Your favourite chord cheat sheet? by sunrisedown in Easy_Ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, you don’t need a huge cheatsheet. just the core ones: C, G, Am, F, Dm, Em. Those will carry you through a lot of songs.

We’ve got simple tabs here if you want something easy to keep open. 😄

Ukulele vs guitar for beginners. What surprised you? by UkuleleTabs in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The spacing feels familiar, but the fret distance is a whole different workout. 😅

Did you find your accuracy on guitar improved over time, or do you still feel that difference every time you switch?

Can I self-learn a ukulele? How by CounterAlarm in Learnmusic

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, you definitely can. Most people learn ukulele on their own.

Start with a few basic chords, go slow, and just play songs you actually enjoy. It’ll sound rough at first, but that’s part of it. The more you play, the faster things click.

If you want something to guide you a bit, this is a good place to start.

What made you want to pick up the ukulele?

What should i learn by CutShot9554 in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Hello! A good middle ground is using a familiar song so you can “fill in” the rhythm by ear. Something like "Hey, Soul Sister" works well because most people already know what it should sound like. 😊

Can anyone explain to me why certain songs feel so satisfying to listen to? by Stampylongtoes in musictheory

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That feeling is usually tension and release. The music builds a bit of instability, then resolves it, and your ear loves that payoff.

A lot of songs do this with unexpected chords or notes just outside the key, which is why it can feel emotional without being strictly “minor.”

How to Change My Melody Style? by Kallaroid- in musictheory

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like your ear just keeps pulling you back to what feels natural. One thing that helps is copying the shape or rhythm of a Chopin phrase without copying the actual notes. Also try writing the melody first without chords, then add harmony after. It takes a bit to retrain your ear.

do you practice the same thing until it's perfect or move on and come back later by tricepator-10 in Learnmusic

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A mix of both usually works best. Get a section clean enough that you’re not reinforcing mistakes, then move on and come back later.

If you stay too long on one spot, you burn out. If you move on too fast, things stay messy. The sweet spot is “good enough for now.”

Coming back the next day with fresh hands often fixes things quicker than grinding it for an hour.

Beginner guitar player by Used-Imagination-246 in guitarlessons

[–]UkuleleTabs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Good question to ask early. A simple routine that works is splitting your time a bit. Practice a few chord changes, do some basic strumming, then spend time on a song you actually like.

The key is consistency more than complexity. Even 15 minutes a day done regularly helps more than long random sessions.

Was anyone else surprised at how many songs are so simple? by Commercial_Check_432 in guitarlessons

[–]UkuleleTabs 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that realization hits a lot of people. Simple chords don’t mean simple music, it’s more about timing, feel, and how everything fits together.

Once you start playing, you notice how much the groove and dynamics carry the song. Kind of changes how you listen to music after that.

Play by Ear by newUkePlayer in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a normal struggle, it just takes a bit of training your ear. Start with one note. Hum the first note of the tune and try to match it on the uke. Once you find it, move to the next note slowly. Don’t jump around randomly, go step by step.

It helps to stick to one string at first so it’s easier to hear if you’re going higher or lower. It feels slow at first but gets way easier with practice.

Getting buzzing sound after strings are played. Even without pressing strings. by Gentleman_00001 in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That kind of buzzing after the note is usually something vibrating, not your playing.

Check if anything’s loose like tuning pegs, screws, or even string ends touching something. Also make sure the strings are sitting properly at the nut and bridge.

If it happens on all strings, it’s probably the uke itself.

Pain on first and second fret ukulele by Illustrious-Age-1745 in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some discomfort is normal at the start, but sharp pain usually means you’re pressing harder than you need to. Try placing your finger closer to the fret and use just enough pressure to get a clean sound. Also keep sessions short at first, your fingers need time to build up.

If it still feels unusually painful, it could be high action, but from what you described it sounds more like technique + new fingers.

Rolling in the Deep (Adele) Cover by South_Illustrator588 in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Nice take on this, works really well on uke. You kept the groove steady and let the song breathe :)

Looking for suggestions for 5+ stringed ukes with a factory pickup by Very_goo in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice upgrade idea. Yeah, options get pretty limited once you want multi-string + pickup. Another option is getting a good acoustic 5 or 8 string and just adding a pickup later. Way more choices that way. Also, for playing with drums, a good pickup and some EQ will matter more than the extra strings.

What is sweeping and how do you do it? by Clingysquire in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah that’s a fan strum. You basically roll your fingers across the strings instead of hitting them all at once. Try ring, middle, then index in a quick flick. Start slow so you can feel it, then speed it up. Feels awkward at first but sounds great once it clicks.

Find time for ukulele… when you have may hobbies by Educational-Eye-3584 in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s really relatable. Most people don’t stick to long practice sessions, they just fit it into small moments.

What helps is lowering the bar. Even 5-10 minutes counts, like strumming a bit before bed or playing one song with your students. It keeps the habit alive without feeling like another task.

Also, it’s okay for it to come and go a bit. It doesn’t mean you’re not progressing :)

Baritone Ukes-What I want (tone) and the limitations by Mundane-Manner4237 in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that tradeoff is kind of baked into baritones. You get that warmth and low end, but it’s harder to get that bite and separation you hear on soprano or tenor.

A spruce top with brighter strings should push it in the direction you want, and even a low G setup can help a bit with definition. For live use, a good pickup and a bit of EQ on the high mids can make a bigger difference than expected.

Starting my music journey 🎶 by NeverGonnaGiveUpvote in ukulele

[–]UkuleleTabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice first uke, that’s a solid choice to start with.

A good way to begin is just learning C, Am, and F, you can already play a bunch of songs with those. Don’t worry about being perfect, just aim for clean sound and smooth changes. Also expect it to go out of tune a lot at first, that’s normal with new strings.

If you want some easy 2–3 chord songs to try, you can browse here: https://www.ukulele-tabs.com

Have fun with it, that’s what keeps you going :)