In sheet music you will find notes placed in a staff with five lines. The placement of the notes in the staff determines which note it is. However, the sheet music notation does not tell you how to play the note on your instrument, in this case, your ukulele. You will have to learn this by yourself.
Tablature notation, on the other hand, tells you how to place your fingers to play a melody or something else. Ukulele tabs show which frets to press down and which strings to play. As soon as you understand the system you can use it to play melodies and chords on your uke.
You can find a few different types of tablature notation on the Internet. In this lesson you will learn a form of ukulele tabs with numbers telling you which fret and string to play.
I suppose that you have tuned your ukulele in C. This means that you first string, that is the bottom string when you play, is tuned to an A, the second string is an E, the third string a C and the fourth string a G.
In the ukulele tab notation we will use all frets you are to press down on your ukulele is shown by two numbers. The first number tells you which fret to press down, the second number what string to play. Here is an example:
12 01
The first number pair tells you to press down the first fret on the second string. The second pair means that you shall play the first string without pressing down a fret. This is called to play an open string.
It is time to take a closer look at the song we will use to learn tab notation. I will write down the lyrics, one line at a time, and the ukulele chords you can use in the key of C-major:
(C)I'm dreaming of a (Dm)white (G7)Christmas
The song starts on the note 02 which is the note E if you want to sing the song. Here are the chords that I have written in brackets before the syllable where you are to play them:
C: 04 03 02 31
Dm: 24 23 12 01
G7: 04 23 12 21
Here are the next line:
(F)Just like the (Dm)ones I (G7)used to (C)know
The chord F-major can be played as follows:
F: 24 03 12 01
Where the (C)treetops (C7)glisten and (F)children (Fm)listen
The uke chords C7 and F-minor are played like this:
C7: 04 03 02 11
Fm: 14 03 12 31
The chord Fm is a little bit tricky to play. Use your left hand index for string four, your middle finger for string two and your pinkie for the first string.
Here comes the last line of verse one:
To (C)hear (Am)sleigh bells in the (Fm)snow (G7)
The second verse starts with the same melody and the same chords:
(C)I'm dreaming of a (Dm)white (G7)Christmas
(F)With every (Dm)Christmas (G7)card I (C)write
Now comes a different melody and new ukulele chords:
May your (C)days be (C7)merry and (F)bright (Fm)
And may (C)all (C#dim)your (Dm)Christma(G7)ses be (C)white
C#dim can be played:
C#dim: 04 13 02 11
I suggest that you learn the song by memorizing one line at a time. The best way to learn to play the ukulele chords is to practice two adjacent chords at a time. Practice changing between the chords smoothly by strumming once on every chord, repeating the procedure slowly until you can play the chords without looking. Then, move to the next chords!
Before we delve to deeply into our ukulele chords let's take a look at the tuning of your ukulele. The resulting names of the chords we play depends on how we tune the ukulele.
In this ukulele lesson I assume that you play a soprano ukulele and that you have tuned it in C.
What does C-tuning mean?
Let's take a look at the piano keyboard to find out how to tune the ukulele.
C-tuning means that the third string on you ukulele is tuned to a C. If you use a piano when you tune your ukulele you will find these notes in the octave in the middle of the keyboard.
The notes in this most commonly used octave on the piano are called C4-B4. The number 4 indicate that the notes are on the fourth octave on an ordinary piano.
The first string on your ukulele will be tuned to an A4 as we call it. The next string will sound like the piano key E4. The third string will be the note C4. The fourth string will be the note G4.
Our first chord is C major. Let's take a look at it:
C: 0/4 0/3 0/2 3/1
What type of notation is this?
This is a type of ukulele tab notation where we use numbers to indicate which fret to press down and on which string.
3/1 for example means: Press down fret 3 on string 1.
We will now proceed with the chord G major:
G: 0/4 2/3 3/2 2/1
As you can see this chord is the same chord as a D major on a guitar. A little bit confusing if you also play guitar but I guess you will get used to it.
The chord F major looks like this on your ukulele:
F: 2/4 0/3 1/2 0/1
Now we have three chords at our disposal and we can create our first ukulele chord progression:
C / / / G / / / F / / / G / / /
What does the slashes mean?
The most basic way to interpret this notation is:
Strum once on a chord name. Continue strumming on the same chord once for every slash!
Let's add one more chord to make this progression a little bit more interesting. Here is G7:
G7: 0/4 2/3 1/2 2/1
Here is the progression:
C / / / G7 / / / F / / / G7 / / /
Before we end this ukulele lesson we will add just one more chord. Here is D minor:
Dm: 2/4 2/3 1/2 0/1
Here is the ukulele chord progression:
C / / / G7 / / / Dm / / / G7 / / /
To really learn to play chords on your ukulele it is important to play them together. The most difficult part is to change from one chord to another smoothly without slowing down the tempo.
Try practising playing two chords at a time. The actual training consists of changing between the chords.
This is a great way to rapidly learn to play the chords of any ukulele song!