His sights were set on winning the
fifth-grade talent contest. The ukulele, he decided, should be electrified.
I discovered that if I took a tape
recorder and pushed Play and Record at the same time, it amplified the
sound, he remembers.
The judges, as you can imagine, could
not resist the brown-eyed boy who stood on stage playing Oh Susanna on his
hand-made electric ukulele with a glued-on microphone and a tape recorder
hanging from his beltsimultaneously playing the harmonica.
Of course there were several hard-rockin
electric guitars he built in seventh grade, sometimes using Erecter set
pieces.
Still longing for the perfect sound, the
ten-year-old
made many visits to the local Radio Shack until he had rigged an FM
transmitter module to his guitar.
I could stand a block away, and anybody
who tuned into that channel could hear me through their radio, he said, his
voice still registering a ripple of excitement about that discovery. 
Lee's music
is available on this site as well as through efolk music, Mel Bay, and many independent
distributors.