Joe Hisaishi – Summer (from Kikujiro) (Tabs)

Joe Hisaishi – Summer (Tab)

Joe Hisaishi is a prolific film composer (I only realised while researching this post that he scored a movie I watched while working on this piece). But he’s best known for his scores for the Studio Ghibli films and for Takeshi Kitano. Summer comes from one of Kitano’s gentler movies: Kikujiro.

This arrangement starts with some palm muted arpeggios before moving into the main melody. In this section, I’ve used the open g-string as a melody note in a number of places. You can replace any of these with E-string, 3rd fret if you prefer.

The arrangement goes full campanella mode in bar 18. Playing one note on each string means you don’t have to move your left hand at all for this quick section. Once you’ve got the picking pattern under your fingers it’s very easy.

Unfortunately, I couldn’t get the rising bass line here to fit with the higher pattern. So I’ve divided them up. So you play the pattern in G, then the lower bass part in bars 20-21, the high pattern in C in bars 22-23 and the bass pattern in C in bars 24-25.

After a reprise of the A section, the outro closes out with some notes up the neck. Which I manage to flub in bar 39. So play what’s written rather than my screw-up. I manage it second time around in bar 41 if you want to hear how it’s supposed to sound.

Links

Buy the original
More Movie Theme Tabs
Uke Hunt Patreon

Choan Gálvez – Brevity for Anita (Baritone Tab)

Choan Gálvez – Brevity for Anita (Tab)

Today we have a guest post from Choan Gálvez with a piece from his latest book. Here are his notes:

Brevities‘ is a collection of short solo pieces for baritone ukulele aimed at the intermediate fingerpicker. In this set Choan Gálvez profits from the extended range, the sustain, and the resonance that this instrument and its tuning provide.

Styles go from renaissance inspiration to Brazilian choro, melancholic waltzes to exciting ragtime.

All the pieces are written for G6 linear tuning and presented in notation and tablature format. Don’t you own a baritone uke? Not an issue: everything is also playable on your low G instrument. Follow the tab!

Brevities‘ is available in print and digital editions from The Ukulele Bookshop.

Keane – Somewhere Only We Know (Tabs)

Keane – Somewhere Only We Know (Tab)

Here’s my take on Keane’s mega-hit Somewhere Only We Know.

Intro: All down-strums here to give an authentic dad-rock feel.

Verse and Pre-Chorus: Switching to fingerpicking using a one-finger-per-string set up.

Chorus: Adding some strums here on the Em chord and picking more heavily than before. You can beef it up even further by strumming all the way through the final chorus but you’ll lose definition in the melody.

Solo: A quick and easy solo. It’s one I made up myself so you’re welcome to change it however you like.

Links

Buy the original
More 2000s tabs
Uke Hunt Patreon

Friday Links: RIP Rick Turner

Rick Turner, luthier and maker of the Compass Rose uke, has passed away. You can read fellow luthier Beau Hannam’s obituary for him here. And you can watch him playing some Django on one of his own ukes here.

– The Ukulele 2022 playlist is taking shape. With tracks from hip youngsters with a laissez faire attitude to capitalisation mxmtoon and BoyWithUke to classical pieces written by Philip Glass and Davide Tammaro.
– Jack White has taken to sharing the stage with a life-size sculpture of a guy playing the ukulele.

Window Shopping
Kala Release their “April 1st Exclusives”
Flight Aqua A10QM and Flight Pathfinder solid body electric.
Southern Ukulele Store run down some very handsome Kanile’a ukes.
Grateful Dead uke with an insane price tag.

Patreon

A massive thanks to all Uke Hunt’s Patreon backers for keeping the site up and running. And double thanks go to these legendary patrons of the arts:

– Arthur Foley
– Colleen Petticrew
– Dan
– Elizabeth Beardsley
– Fi Keane
– Jameson Gagnepain
– Jeff K
– Kelby Green
– Kie77
– Leia-lee Doran
– Lisa Johnson
– Monika Kolodziejczyk
– Moses Kamai
– Nevylle Carroll
– Nick Parsons
– Olga deSanctis
– Pat Weikle
– Pauline LeBlanc
– Robert
– T S
– Thorsten Neff

If you join Patreon at the Concert level or higher, you’ll get access to all previous exclusive tabs including April’s: Toto’s Africa.

Ukulele Clubs and Groups in the UK and Ireland


View Ukulele Clubs and Groups in a larger map

For the last 12 years I’ve been keeping list and a map of all the ukulele clubs I’ve been told about. In that time, the list of UK groups has got unusably large. And, in a possibly related matter, I’ve been having technical problems with the page and have taken it down. So here’s a fresh post and from now on I’ll be updating just the map.

For anyone who has a use for it, here’s the list of clubs in the UK and Ireland as it stood:

Ukulele Clubs and Groups in the UK and Ireland

If you’d like your club added to the map please send the name of the group, the location and the url of website/Facebook/wherever on the net to ukulelehunt@gmail.com

The Monkees – Daydream Believer (Tabs)

The Monkees – Daydream Believer (Tab)

Daydream Believer by The Monkees is fairly straightforward to play. The biggest challenges are a few quick hops up the neck. The trickiest one coming in the shift between bars 8 and 9. Other than that, it’s all familiar chord shapes and a simple but insanely catchy melody.

The original is in the key of G and that fits very nicely on the uke so I’ve kept it for this arrangement. The little piano riff in the intro works particularly well.

Links

Buy the original
More 60s tabs and chords
Uke Hunt Patreon

Foo Fighters – My Hero (Tabs)

Foo Fighters – My Hero (Tab)

In tribute to Taylor Hawkins: My Hero by Foo Fighters.

The song starts off with a bit of dissonance between the Ab on the E-string and the open A string. The Ab also provides dissonance as the first note in the chorus melody (bar 16).

My first arrangement contained strumming almost all the way through. So in the intro I was strumming the second half of bars 1 and 2. And also strumming in the gaps at the end of every other bar in the verse. If you want to do it that way, go for it. But I decided to create a bit more of a contrast been the sections by picking adding picking to the quieter sections.

For the “solo” section of the tab is more in keeping with the spirit of that section rather than the actual notes. It’s really just a breakdown cooling things off before bringing the rock back. So as long as you build up at the end, you’re free to do whatever you like with this section.

Links

Buy the original
Smells Like Teen Spirit tab
Uke Hunt Patreon

UkeTube: Elisabeth Pfeiffer, Ronya-Lee, BoyWithUke

Watch on YouTube

Tracklist
Elisabeth Pfeiffer – Dance of the Mountain Sage
Ronya-Lee and the Light Factory – Light
BoyWithUke ft. blackbear – IDGAF
Gracie Terzian ft. Vinicius Vivas and Rotem Sivan – Waiting for a Train
4stringboy – Ain’t Nobody
Belinda Underwood – Thinkin’ Dirty
Del Rey – Sitting On Top of The World
CocoCapitainePoulet – Le Club de l’Apocalypse
Herman Vandecauter – Canario
Gerald Ross – How Sweet It Is

Riffs and Intros from the Oscars

Here’s a selection of quick pieces from movies nominated for this year’s Best Picture Oscar. I haven’t seen King Richard or Belfast. So it’s possible these tunes have an exceptionally minor part in those movies. But they’re great riffs. And Cissy Strut can sneak in via its use in last year’s Best International Picture winner: Another Round.

Johann Strauss – Radetzky March (From The Power of the Dog)

Tabs: Radetzky March (PDF)

The Meters – Cissy Strut (From King Richard)

Van Morrison – Jackie Wilson Said (From Belfast)

The Doors – Peace Frog (From Licorice Pizza)

Marvin Gaye and Tammi Tyrell – You’re All I Need to Get By (From CODA)

David Bowie – The Man Who Sold the World (Tabs)

David Bowie – The Man Who Sold the World (Tabs)

After The Man Who Sold the World’s starts off with that iconic riff playing over changing chords. It works nicely on uke and is well worth learning on its own.

At the end of the intro, there’s an awkward bar of 2/4. I considered extending it to a bar of 4/4 (as Nirvana did in their Unplugged version). It certainly feels more natural that way. Even Bowie messed up and came in late sometimes. I’d recommend going with a bar of 4/4 if that feels more comfortable to you. There’s another bar of 2/4 in bar 20, but that one feels much more natural.

The verse is a simple chord and melody affair. But things get a little tricky in the chorus where you’re playing the riff and the melody. Make sure you keep them as distinct as you can by giving extra emphasis to the melody notes and sustaining them as much as you can over the riff.

Links

Buy the original
More David Bowie tabs and chords
Uke Hunt Patreon

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