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Ukulele gains popularity in schools

Even parents are trying their hand at the Hawaiian instrument.

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Many parents dread the day their child brings home a recorder from school - it signals the start of a period when peace at home will broken by high-pitched whistles, as the young novice tries to master the instrument.

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But thanks to the growing popularity of the ukulele in Hong Kong schools, an increasing number of parents are finding that they can sit back and listen to the strains of an instrument associated with the palm-fringed beaches of Hawaii instead.

The ukulele is arguably Hong Kong's fastest growing choice of musical instrument, and schoolchildren, parents, and even grandparents are signing up for lessons.

The instrument, a member of the guitar family which was created in Hawaii as an adaptation of the Portuguese machete, was relatively unheard of here six years ago, says Sam Cheung Ka-sing, of the Hong Kong Ukulele Association.

Many thought of it as a novelty instrument, or mistook it for a toy guitar with four strings.

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"When we first started to promote the ukulele in Hong Kong, people thought it was a little guitar, or even a violin," says Cheung, who founded the association in 2009, and also runs a ukulele shop and school in Tsim Sha Tsui.

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