I do! I’m not great at it, but I can strum almost all of the less complicated chords (though B-anything gives me fits).
I’ve found that although I have large hands, I don’t have long fingers. This makes things difficult for me, but the uke is a super forgiving instrument in that respect.
My first uke Web site was Dr. Uke:
Doc Uke’s site is great because the chords are charted out very clearly on each song and most of them include an mp3 file of him singing and playing the song (great for learning).
Then I graduated to chordie.com, which has an absolutely massive database of music. Definitely get an account, because you can save your own songbook. The site will transpose songs from one key to another for you, and will show you uke chords for any song in the database.
Do you know any decent beginners’ resources for jazz uke? There’s plenty out there for general folky / bluesy / traditional playing, but I’ve had a hard time finding any basic jazz instruction.
I strongly recommend you begin with a twofold approach: learning the uke fingerboard and improving technique, while simultaneously educating yourself on voice leading, harmonic theory and chord motion.
First thing to do is learn each maj and min triad in each inversion. Follow that with dominant chords. Be able to play all those both chromatically and around the circle of fifths (moving fourthsward, i.e. C F Bb Eb Ab Db/C#Gb/F# B E A D G)
Then begin working on ii-V7 and start learning some standards. Don’t worry about melody yet, just get the changes down. Start with easy tunes like Autumn Leaves, Days of Wine & Roses, Stella By Starlight, Satin Doll, A Train, St Thomas.
Pick up a copy of The Jazz Theory Book if you want to really go down the rabbit hole. It’s fantastic, but will take you a while to get through. To put it mildly.
I can manage Love Me Tender, Ring of Fire, and half of Sweet Child O Mine.
I asked for and received a cheap, cheerful kid’s uke from my husband for our 19th wedding anniversary two months ago. It’s my first stringed instrument since a few months of violin when I was five, so it’s going to take awhile to not be completely terrible, but I’m slowly starting to change chords without looking down each time to check my fingering. My four year old daughter keeps yelling at me to quit it every time I practice. Everyone’s a critic!
I’ve gotten most of the basic chords down in their standard arrangement, but I’ve been putting off getting into inversions and learning actual chord progressions. I’ll definitely check out your sites.
Looks like some great resources. I’ve been “learning” uke by just digging up chord charts and strumming songs, but I’ve been acutely aware that I’m not developing much theory.
Uke makes the basics of voice leading and chord motion very simple.
Inversions…rather than thinking of them in the traditional sense, learn the three basic shapes, then identify which has the root, the third and fifth on top.
you can do that from the A string on a low g uke, or from the A or G on a traditional high g tuning.
See if you can find the movie Mighty Uke (here’s a trailer). I saw it in the theater and it was informative and fun. The filmmakers were there answering questions after the film. The theater had urged people to bring their ukes to the screening and everyone who did went up onstage after the movie to jam. I’d never even seen a real uke before and I was grinning like a loon. Tons of fun. Here’s an Amazon list of other movies featuring Ukes.