Chords for Different Ukulele Sizes | How to Buy a Ukulele Part 1
Tempo:
115.95 bpm
Chords used:
C
D
G
Dm
E
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[C] [D]
[Dm] Aloha, my [C] name is Taylor and I'm here [Dm] at Austin Bazaar and [Em] today we're [G] talking about ukuleles.
[D] [C]
[Dm] Here we [E] have the four [F#] standard sizes of the ukulele, [Dm] starting smallest to biggest.
[C] We have the [D] soprano, concert, [G] tenor, and baritone.
[D]
[C]
[G] [C] [F]
[C]
[G]
[Am]
[C] [G]
[C] [F]
[Cm]
[G] [D]
[C] [G]
[C] First the [B] smallest is [E] the soprano.
Good for people with small hands or maybe children that are trying to learn to play.
[C] It has that really distinctive [Dm] ukulele sound that people think of when they think of ukuleles.
It normally has about 12 frets, super portable, [E] and really fun.
Next size up is the concert.
It's a little bit bigger than the soprano [Dm] and still [D] portable and fun but just a little
bit wider range of sound.
The soprano and the concert are fairly similar in size and sound.
This is when things [D#] start to [Am] change.
The tenor has a deeper [D] tone than the other two and has again more frets.
This is a great ukulele for a solo performer or somebody who maybe has experience with
a guitar and is looking for a different sound.
This is the baritone ukulele.
It is the largest of the four and it's going to have the deepest tone of all four as well.
The other three [E] ukuleles are tuned G, C, E, A.
The baritone is actually [C] tuned as if it
were the [B] bottom four strings of guitar.
So it's D, G, B, E.
This is a great ukulele for somebody who likes to do a lot of finger
picking and there are other six and eight string variations of this [C#] that give you [D] a
huge range of tone.
[G] [Dm]
[C] [D]
[Dm] Aloha, my [C] name is Taylor and I'm here [Dm] at Austin Bazaar and [Em] today we're [G] talking about ukuleles.
[D] [C]
[Dm] Here we [E] have the four [F#] standard sizes of the ukulele, [Dm] starting smallest to biggest.
[C] We have the [D] soprano, concert, [G] tenor, and baritone.
[D]
[C]
[G] [C] [F]
[C]
[G]
[Am]
[C] [G]
[C] [F]
[Cm]
[G] [D]
[C] [G]
[C] First the [B] smallest is [E] the soprano.
Good for people with small hands or maybe children that are trying to learn to play.
[C] It has that really distinctive [Dm] ukulele sound that people think of when they think of ukuleles.
It normally has about 12 frets, super portable, [E] and really fun.
Next size up is the concert.
It's a little bit bigger than the soprano [Dm] and still [D] portable and fun but just a little
bit wider range of sound.
The soprano and the concert are fairly similar in size and sound.
This is when things [D#] start to [Am] change.
The tenor has a deeper [D] tone than the other two and has again more frets.
This is a great ukulele for a solo performer or somebody who maybe has experience with
a guitar and is looking for a different sound.
This is the baritone ukulele.
It is the largest of the four and it's going to have the deepest tone of all four as well.
The other three [E] ukuleles are tuned G, C, E, A.
The baritone is actually [C] tuned as if it
were the [B] bottom four strings of guitar.
So it's D, G, B, E.
This is a great ukulele for somebody who likes to do a lot of finger
picking and there are other six and eight string variations of this [C#] that give you [D] a
huge range of tone.
[G] [Dm]
[C] [D]
Key:
C
D
G
Dm
E
C
D
G
_ _ [C] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _
[Dm] _ _ Aloha, my [C] name is Taylor and I'm here [Dm] at Austin Bazaar and [Em] today we're [G] talking about ukuleles. _ _
[D] _ _ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ _ [Dm] _ _ _ _ Here we [E] have the four [F#] standard sizes of the ukulele, [Dm] starting smallest to biggest.
[C] We have the [D] soprano, concert, [G] tenor, and baritone.
_ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _ [F] _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [G] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _ _
[C] _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _
_ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _
_ _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [C] _ First the [B] smallest is [E] the soprano.
Good for people with small hands or maybe children that are trying to learn to play.
[C] It has that really _ distinctive [Dm] ukulele sound that people think of when they think of ukuleles.
It normally has about 12 frets, super portable, [E] and really fun.
Next size up is the concert.
It's a little bit bigger than the soprano [Dm] and still [D] portable and fun but just a little
bit wider range of sound.
The soprano and the concert are fairly similar in size and sound.
This is when things [D#] start to [Am] change.
The tenor has a deeper [D] tone than the other two and has again more frets.
This is a great ukulele for a solo performer or somebody who maybe has experience with
a guitar and is looking for a different sound.
This is the baritone ukulele.
It is the largest of the four and it's going to have the deepest tone of all four as well.
The other three [E] ukuleles are tuned G, C, E, A.
The baritone is actually [C] tuned as if it
were the [B] bottom four strings of guitar.
So it's D, G, B, E.
This is a great ukulele for somebody who likes to do a lot of finger
picking and there are other six and eight string variations of this [C#] that give you [D] a
huge range of tone.
_ [G] _ _ _ _ [Dm] _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _
[Dm] _ _ Aloha, my [C] name is Taylor and I'm here [Dm] at Austin Bazaar and [Em] today we're [G] talking about ukuleles. _ _
[D] _ _ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ _ [Dm] _ _ _ _ Here we [E] have the four [F#] standard sizes of the ukulele, [Dm] starting smallest to biggest.
[C] We have the [D] soprano, concert, [G] tenor, and baritone.
_ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _ [F] _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [G] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _ _
[C] _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _
_ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _
_ _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [C] _ First the [B] smallest is [E] the soprano.
Good for people with small hands or maybe children that are trying to learn to play.
[C] It has that really _ distinctive [Dm] ukulele sound that people think of when they think of ukuleles.
It normally has about 12 frets, super portable, [E] and really fun.
Next size up is the concert.
It's a little bit bigger than the soprano [Dm] and still [D] portable and fun but just a little
bit wider range of sound.
The soprano and the concert are fairly similar in size and sound.
This is when things [D#] start to [Am] change.
The tenor has a deeper [D] tone than the other two and has again more frets.
This is a great ukulele for a solo performer or somebody who maybe has experience with
a guitar and is looking for a different sound.
This is the baritone ukulele.
It is the largest of the four and it's going to have the deepest tone of all four as well.
The other three [E] ukuleles are tuned G, C, E, A.
The baritone is actually [C] tuned as if it
were the [B] bottom four strings of guitar.
So it's D, G, B, E.
This is a great ukulele for somebody who likes to do a lot of finger
picking and there are other six and eight string variations of this [C#] that give you [D] a
huge range of tone.
_ [G] _ _ _ _ [Dm] _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _