It is the string set up of the Rajao on the body of the Braghina.
The ukulele was created on Hawaii based on Portuguese instruments brought there in 1879. It was a year or two later that the instrument known as the ukulele was created and offered for sale.
The accordion does not have strings. The banjo has a tight skin that vibrates with the strings. The ukulele uses the thin wood for the vibration.
It would depend entirely on the composition. The biggest danger is that the trumpet is going to overwhelm the clarinet and both of them are going to over power the ukulele. You would have to amplify the ukulele, but they are all musical instruments and they can be blended. It won't be easy, but it can be done.
Nothing, they are the same thing. The original ukulele was what is now referred to as the soprano. The larger concert size was made to get a bit more sound for a bigger audience. And then the tenor size, bigger, deeper sound.
The two vocals are used, drums are used, and the piano is used.
No the two are very different instrument's, banjo's are typically 4 or 5 strings and have a much longer fret board. The ukulele is smaller with a guitar type all wood construction. The banjo has a wooden rim with a velum or synthetic material stretched over it. Ukulele strings are usually nylon whereas banjo string is normally wire. Both instruments sound very different, the ukulele has a softer mellow tone often associated with Hawaiian island sounds. The banjo has a slightly harsher plucky tone especially bluegrass resonator banjo's. The hybrid instrument of the two is the banjolele, an instrument that takes aspects of both the banjo and the ukulele.
saxaphone and fiddle
Djembe, Ibo Drum, and Kalimba were the original instruments that were used to in the performance of the Blue's music. The Africans used two spoons which they used to clap.
There are two version available on Chordie. When you go to the bag, you can select chords for the ukulele in C or D tuning on the right side of the page.
That is entirely up to you. The ukulele is very easy to learn. The fiddle is probably the most difficult and the banjo in between the two.
heterophony
The lute and the volce.