

So, who are you going to trust to build yours? A company that usually screws together weighty electrics and now markets cheap ukes as a side-line, or the luthiers at Cordoba? Ukulele construction is very, very similar to classical guitar construction.
BEST UKELELE HOW TO
The point being? Well, this is a company that knows about craftsmanship, it knows how to build lightly constructed instruments that resonate beautifully. Since then, it's been successfully luring steel string players – both acoustic and electric – to its superbly built nylon strung guitars.

It may appear to be an old company, steeped in heritage, but it was only founded in 1997. Not as much history as some other brands hereĬordoba's mission has always been to make nylon string acoustic guitars cool again. In a few years' time, when you're ready to hit the stage, the 20TM-CE will have your back. It's not a cheap buy, but it does include an undersaddle Piezo pickup, quality tonewoods and a reliable build. Like Kala, Cordoba is passionate about building nylon-stringed instruments that look and sound sublime. We also heartily recommend the Cordoba 20TM-CE Tenor Ukulele (opens in new tab). It's not the cheapest ukulele here, but it is stonking value for around the $/£100 mark, and it could easily serve you for years to come. That concert size is also going to be accessible to more players, especially those with larger hands. The mahogany construction is going to give you shedloads of tone, warmed up a little by the concert sizing, which is no bad thing. This wonderful concert ukulele scores on price, on build, on sound, on appearance – there's very little to dislike here. The team at Kala live and breathe ukes, it's their primary business not just a side-line. Best beginner ukuleles: Our top picksįor us, the best beginner ukulele is the Kala KA C RW Mahogany Concert (opens in new tab). It's never been more popular, and ther.'s never been a better time to pick one up and start learning. Today, you can find it appearing in almost every genre from jazz to dance to chart belters.
