Ukuleles united: Every Wednesday, members of the Dogtown Ukulele Band gather for food, fellowship and fun

Ladies and gentlemen, the Dogtown Ukulele Band! Michael Rodman (from left), Jason Plaxco, Rick Lee, Joe Roitz, Hannah Moore, Mitch Vire and Deb Moore. Photo by Cary Jenkins, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Ladies and gentlemen, the Dogtown Ukulele Band! Michael Rodman (from left), Jason Plaxco, Rick Lee, Joe Roitz, Hannah Moore, Mitch Vire and Deb Moore. Photo by Cary Jenkins, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The band members are talking and joking with one another as they tune their instruments. A few beers are swigged amid the easygoing cacophony and, because these are musicians and because musicians seem to always be on the lookout for gear, there's mention of a deal found online for a used conga drum.

Soon, the tuning turns to grooving and the next thing you know a song — "Feeling Alright" by Joe Cocker — emerges from the swirl. As the evening progresses, the group will run through versions of songs by the Rolling Stones, Them, The Pretenders, The Faces, The Band and others.

Have we mentioned that the union of players cranking out these FM rock radio nuggets is made up of a bunch of ukuleleists?

They are The Dogtown Ukulele Band, a seven-piece unit that kicks out the jams on little four-string instruments more commonly acquainted with Hawaiian music and "Tiptoe Through the Tulips."

The group has gathered, as it does most every Wednesday, at the home of Deb Moore and her husband, Joe Roitz, in North Little Rock's Lakewood area. After a supper of tacos, cheese dip and salsa, they've eased downstairs to start rehearsing songs from the set they have planned for Friday's free gig at 5 p.m. at the Butler Center Galleries, 401 President Clinton Ave., Little Rock.

DOGTOWN VIBES

Mitch Vire picks a tune on his ukulele while playing with the Dog Town Ukulele Band. Photo by Cary Jenkins with the Democrat-Gazette
Mitch Vire picks a tune on his ukulele while playing with the Dog Town Ukulele Band. Photo by Cary Jenkins with the Democrat-Gazette

The rehearsal space is large and accommodating. Christmas lights are strung from the ceiling, a spare drum kit sits off to the side along with electric guitars, a keyboard, a mixing board and other sound equipment. Several ukuleles hang on a rack, and CDs and albums line a few shelves. Framed fliers from the group's gigs, crisply designed by Moore and featuring vintage black-and-white photos that bring to mind the art for early Smiths singles and records, hang on the wall.

Moore, 56, sits in a chair plucking a small electric bass ukulele, holding down the bottom end for the rest of the band, which includes her daughter, Hannah Moore, 32; Roitz, 57; Mitch Vire, 54; Michael Rodman, 46; Rick Lee, 48 and Jason Plaxco, 43.

Hannah Moore and Roitz take turns behind the drum kit, while the other DUB members play ukuleles. Roitz and Vire handle the ukulele leads, with Roitz bent over his four string, electric tenor guitar and Vire picking on an amplified ukulele.

Each member, save for Roitz and Deb Moore, takes a turn on lead vocals. Rodman also handles maracas and beats on a conga drum when called upon, like during the Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil."

Deb Moore started playing guitar as a teenager and was introduced to the ukulele in her mid-20s by her stepfather. The roots of the Dogtown group can be traced back to her time at a low-residency graduate school at Queens University of Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., where she studied creative nonfiction.

"You would go there four times a year to meet and do classwork," she says over tacos before rehearsal begins. "I took my ukulele and I Johnny Appleseeded it to all the people in the school. Every time I went, we'd get together and have a big ukulele jam."

She wanted the same thing back home, so she and Roitz, who were living in west Little Rock, tried to get something off the ground. Nothing stuck until they moved across the river about three years ago.

"There's just a different vibe in North Little Rock," she says.

She posted signs at Lakewood United Methodist Church, where Roitz is communications director, and the response was immediate. About 25 people showed up to play.

Lee's girlfriend and Plaxco's wife were among the curious, but dropped out. Plaxco and Lee stuck around.

Plaxco, a quality assurance manager who lives in Sherwood, was a complete novice. "I'd never touched an instrument at all, really. I started to play when the group started."

The same was true for Lee of Little Rock.

"I was just there because of my girlfriend," he says.

Rodman, a North Little Rock handyman and artist, was also a ukulele newbie. Along with a regular ukulele, he plays a banjolele, which looks like what happens when a banjo and a ukulele have a baby

4-STRING GATEWAY

The nonintimidating nature of the little ukulele and its four nylon strings make it an ideal gateway instrument for beginners, says Deb Moore, a retired college professor who works as a programmer for the Central Arkansas Library System teaching classes in Adobe software and writing.

"It's really easy to play all different kinds of music on a ukulele that might be more difficult to play on a guitar. It's a cool instrument, and it's a friendly instrument. No unhappy person plays ukulele."

Steve Evans, owner of Jacksonville Guitar Center, started a nine-piece ukulele group at First Presbyterian Church in Jacksonville last year.

"About half of the people in the band had never played anything before," he says. "We just play little three-chord songs and pick the easy chords. We've played seven or eight times in front of the church and the beginners are picking it up really fast."

Ukuleles come in four sizes — soprano, concert, tenor and baritone — and besides being easy to play, they're also inexpensive. A good starter model can be had for less than $30.

Soooo ... they're easy to learn and pretty pain-free from a financial standpoint — it's no wonder Evans has seen ukulele sales pick up.

"It's crazy," he says. "We've been in business 44 years, and 20 years ago we didn't have a ukulele in the store. Now we have 60, and at Christmastime we'll have 70."

Pop culture has also contributed to the ukulele rise.

You know how the story goes that everybody ran out and bought guitars and started bands after The Beatles debuted on The Ed Sullivan Show on Feb. 9, 1964? The ukulele equivalent, Evans says, is the June 7, 2016, appearance by 12-year-old Grace VanderWaal on the 11th season of America's Got Talent.

VanderWaal sang one of her own compositions, "I Don't Know My Name," while accompanying herself on ukulele. A clip of the performance has been viewed more than 97 million times on YouTube.

"It was so fantastic," Evans says. "It made everybody want one, but especially girls. Every 12-year-old girl has a ukulele now."

UKULELE DAY

The band will perform a free show at 5 p.m. Friday, during Second Friday Art Night at the Butler Center Galleries in downtown Little Rock. Photo by Cary Jenkins, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
The band will perform a free show at 5 p.m. Friday, during Second Friday Art Night at the Butler Center Galleries in downtown Little Rock. Photo by Cary Jenkins, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Back at rehearsals in Lakewood, Hannah Moore says that her Wednesdays have been pretty much overrun by the ukulele.

She's an art teacher at Benton Middle School, where she and the band instructor started a ukulele club for students. The club meets each Wednesday afternoon.

"The kids love it," she says, not long before channeling singer Chrissie Hynde on a cover of The Pretenders' "Don't Get Me Wrong." "It's kind of a relaxing, after-school club. A lot of them learn on their own. We'll have our normal thing that we play, like we'll learn 'Lean on Me,' and then one of the kids will have something to share and they will blow your socks off."

And then, of course, Hannah Moore jams with her mom and the other grown-ups in the evening.

"Wednesday is definitely ukulele day," she says.

That large group Deb Moore and Roitz first attracted with their sign at the church has slimmed down into this, a seven-piece band cranking out what its business cards call "4-string classic rock."

Yes, there are plenty of rock 'n' roll chestnuts played during rehearsal, but there are also some surprises among the repertoire.

The bearded Vire, a computer programmer and ukulele lifer who has been playing since he was a kid, sings "I'm Alive," the closing theme song to the anime series Black Butler. He lays down a Spanish-flavored intro to Gloria Gaynor's disco anthem "I Will Survive" with Hannah Moore on vocals and Rodman shaking maracas like they owe him money. The group also does a take on The Squirrel Nut Zippers' mid '90s swing hit "Hell" with Lee singing lead, reading glasses down low on his nose.

They've been working on the furious "Killing in the Name" by Rage Against the Machine, but they don't bring it out tonight.

The vibe around the DUB Wednesday night jam is garage-band casual, with a ragged-but-right approach to cover versions and an emphasis on good times over perfection. This is a group of friends who enjoys each other's company.

"You shouldn't be allowed to have this much fun," Lee says.

A few days after rehearsal, Deb Moore talks about the band's chemistry and the draw of their common instrument.

"It was just happenstance. We were total strangers when we started playing together. It's fun meeting every week and working toward a bigger thing that we enjoy, and we're all nice people, too."

Style on 04/09/2019

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