Ukulele Guitar Review

Ukulele Guitar Review

It's always a happy ukulele time here when I get to look at a new Noah Ukulele. This is the brand new Noah Tenor X Ukulele.

And when I say 'brand new' - I mean that this is only on the cusp of being launched and this is serial number 001!! Noah will be well known to my readers as the British business of Matt Cohen who has been having instruments made in his name by a luthier in Vietnam for ten years now. That 'ten years' is relevant because it's ten years since Matt moved back from living there and set up the Noah Ukulele brand. As such, to mark that milestone he has decided to make a ten year (X) anniversary model. What a nice story! It's been a fun ten years for me as a reviewer too going back to Matt's first forays and they've always done rather well. It's also been nice to see Matt take on board constructive criticism as they have got better and better the more I have seen them. Let's dive in.

GOT

The Tenor X is an attractive double bout tenor ukulele with a Florentine cutaway which, like all Noah ukuleles, is made from solid tone woods. In this case Matt has specified a solid spruce top and solid Indian rosewood back and sides. That's a real classic combination of woods for stringed instrument on both looks and tone grounds so I am delighted to see it here. The woods are not what I would call AAA grade but are neat enough, particularly the stripy back and sides which are particularly attractive and nicely bookmatched. Interestingly, the looks, decor and wood combination here comes from inspiration taken from a guitar that this luthier built for Matt a few years ago which he adores. He thought it would be nice to use those designs for this anniversary ukulele model. Nice.

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The bridge is made from the Vietnamese hardwood Gõ gõ mật and takes on a new style for Noah with a wavy, asymmetric bottom shape with an interesting notch cutaways. It's extremely smooth and tidy and I think looks great. It's a pin-bridge style and is fitted with a bone straight topped saddle. Spacing here is 42mm.

Decoration is subdued but effective with Indian Rosewood top and back bindings trimmed with paler wood purfling, a rosewood sound hole rosette and a Ziricote bottom bout 'comfort edge'. Those paler purfling strips create attractive 'box' edgings to the side faces and inside the cutaway and there is another pale inlay down the back joint. You also get a side sound port in the upper bout. As I always say with Noah these are hand made and not made by robots so you do see some hand tooling edges on the inlays where things are fitted in by eye. It's never bothered me, but they are there. If anything they remind me that this is made by a person. If you want pixel perfect purfling lines, go to a factory build but also remember that Noah ukuleles are always priced very keenly for hand made instruments. The body is then finished in a deep gloss which I can't find any fault with though does show off the purfling flaws more than satin would I suspect.

Inside is pretty tidy with notched linings and shaped braces. The top is vertically braced, and whilst there is no bridge plate I think the strength there is being afforded by the top braces that run from sound hole to tail.

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The neck is made from a dark maple and has been pleasingly left in satin so is super slick. There's a single joint in the heel which is fairly well hidden and the heel is capped with rosewood It tapers down to a pretty rounded profile that reminds me of Pono chunkiness, but I can ignore that as the nut width is lovely and broad at 39mm, 32mm G to A. Certainly roomy for guitar players fingers!

That is topped with more Gõ gõ mật for the board which is in superb condition, evenly dark and oily. It's fitted with 19 frets, joined at the 14th which have a vintage flat top dressed feel. The sides are edge bound and the fret ends are hand dressed to small points with no sharp edges. Position dots are inlaid at the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 10th, double 12th and 15th and these are paired with side dots. Like some of the purfling you can see these are cut and inlaid by eye as some edges are a little rough, but there you are.

Beyond the nut is an open slot headstock which I know Matt really likes. It's tidier than some other Noah headstocks I have seen and is faced in more Indian Rosewood and carries the Noah logo in a pearl inlay.

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Finishing things off are a tail strap button, a padded gig bag and, on this example a set of Fremont Blackline strings (though Matt advises that you get a no cost option of either Aquila or Fremont). And like other Noah instruments it's very reasonably priced at only £329 including UK shipping. Bear in mind this is hand made with a lot of craftsmanship involved. No, it's not flawless in all the decor, but come on.. £329... Cor.

Martin

So much to like here so far and I'm smitten with the looks. It's a hefty-ish ukulele at 785g but balances just fine and is very nice to hold both on the neck and on the arm on account of the comfort edge. Setup is good too.

Volume and sustain are both excellent with no complaints on me with either. It's a very punchy instrument that will suit all play circumstances.

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The tone has a brightness that I would expect from a spruce top, but balanced off by the rosewood back and sides giving it a broad range of mids and lots of character. Strummed it has a complex harmonic sound that is interesting and enjoyable with lots of jangle that shimmers with itself. It's not a bassy ukulele (a low G will give you more) though is still a rich sound which I am really liking.

Fingerpicking is zingy and crisp right up the neck and again comes with bags of character and is extremely comfortable to play that way on account of the fingerboard space. It really chimes on the higher notes and sounds extremely pretty to my ears. No matter how i've played this I just keep going back to that price as the tone here is punching WELL above the ticket price. It's a lovely balanced sound.

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Matt has long been on to a good thing with his choice of luthier and, as ever, I find the Noah ukes get better and better as he goes along. This is a fitting model to mark his ten year anniversary I think - agreat looking, characterful sounding ukulele for not a lot of money at all. Very highly recommended!

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GOT A UKULELE IS NOT PAID BY BRANDS OR SHOPS - YOUR KIND DONATIONS ARE WHAT KEEP THE SITE GOING! THANKS FOR YOUR HELP!

If you enjoy this blog, donations are welcomed to allow me to invest more time in bringing you ukulele articles. Aside from the Google ads, I don't get paid to write this blog and for reasons of impartiality a not sponsored by brands or stores. Your donations all go back into the site to allow me to keep bringing you reviews, and in the end the ukuleles acquired are given to local schools and charities.After completing new testing, we have new picks: Kala’s Satin Mahogany is our top pick, and Monoprice’s Idyllwild Sapele is our budget pick.

From kids in elementary-school music programs to residents of retirement homes, people everywhere continue to take up the ukulele in record numbers. The Kala Satin Mahogany is the best all-around choice for most beginners because it plays well, sounds pretty good, and comes in concert and soprano sizes to suit adults and kids alike.

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Got A Ukulele

This uke sounds good, plays easily, and comes in the just-right concert size that’s comfortable for kids and adults. But it doesn’t come with any accessories.

This soprano uke is a smaller version of the KA-C concert uke. It offers similarly good sound and quality in a more-portable size that’s better for small hands.

The Kala KA-C Satin Mahogany Concert Ukulele and the Kala KA-S Satin Mahogany Soprano Ukulele are ideal starter ukes for many reasons. They’re easy to play and built well, with no buzzing strings or rough-edged frets (at least on the samples we tried). They both have a full, reasonably loud sound. And unlike many ukuleles, which tend to go out of stock often these days, both of these Kala ukes seem to be in consistent supply at retailers.

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The KA-C concert model has a larger size and fretboard, so it’s better for adults and big kids, whereas the smaller, KA-S soprano uke is better for travel and tiny hands. (Check out the diagram below to learn the parts of a ukulele.)

Kmise

These ukes don’t

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