Junior Kalima, Henry Mucha, Honey Kalima, Albert Kalima, Julian Gaspar, Henry Mucha, Richard Kauhi, Little Joe Kekaoha, Johnny Waikiki
Jesse Kaleihia Andre Kalima (1920–1980) was an ukulele player.
He was born in Honolulu on October 31, 1920, at a time when the ukulele was just becoming recognized for its capability to be played as a solo instrument.
Early years
Kalima's mother, Amy Pakiko of Napoʻopoʻo, was a teacher a singer and musician and taught him to play the ʻukulele at the age of six. In 1926, Jesse's father died and his mother married Solomon Kalima. At age 9, Jesse would perform while his mother did the hula for territorial political rallies.[1]
Kalima attended Farrington High School and played in the orchestra and school band while a student. He loved the marches he learned and when he learned a march on the tenor saxophone and clarinet, he would figure out how to play it on the ukulele.[2] At age 15, Kalima burst into the public music scene, and is credited with accelerating the development of the solo ukulele, when he won the 1935 Territorial Amateur Contest at Honolulu's Princess Theater with his rendition of "Stars and Stripes Forever".[3]
Contributions
Kalima was the first person known to have strung his tenor with a low G, rather than the standard re-entrant tuning.[2] Kalima popularized the use of the tenor size ukulele and was one of the first to use an amplifier with his instrument.[4]
Jesse worked for the Shell Oil Company and in 1940 he married Dorothy Louise Routh Halouska. In addition to performing on a regular basis, he ran a small store where he sold ukuleles under his name and gave lessons.[5] Jesse Kalima died on July 13, 1980.