ukulele Five-O" as part of the soundtrack for the new Hawaii Five-0 television series.[22] He capped off 2011 with several live performances on the New Year's Eve episode of A Prairie Home Companion, broadcast live from Hawaii.

Shimabukuro's 2012 album, Grand Ukulele, was produced by music producer/engineer Alan Parsons, at Parsons' request. It features a 29-piece orchestra and a rhythm section, with the ukulele soloing, and was recorded live with no over-dubbing.[3] The album has reached #2 in Billboard's Top World Music Albums.[23]

In 2012, a one-hour documentary film about Shimabukuro's life and career was released, titled Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings. The film won the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the Ashland Independent Film Festival,[24] the Audience Award for Best Documentary Film and the Best Editor award at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival,[25] the Honorable Mention for Best Documentary Feature at the Urbanworld Film Festival,[26] and the Best Medium Length/Essay Award at the DocuWest International Documentary Film Festival.[27] The film aired nationally on PBS in May 2013. It was released on DVD July 2013.[28]

On February 14, 2020, Shimabukuro released his album Trio through Music Theories Recordings, which landed at No. 1 on Billboard's Contemporary Jazz Albums chart.[29] That same year Shimabukuro announced his latest studio project, Jake & Friends, but its release was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[30] On September 9, 2021, he released the first two songs from the album: "Two High" with Moon Taxi, and "Stardust" with Willie Nelson. The full album was released on November 12, 2021, and also features collaborations with Bette Midler, Warren Haynes, and more.[31]

On June 23, 2021, Shimabukuro was nominated by president

National Council on the Arts.[32]

Jake Shimabukuro at the Blue Mountains Music Festival (Katoomba, NSW, Australia) March 2008

Media appearances

Shimabukuro has appeared and performed in a number of media outlets, including

The Today Show (2013), Musicians@Google, and several TED conferences including TED2010, TEDxSanDiego,[33] TEDxTokyo,[34] TEDxHongKong, and TEDxHonolulu. He has been featured on A Prairie Home Companion, NPR’s Morning Edition and World Cafe, Public Radio International’s The World, Whad'Ya Know?, PRX's Echoes, and The Bob Edwards Show on XM Satellite Radio
.

Shimabukuro was featured on the January 15, 2012, episode of CNN's The Next List.[35] In March 2012 the documentary by Tadashi Nakamura on his life and career was released, Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings, and it subsequently aired repeatedly on PBS.

Instruments

Shimabukuro plays a custom-made 4 string tenor ukulele from Kamaka Ukulele. Early in his career he experimented with the use of effect pedals, but since around 2011, has relied on the natural sounds of the ukulele and avoided sound manipulation.[36] For his Grand Ukulele Tour, he has added the use of a couple of effects pedals to his show. One of them is used to take a sound sample that he loops and accompanies.

Charity

Shimabukuro was for many years the key spokesperson and then also director of the Music Is Good Medicine non-profit organization. It used community outreach programs and performance visits to schools, senior centers, and hospitals to promote healing and encourage a healthy lifestyle and a connection to music.

Sendai, Japan, in order to bring peace and respite to the distraught and newly homeless residents' lives.[38]

Following the dissolution of the Music Is Good Medicine program, Shimabukuro founded his own non-profit organization, the Four Strings Foundation, in 2013.[39] It creates music education workshops nationwide and provides ukuleles, materials, and training tools to schools and music teachers. It also hosts concerts and publishes music media, lobbies to increase music education, encourages schools to make music programs culturally relevant, conducts research in music education and children's social/emotional learning, and provides funding for music education in schools nationwide.[40]

Shimabukuro stated: "The Four Strings Foundation was created as a vehicle to give people opportunities to make a difference. My primary focus is to inspire kids through music to help them discover their passion in life. The message is simple – strive to be the best, live drug-free and have fun."[40] The mission statement of Four Strings is: "To create new opportunities for people of all ages to participate in the act of making music and to use those experiences as a vehicle to promote personal empowerment and fulfillment."[41][42]

Personal life

Shimabukuro married

OB/GYN
physician Kelly Yamasato in May 2011. They have a son, Chase, born in August 2012.

Jake's brother, Bruce Shimabukuro, is also a well known ukulele player in his own right; he teaches ukulele and has released albums of his own. Bruce accompanies his brother on guitar on a track on My Life, and composed one of the tracks, "Ukulele Bros.," on Peace Love Ukulele.[43]

Shimabukuro's career-long manager was Kazusa Flanagan, a native of Japan who moved to Hawaii in 1992.[citation needed]

Awards

Na Hoku Hanohano Awards

Pure Heart member
  • 1999 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Pure Heart – Best Album of the Year
  • 1999 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Pure Heart – Island Contemporary Album of the Year
  • 1999 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Most Promising Artist (Pure Heart)
  • 1999 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Favorite Entertainer of the Year (Pure Heart)
  • 2000 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Pure Heart 2 – Contemporary Album of the Year
Colón member
  • 2001 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Favorite Entertainer of the Year (Colón)
Solo artist
  • 2003 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Sunday Morning – Instrumental Album of the Year
  • 2003 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Favorite Entertainer of the Year
  • 2004 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Crosscurrent – Instrumental Album of the Year
  • 2005 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Walking Down Rainhill – Instrumental Album of the Year
  • 2006 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Favorite Entertainer of the Year
  • 2007 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Gently Weeps – Instrumental Album of the Year
  • 2010 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Live – Instrumental Album of the Year
  • 2010 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Favorite Entertainer of the Year
  • 2012 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Peace Love Ukulele – Instrumental Album of the Year
  • 2012 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards: Favorite Entertainer of the Year

Hawaii Music Awards

Pure Heart
  • 1999 Hawaii Music Awards: New Artist of the Year (Pure Heart)
  • 1999 Hawaii Music Awards: "Koke'e" – Best Music Video (Pure Heart) (4 winners)
  • 2000 Hawaii Music Awards: Pure Heart 2.5 – Best Seasonal Album (Pure Heart)
Solo artist
  • 2002 Hawaii Music Awards: Mahalo Award, Studio Musician of the Year
  • 2002 Hawaii Music Awards: "Ehime Maru" – Best Single Recording
  • 2003 Hawaii Music Awards: Sunday Morning – Instrumental Hawaiian Album of the Year
  • 2004 Hawaii Music Awards: Entertainer of the Year
  • 2004 Hawaii Music Awards: Crosscurrent – Album of the Year
  • 2004 Hawaii Music Awards: Crosscurrent – Instrumental Hawaiian Album of the Year
  • 2005 Hawaii Music Awards: Walking Down Rainhill – Best Ukulele Album
  • 2005 Hawaii Music Awards: Play Loud Ukulele – DVD of the Year, 2nd Place
  • 2006 Hawaii Music Awards: Dragon – Best Rock Album
  • 2008 Hawaii Music Awards: My Life – Best Ukulele Album
  • 2008 Hawaii Music Awards: Hula Girls – Best Film Score
  • 2010 Hawaii Music Awards: Live – Best Ukulele Album

CDs

with Pure Heart
  • Pure Heart (1999)
  • Pure Heart 2 (1999)
  • Pure Heart 2.5 (1999) (Christmas album)
with Colón
  • The Groove Machine (2000)
Solo career
Japan-only releases
  • Skyline (2002)
  • Haruyo Koi (2007)
  • Yeah (2008)
  • Ichigo Ichie (2008)
  • Annon (2009)
  • The Music of Sideways (2009) (film soundtrack to Sideways, the 2009 Japanese remake of the same name, composed by Shimabukuro)[4]
  • Across the Universe (2009)
  • Aloha To You (2011)
  • Ukulele X: 10th Anniversary Collection (2011)
  • Ukulele Disney (2012)

DVDs

  • Play Loud Ukulele (2005) (instructional, concerts, interviews)
  • Million Miles Away (2005) (concert performance)
  • Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings (2012) (documentary film featuring Shimabukuro)

Books

  • Shimabukuro, Jake. Peace Love Ukulele. Hal Leonard Corporation, 2012. (songbook transcriptions with ukulele tablature)
  • Shimabukuro, Jake. The Name of the Wind: Portrait of Jake Shimabukuro. (Japanese biographical photobook)

Notes

  1. ^ Local usage generally reserves Hawaiian as an ethnonym referring to Native Hawaiians. Hawaii resident or from Hawaii is the preferred local form to refer to state residents in general regardless of ethnicity. Hawaii may also be used adjectivally. The AP Stylebook also prescribes this usage.[1]

References

  1. – via Intenet Archive.
  2. ^ "Jake Shimabukuro". musicplayer.com. September 2005. Archived from the original on 2012-02-14.
  3. ^ a b "The Official Website For Jake Shimabukuro!". JakeShimabukuro.com. 2016-08-01. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  4. ^ a b Dennis, Zach (2015-11-11). "5 Things To Know About 'Ukulele Virtuoso' Jake Shimabukuro". Playbuzz. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  5. ^ cromulantman (2006-04-22), Ukulele weeps by Jake Shimabukuro, retrieved 2017-02-14
  6. ^ "Ukulele Virtuoso Jake Shimabukuro Gives Lecture at the University of Tokyo". Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education. November 1, 2022.
  7. .
  8. ^ "Shimabukuro reunites with former bands - Honolulu PulseHonolulu Pulse". Honolulu Pulse. 2014-12-06. Archived from the original on 2017-02-15. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  9. PBS Hawaii (transcript). Video of episode Archived 2013-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
    .
  10. ^ Berger, John. "From an upcoming ukulele symposium to a solo CD project, Jake Shimabukuro's career is on a High Strum". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. March 19, 2002.
  11. ^ Sunday Morning on JakeShimabukuro.com (Internet Archive, September 2, 2004).
  12. ^ Shimabukuro, Jake. The Name of the Wind: Portrait of Jake Shimabukuro. Kodansha, 2008.
  13. ^ Reinartz, Joe. "Jake Shimabukuro's Two Octave, Four String Adventure". Pollstar. October 25, 2010.
  14. ^ Dragon – Awards on AllMusic.
  15. ^ Lewis, Vince. "Jake Shimabukuro: Ukulele Virtuoso". VinceLewis.net. August 4, 2007.
  16. ^ Jake Shimabukuro playing "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" on YouTube.
  17. ^ Gently Weeps – Awards at AllMusic.
  18. ^ Live – Awards at AllMusic.
  19. ^ "Na Hoku Hanohano :: 2010". Mele.com. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  20. ^ Jake Shimabukuro – Awards at AllMusic.
  21. ^ "Na Hoku Hanohano :: 2012". Mele.com. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  22. ^ Hawaii Five-O: Original Songs From the Television Series, CBS Records (2011) EAN: 0094922484567.
  23. ^ Jake Shimabukuro: World Albums – Chart History at Billboard.com.
  24. Internet Movie Database
    .
  25. ^ "Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival » FESTIVAL AWARDEES RECOGNIZED". Archived from the original on 2013-09-02. Retrieved 2013-05-26.
  26. ^ "Urbanworld 2012 Announces Award Winners". IndieWire. September 23, 2012.
  27. ^ "The Best Medium Length/Essay Award goes to the film Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings". DocuWest Film Fest, official Facebook page. September 18, 2012.
  28. ^ Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings DVD on Amazon.
  29. ^ "Jake Shimabukuro Earns First #1 Contemporary Jazz Album on Billboard Charts". Jensen Communications. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  30. ^ Jae Leiber, Sarah. "Jake Shimabukuro Releases New Album 'Trio'". Broadway World. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  31. ^ Moore, Bobby (20 September 2021). "WIllie Nelson Revisits 'Stardust' With Ukulele Great Jake Shimabukuro". Wide Open Country. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  32. ^ "Biden Nominees for Arts Council Include Ukulele Legend Jake Shimabukuro, Apollo Theater's Kamilah Forbes & Indie Record Label President". 24 June 2021.
  33. ^ "TEDxSanDiego | TED.com". www.ted.com. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
  34. ^ "» Jake Shimabukuro". archive.tedxtokyo.com. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
  35. ^ Belsky, Joshua. "Sneak Peek: Peace, Love and Ukulele with Jake Shimabukuro". CNN.
  36. ^ "Jake Shimabukuro Interview". J-Pop World. March 2011.
  37. ^ "Ukulele Virtuoso Proves that Music is Good Medicine". From the Top. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  38. ^ "A benefit concert for those affected by the 2011 Japan Earthquake, featuring Jake Shimabukuro". Honolulu Festival. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  39. ^ "Jake Shimabukuro Reaches Children Through New Foundation – Ukulele". www.ukulelemag.com. 24 February 2015. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  40. ^ a b "Jake Shimabukuro launches non-profit for music education". Guitar Player. April 25, 2013.
  41. ^ Four Strings Foundation – Official site.
  42. ^ "Jake Shimabukuro: The Ukulele Man". The Outsider Argentina. April 10, 2013.
  43. ^ Bruce Shimabukuro – Credits at AllMusic.

External links

Videos
Interviews
Profiles