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Ukulele Tablature Basics Guide

The document provides an overview of reading ukulele tablature. It explains that tablature represents the four strings of the ukulele with four lines, showing which fret to press for each note. It notes that tablature may seem backwards at first, but helps to visualize holding the ukulele up to the lines. The document also describes how to interpret open strings, X's to not play strings, and how tablature can be used to learn standard musical notation and melody playing.

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Andrea Nortje
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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
739 views1 page

Ukulele Tablature Basics Guide

The document provides an overview of reading ukulele tablature. It explains that tablature represents the four strings of the ukulele with four lines, showing which fret to press for each note. It notes that tablature may seem backwards at first, but helps to visualize holding the ukulele up to the lines. The document also describes how to interpret open strings, X's to not play strings, and how tablature can be used to learn standard musical notation and melody playing.

Uploaded by

Andrea Nortje
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Beginner Lesson • Reading Tablature

REV: January 2016

Sometimes ukulele songs (and those of other stringed instruments) are shown in tablature. In ukulele tablature,
the four lines each represent one of the ukulele’s strings; I’ve included the string names to the left of the line to
show you. Note that the “bottom” line, is the “G” string.

For many folks, tablature at first seems a bit “backwards” in where you’d guess the notes to be. It sometimes
helps to think of holding up your ukulele to the tabalature and you can “see” where the strings/notes are in
relation to the lines.

The numbers on the line tell you which fret you need to press that string down. If there’s a “0” it means you
should pluck it as an open string (no fingers on any of the frets).

If you don’t know how to read standard musical notation but you do learn to read tablature, you can quickly
“teach” yourself to read simple musical notation by comparing the fingers you’re using in the tablature to
the note depicted directly above it in the standard notation. Then all you have to do is memorize the “letter
name” of the fingers you’re playing and you’ll also learn to read the treble clef (no bass clef for ukulele--our
instruments don’t go that low).

Knowing how to read tablature allows you to venture into melody, not simply chords. You can also learn to play
“chord-melody” style which blends playing melody with strumming chords; it’s pretty impressive and not as
difficult as it sounds.

When you see an “X” on one (or more) of the lines, or when you see nothing at all on it, that means not to play
that string at all. This is very different than having a “0” on a string—which means that you play that string but
you play it “open” (with no finger on the string).

Compare the two “views”

Try it for yourself; pluck each note shown once. Do you recognize the song?

Here’s how to “translate” it:

Measure 1: For the first two notes, hold down the second string (E string) at the first fret. For the second two
notes, hold down the first string (A string) at the third fret.
Measure 2: For the first two notes, hold down the first string (A string) at the fifth fret. The third and final note in
the measure is on the first string, third fret.
Measure 3: For this measure, you’re playing entirely on the first string (A string). The first two notes are on the
first fret; the second two notes are “open” (no fingers) on that string.
Measure 4: This measure is played entirely on the second (E) string. The first two notes are on the third fret; the
last note is on the first fret.

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