International Arts Festival Review: The Ukulele Orchestra of Great BritainReview by Alison Little
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain
Wellington Town Hall
29 February - 2 March (Regional preformances 4 - 6 March)
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain manage to trip their way through pretty well every genre and style of music in
the last few hundred years - despite lacking the common orchestral accoutrements of orchestral instruments and
significant quantities of musicians.
They make do with just seven musicians who variously sing, whistle and pluck with veritable virtuosity on seven
variations on the theme of ukulele. Somehow the unpretentious four stringed uke, too often relegated to novelty or
side-note instrument, is made by these skilled hands to sound like harps, guitars, violins, cellos, harpsichords,
mandolins, banjos, and more.
They dress like conventional orchestral musicians, with the men in tuxedoes, the women in evening dress. But they seem
to be having a lot of fun hamming up the conventions, gently mocking the pretensions of both highbrow and popular music.
The group was founded in 1985, and since then has performed in august venues such as the Royal Festival Hall and the
Glastonbury Festival in the UK. They have also played in music and arts festivals around the world, including in Canada,
Sweden, Belgium, Finland, Ireland and Japan, although this is their first time in New Zealand.
Most of the members have been with the Orchestra for more than twenty years, one who were are told has only been onboard
for 17 ½ years, is referred to jokingly during the show as the "new boy". All are exceedingly competent pluckers and
strummers; the group includes some fine singers and even a whistler. All take turns to lead the group, as well as
contributing to the amazing collective sound.
The Orchestra weaves a gently comic way through music that includes everything from Hayden to Nirvana, folk music, the
Sex Pistols, and popular film themes such as Shaft and The Good the Bad and the Ugly. Sometimes they sample music from
several entirely different genres at once, what should be a cacophony is instead . . . something entirely other.
This show is one that you can safely take both your nan and your grumpy teenager to; both are likely to find it utterly
charming.
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The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain on the Arts Festival website (includes video sample)
Clips of their music are available from http://www.ukuleleorchestra.com
TV3 Video - Ukulele's not just a toy for little people
Scoop full coverage: Wellington International Arts Festival 2008