Beirut – The Penalty

Beirut – The Penalty (Chords)

The standout track on The Flying Club Cup as far as I’m concerned – although I am completely biased in any matter that involves ukuleles – is the uke lead tune The Penalty.

The first thing to notice in the chords for the song is that there are three different inversions of the C chord in there. The Penalty starts off with a shortened bar of the usual open C shape. Then the three strings remain open while the A string is played at the seventh fret. I’ve called it e/C as the highest note is the E. Finally, there’s another C chord – I’ve called it C(alt) which acts a passing chord between the Em and the F (it is only played for a short time and is, therefore, in square brackets). There’s is also a short Fadd9 chord which is made simply by taking your finger off the G string and letting it run open. This chord is only played for a short time also and is used to create a little harmonic interest in the long F bars.

There’s only one other set of chords in the tune: a simple F C F G. Then you are good to go.

More Beirut tab and chords for ukulele

Buy The Flying Club Cup US UK

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Review: Beirut – The Flying Club Cup

Photo by electrospray

Beirut’s debut album Gulag Orkestar and single Elephant Gun established Zach Condon as one of the biggest stars of alternative, indie ukulele. On his new album, The Flying Club Cup, he delivers only two new uke heavy songs – The Penalty and St. Apollonia – but both are instant classics.

The new album suggests that Beirut’s music is making a steady drift westwards and forwards in time: from Beirut, to traditional Balkan music, to early twentieth century French. Flying Club Cup is packed with accordion waltzes, chanson strings and French song titles. The concept behind the album is that of a balloon race with each song representing a flying over a different French flying club cup beirut album covercity. The concept, fittingly enough, doesn’t weigh the album down but gives it continuity and an atmosphere.

The sound of the album is noticeably larger and more cleanly produced than Gulag. Whereas Gulag Orchestar was recorded in Condon’s bedroom, Flying Club Cup was recorded in the Arcade Fire’s church come studio. Whereas Condon recorded Gulag Orchestar alone, Flying Club Cup features the eight regular touring members and string arrangements by Owen Pallet (Mr Final Fantasy). The album is very much in keeping with the move towards grandeur and intricacy in indie music at the moment.

There are two things that haven’t changed: Condon’s acquired taste of a voice and the risk that at any moment the whole thing could crash over into pretentious, student-railcard music. But the songs are strong and regular moments of absolutely gorgeous sound (the opening of Forks and Knives, The Penalty and Cliquot) that you are quickly distracted from the possibility.

Overall, eight thumbs up.

At the current rate of geographical and chronological trajectory, I estimate that the next album will be based on 1940s England. So the next Beirut album is like to have an Arthur Askey vibe to it. Can’t wait.

Buy The Flying Club Cup US UK

Tab and chords for The Penalty, St Apollonia and more Beirut.

Beirut – Elephant Gun

Beirut – Elephant Gun (Chords)

Elephant Gun was annoying to work out as the original version is played on a uke tuned a semitone sharp (g#C#FA#). I decided to notate the chords as if the uke was in standard C-tuning. If you want to play along and don’t want to re-tune or use a capo, you can play along with this live version (or the many others on YouTube) which is in standard tuning.

To get the opening bars to sound right, start by strumming downwards twice, concentrating on the 3rd and 4th strings. Then strum upwards concentrating on the 1st and 2nd strings. Do this twice on the Am. Then, on the D7, strum in a similar way but hammering on from open strings on the first strum.

A quick aside, I’ve tweaked the tab (but not the chords) for Postcards from Italy. So if you grabbed it first time you might want to check back.

More Beirut on Uke Hunt

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Ukulele Players – Indie Ukulele

Stephin Merritt – Magnetic Fields

Who? Dark humorist and dour songwriter with Magnetic Fields, Gothic Archies and other projects.

What’s so special? The first alternative act I heard use the ukulele (in 1999’s 69 Love Songs). Put to rest the idea that everything sounds happy on the ukulele. Introduced the ukulele to a generation of youngsters who are a little too intelligent and cynical for Harry Potter by providing the soundtrack to Lemony Snicket.

Want to hear more? Gothic Archies – The Tragic Treasury

Learn to play like him Smile Tab

Zach Condon – Beirut

Who? Interrailing indie star.

What’s so special? Made it passe for anyone to play something as obvious as a guitar and widened the hipster’s sonic palette to include brass, accordions and, yes, ukuleles.

Want to hear more? Beirut – Gulag Orkestar

Learn to play like him Beirut Chords and Tabs

Dent May and His Magnificent Ukulele

Who? Crooning ukulele lounge singer.

What’s so special? Giving the ukulele equal billing and lending the instrument a barrow-full of nerd-cool.

Want to hear more? The Good Feeling of Dent May and his Magnificent Ukulele

Learn to play like him Meet Me in the Garden Chords

tUnE-YaRdS

Who? Crazy cat lady with a ukulele.

What’s so special? Easily the most startling ukulele player around today. Completely original and endlessly compelling.

Want to hear more? tUnE-YaRdS – BiRd-BrAiNs

Learn to play like her Hatari Tab

Mirah

Who? Prolific indie folkie.

What’s so special? Ukulele packed debut You Think It’s Like This, But Really It’s Like This in 2000 showing that the ukulele can do more than just gentle strumming.

Want to hear more? Mirah – You Think It’s Like This, But Really It’s Like This

Learn to play like her Million Miles Tab

Uke Hunt Is One

Happy Birthday Uke Hunt!

A year ago today was this blog’s first ever post. I thought I’d take the opportunity to be completely self indulgent and have a look back at the first year.

Most Popular Posts

1. While My Guitar Gently Weeps Tutorial
My plea for people to stop aping Jake’s version and come up with their own. Lots of people read it. They all ignored it. Oh well, I tried.

2. Beirut – Elephant Gun
3. Beirut – Postcards from Italy
One of the main reasons I started this blog was to spread the good news about indie ukulele acts like Beirut and Magnetic Fields which I thought were being overlooked a little in the online uke world. But I had no idea so many people were looking for Beirut chords and tabs. Still, I think it might have been a little obsessive of me to work out their entire back catalogue.

4. IZ/Jason Castro – Somewhere Over the Rainbow
I woke up one morning to an email from Jeff telling me about this guy who had played the uke on American Idol. I decided to knock together a quick post about it. Since the minute it went up, it’s been the most visited post on the blog.

5. Beirut – The Penalty
6. Britney Spears/Sweetafton23 – Toxic
Molly linked to this post in her description. It still sends a bunch of people here every day.

7. Daft Punk – Harder, Better, Strong, Faster
Terrible song to play on the ukulele (Spencer, what were you thinking?). Why the hell are so many people looking at this? Gave me an excuse to watch that video over and over, though.

8. Guns and Roses – Sweet Child o’ Mine
9. Arcade Fire – Keep the Car Running
10. Sean Kingston – Beautiful Girls

Most Overlooked Posts

I toiled and laboured through endless nights. Spilt blood, sweat and tears on my uke. If you build it people will come. Or not.

These posts took hours and hours to come up with and didn’t make it into the top 100 pages:

1. Carl Ray Villaverde – Tears in Heaven
2. Danse Macabre
3. Brian Hefferan – Sailors Hornpipe

The Stats

Page Views: 1,143,624
Visits: 236,808
Subscribers: Around 600 (half of them by email, nearly half by RSS and a smattering by Twitter).

Visits Graph:

1st Spike: Christmas Day. I decided to take Christmas time off. “Who’s going to be on the computer on Christmas Day?” I thought. Two conclusions to draw from this. One: I’m an idiot. Two: This blog is much more popular when I’m not here.
2nd (Mini) Spike: Jonathan Coulton mentions Molly winning Online Ukulele Video of the Year.
3rd Spike: Jason Castro on American Idol.
4th Spike: This happened just a few days ago. The number of direct visitors (people typing in the address or using a bookmark) tripled and it was my biggest day ever. I have absolutely no idea why this happened. Anyone any ideas?
Absolutely No Change: Getting mentioned in the NME.

Referrers

1. YouTube
2. KDUS
3. Boat Paddle Ukuleles
4. Richard Gillman
5. Ukulele Cosmos

I’m really grateful to everyone who has linked to me in the last year (no matter how big or small your site is). Thanks everyone.

Best Comment

Nobody – “Seems that you’ll put anything up on this site just for content. Or maybe you’re doing favors for your special friends to rake in lots of freebies.”

Note to freebie givers: I’m a very cheap date.

The Next Year

As you might have noticed, I’m moving towards making this place a bit less bloggy. There’s a whole lot of stuff here now and the blog layout isn’t the best way for people to navigate it. I’m also doing more long term, permanent stuff like the Buy a Ukulele section (which still needs a lot of work).

People have started turning up at the blog after searching for just the word ‘ukulele’. I assume these people mostly aren’t hardcore ukulele nerds like you and me. So I’ll be doing a few bits that might be helpful to them as well as uke players (such as the Ukulele Songs bit). The plan is to turn vague browsers into hardcore ukulelists.

From the start, it was my plan to post once a day until I had enough posts on the site to make it worth people visiting. When I hit that point, I thought I’d slow down. I’m now doing 8 posts most weeks. I’m still planning on slowing down a bit. It probably won’t happen. One thing I will have to do is start saying ‘no’ to some requests. I’ve got a huge backlog and feel guilty about it. Also, it’s amazing the number of people I do requests for who never thank me. I’ll be much more likely to do your request if I recognise your name from comments and messages and if it’s the sort of thing I usually have on the blog. (Oh, and double check your email address if you’re using the contact form).

Ultimately, I want Uke Hunt to be the best ukulele website around. I think I have a long way to go before that’s the case. The first year has gone far, far better than I thought possible. So I’ve set some aims for next year which I think are also impossible:

– still number one on the top 50 uke sites (I think Ukulele Underground will overtake me sooner or later).
– number one on Google for ‘ukulele tabs‘, ‘ukulele chords’ and ‘ukulele’. The last one definitely is impossible (thanks to Wiki-frickin’-pedia). Type ‘search engine optimization’ into Google; even the experts can’t beat Wikipedia. If you want to help, you could link to Ukulele Hunt with the word ukulele on your website/blog/LiveJournal/whatnot. The other two might be doable.
– 1 million visits (not page views)
– 1,500 subscribers. There can’t be that many people in the world who feel the need to read this site every day of their lives.

Thank You!

A massive thanks to all of you. I’m massively grateful to the people that have commented, messaged and got involved. If it wasn’t for you people, I’d have given up a long time ago.

Ten Years of Uke Hunt

This week marks ten years since I decided the best use of my time was to start a ukulele blog and call it “Uke Hunt”.

Since then the blog has had over 2,000 posts, over 27 million visits and more than 115 million page views. That’s equivalent to everyone in Australia visiting the site and checking out a few pages. It’s insane. And as much of a shut-in, loner as I am there’s a huge number of people I’m pathetically grateful for helping me make it this long.

Thank You!

Firstly, I have to thank my mum, dad and brother. They were way more supportive of me when I told them I’d quit work and decided to be a ukulele blogger than I had any right to expect. My dad died in 2010. Not long before I landed the Ukulele for Dummies book. It’s a real shame he didn’t get to see me do an actual, legitimate thing.

Secondly, I have to thank my fiancée, Carrie. I met her through this blog and it was worth ten years of work just for that. Without her love and kindness keeping me on the right side of sanity the blog would be long dead by now.

I’m really blessed to be part of a world that is as encouraging and enthusiastic as the ukulele community. The success of the site is entirely down to all of you for your support over the years. I have a complete lack of stick-to-it-iveness (Uke Hunt is the longest job I’ve ever had by a factor of about 5) so I’m pathetically grateful to everyone for:

Reading: It’s such a thrill for me that people find the site useful.

Most people assume I’m a ukulele advocate and think everyone should play it. But I’m not one of those, “If everyone played the ukulele there’d be no wars,” types. Ukuleles are great but the success of the ukulele isn’t something that gets me out of bed in the morning (metaphorically, I’m writing this in bed – I’m not an idiot).

What really gets me excited is helping people to feel accomplished and proud of themselves. Like this. Or playing to entertain their friends. It’s such a buzz to be able to help people with that. Music if difficult. You should give yourself a pat on the back when you master a tune.

The amateur psychologist would say the real motivation is that if I make enough people feel accomplished and proud of themselves then eventually I’ll feel accomplished and proud of myself. Maybe in the next ten years.

Feedback: commenting, emailing, tweeting and reviewing: I judge the success of a post almost entirely by how much of reaction it gets in comments, emails and on YouTube. That feedback is so important to me.

There are a few people who have been commenting on the blog for most of its existence. I’m particularly grateful to those people for still popping round and saying hello.

Spreading the word: Telling people about the site is absolutely the best way to support it. I put the growth of the site entirely down to people recommending it to other ukers.

Buying: It’s my nightmare that one day I might have to get a proper job. So I can’t thank enough those people who spend hard earned money on my ebooks. I’m not one of those people energetic and productive enough to do a day job and run a side project. There’s no way the site could exist without your financial support.

Getting involved: There are so many clubs and groups and festivals I can hardly keep up. Add to that the number of people writing blogs, tabbing and doing YouTube tutorials. It’s staggering and it all makes playing the ukulele a better experience.

Playing: It’s a huge inspiration to watch people playing on YouTube and listening to the records. Just watching random YouTube videos gets my brain firing. If you do something cool I’m very likely to steal it.

The Archives of Uke Hunt

Year One

In my head I remembered the blog taking a while to settle into a rhythm. But looking back I’m surprised how quick it got going. By July 2007 Friday Links and Saturday UkeTube were already in place and by the end of 2007 I’d released my first three ebooks: Ragtime Ukulele, Ukulele Chord Progressions (both no longer available, I’m afraid) and the first Christmas Ukulele (still available in updated form).

The first year included the big two: Somewhere Over the Rainbow and a tutorial for While My Guitar Gently Weeps (with a doomed plea for people to work up their own versions).

Beirut were a big impetus for me starting the blog and I got cracking on those with Elephant Gun, Postcards from Italy and The Penalty.

Plus a couple of tabs I still like: Carl Ray Villaverde – Tears in Heaven and Brian Hefferan – Sailors Hornpipe

Year Two

The How to Play Blues Ukulele ebook was released. Which I updated a little while ago and I think is my best ebook.

Tutorials on:

The Blues Scale
The basics of strumming
10 Reason It’s Easier to Learn the Guitar than the Ukulele

Tabs and chords:

Tonight You Belong to Me (The Jerk Version)
The Office: An American Workplace Theme
Neutral Milk Hotel – Holland, 1945
Whose Line Is It Anyway? – Hoedown
Star Wars – Cantina Band
Davy Graham – Angi

Year Three

The How to Play Ukulele Strums ebook came out in July.

This year brought the very sad death of John King. He was a massive influence on me. Easy the biggest influence when it came to how I arranged tunes for the ukulele. I wrote up a post about all the things I learned from him in tribute.

A guide to strumming notation and 10 things I wish I’d known about ukuleles (before I bought one).

Tabs and chords:

David Beckingham’s take on In the Mood: David is a fantastic arranger and I’m really proud that he generously lets me share his tabs here. Find all his tabs here.

Robert Johnson – They’re Red Hot (Chords)
John King – Larry O’Gaff (Tab)
Harry Potter – Hedwig’s Theme (Tab)
Sigur Ros – Hoppipolla (Tab)
Iron & Wine – Naked As We Came (Tab)
Keston Cobblers’ Club – You-Go (Chords)
Elliott Brood – The Valley Town (Tab): Such an under-appreciated band. Their debut EP Tin Type – with songs like Oh Alberta and Only at Home – sounds like the blueprint to every Mumford and Lumineers song.
Upstairs, Downstairs Theme (Tab) which ended up being played on Radio 4.

Year Four

This year’s ebook was How to Play Classical Ukulele and I tabbed up the entirely uke-inappropriate O Fortuna to go along with it.

Discussions on why you should give a crap about copyright terms and 10 things you hear about ukuleles that might be bollocks.

Tabs and chords:

Rodrigo Y Gabriela – Tamacun
Duelling Banjos
Bjork – It’s Oh So Quiet
Top Cat and Fraggle Rock
Mumford and Sons – The Cave
Ellie Goulding’s Starry Eyed
Willie Nelson’s Crazy and Gnarls Barkley’s Crazy
John King’s Swallowtail

Year Five

No ebook this year because I was busy burning myself out writing Ukulele for Dummies an actual, proper, dead-tree book.

The 13 most useful strumming patterns.

It emerged that Obama’s birth certificate was signed by one U.K.L. Lee.

Tabs and chords:

Moon River
King of the Hill theme
The Burning Hell – I Love the Things That People Make (Chords)
Amanda Palmer – Ukulele Anthem (Chords)
Zooey Deschanel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt – What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve? (Chords)
Sherlock’s Theme (Tab)
Gotye – Somebody That I Used To Know (Chords)
Skrillex – Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites (Tab)

Year Six

I released my second book of Christmas tabs which I almost called Christmas Ukulele 2: Yuletide Boogaloo. Not doing so was probably the worst business decision I’ve ever made.

Three weird-ass scales

Tabs and chords:

Bob’s Burgers theme tab which briefly appeared in an ad for the show.
Taylor Swift (ft. The Civil Wars) – Safe and Sound (Tab)
The Muppet Show Theme (Tab)
Pi for Ukulele (Tab)
Elvis Costello – Shipbuilding (Tab)
Mike Love – No Regrets (Chords)

Year Seven

Great books by ukulele playing authors.
Three more weird-ass scales.

Tabs and chords:
The xx – Intro
WIUO – Afternoon Delight
I Am The Doctor
Gustavo Santaolla – The Last of Us Theme
A bunch of Pete Seeger songs
La Vie en Rose (Chords)
Daft Punk – Get Lucky (Chords)
Lorde – Royals (Chords)
Mr Moustafa from Grand Budapest Hotel (Tab)

Year Eight

Finishing off the Christmas tab ebook trilogy with Christmas Ukulele 3: Return of the Maji. Along with new editions of Ukulele Strums, Slide Ukulele, National Anthems and second edition of Blues Ukulele.

Tutorials for no hassle chord changes and lots of hassle strumming patterns.

Jonathan Lewis launched his excellent ebook of campanella arrangements of Irish tunes and wrote his introduction to campanella for Uke Hunt.

Tab and chords:

Pharrell’s Happy
Uptown Funk
Led Zep’s Rain Song
Medley of Arctic Monkeys AM album
the Nun Song from Orange is the New Black
Joe Brown’s classic version of I’ll See You in My Dreams
Frasier theme
Serial theme
Massive Attack’s Teardrop
Michael Jackson’s The Way You Make Me Feel

Year Nine

Tutorials:

Prince’s favourite chord trick
The easiest ways to improve your playing.
For Halloween some spooky ukulele sounds and a roundup of spine-chilling songs.
The most iconic strumming patterns

Tabs and chords:
Dave Brubeck’s Take Five: One of my favourite tabs which is lucky because it took me years to get to that stage.
Various songs from Steven Universe and all my Steven Universe tabs here.
ABBA’s Waterloo
Happy Birthday to You finally got released from the fraudulent clutches of Warner/Chappell and I celebrated with chords and two tabs of the tune.
David Beckinham’s superior version of Tiptoe Through the Tulips
A group arrangement of the Ghostbusters theme
Medley of songs from the Back to the Future trilogy
Damien Rice’s 9 Crimes

Year Ten

Release of my most recent ebook with tabs of traditional American tunes: Songs of the States.

The best chord progressions of all time.
Chuck Berry’s Major and Minor Pentatonic Trick.

Tabs and chords:

Tallest Man on Earth – King of Spain (Tab)
Prince’s Purple Rain
– Commemorating Leonard Cohen with Hallelujah and Suzanne.
Pure Imagination in tribute to Gene Wilder.
Norah Jones – Don’t Know Why (Tab)
Radiohead’s Paranoid Android
– After playing Life is Strange the inevitable Max and Chloe Theme (Tab) and Foals – Spanish Sahara (Chords).
The Beach Boys – Good Vibrations (Chords)

Leonard Cohen – Hallelujah (Tabs)

Leonard Cohen – Hallelujah (Tab)

I wrote up the chords for Hallelujah way back in 2008. But, since it’s a huge hit with ukulelists, I wanted to do an instrumental version as a little tribute to Leonard Cohen. And a tribute to Jeff Buckley since the intro is completely ripped off from his incredible version.

I try to keep most of my tabs fairly disciplined and work them up fully beforehand. It’s easier for people to read and learn that way. But be warned: this one I played pretty freely then tabbed out what I played. So the fingerpicking is all over the place.

In the verse the melody is everything played on the A-string plus the third fret of the E-string. Everything else is backing so should be played a little more softly. The chorus is more strange since the melody notes are played on the g-, C- and E-strings. I’ve notated all the melody notes with an accent > above them.

Links

Buy it on iTunes

Ukulele Picking Patterns in 3/4 Time

In the comments of the fingerpicking patterns post post Gretchen requested picking patterns for 3/4. Which was an excellent idea.

If you’re not familiar with it, there’s a guide to fingerpicking notation here. And there’s a beginner’s guide to fingerpicking here.

What is 3/4 Time?

Most pop songs are in 4/4 time. So you’d count along with them “1, 2, 3, 4” Joey Ramone style. But there are many songs in 3/4 time i.e. you count “1, 2, 3” along with the song.

Some well known songs in 3/4 time: Happy Birthday, Hallelujah, The Times they are a-Changing.

Thumb and Two Finger Patterns

Three patterns using the thumb and two finger method of picking.

PIMP Pattern

A very straight forward pattern with the thumb on the C-string.

Ex1

PIMIPI Pattern

Similar to the last pattern but now you’re going up and down the strings (and up a bit again).

Ex2

Unison Pattern

Here you’re playing the E and A-strings at the same time. There’s a bass note then the rest of chord. It’s something you hear a lot in 3/4 time.

Ex3

One Finger Per String Method

Now for three patterns using the One Finger Per String Picking Method.

PIMA Pattern

Going straight up the strings. But the first two notes are eighth notes and the second two quarter notes.

Ex4

Unison Pattern

Similar to the third pattern except this time playing the g-string alone. This example is a bit Beirut-y.

Ex5

IMP Pattern

Another example with strings being played in unison. But this time the g and E-strings being played at the same time.

Ex6

Friday Links

Wilfried Welti has a new Christmas ukulele ebook out: Christmas Music with the Ukulele. If, for some inexplicable reason, you’re in any doubt about buying it take a look at his previous free Christmas ebook Weihnachten mit der Ukulele.

Beck’s album of sheet music with ukulele chords is imminent and he has released the score to the song Old Shanghai which you can download on SongReader.net and make your own version of. There’s excellent uke version here and here’s my instrumental version.

For Sale:
– Pre-order Helen Arney’s ukulele chord book.
Gregorian Chant for Ukulele

Freebies:
– Lots of familiar voices from the old podcast. Bossarocker’s band Lou and the Llama have a session for ALL FM here, Podcast sessioneer Uke Punk has a new song available for download, as does Damon Hill.
Dookielele Green Day cover project.
Ukulele Clan Band’s The Sun
New Navy’s Regular Town.

Videos:
Johnny Ukulele (via UkulelePorn).
Rudy off of E4’s Misfits shared some life experience: “When you’re locked in a prison cell 23 hours a day there’s not much else to do than masturbate and play ukulele.” Watch it here if you’re in a suitable geographic area.

Photos:
Flea necklace
Eddie Vedder

Uke Hunt’s 1,500th Post

Yes, this is post number 1,500. And it’s just a mish-mash of stuff that reaching that milestone brought to mind.

If you’ve got any thoughts on any of these, leave a comment or send an email. I’d like to know what you think and which direction you’d like to see things go over the next 1,500 posts.

Updates

First off, it’s time to refresh things. The eagle-eyed amongst you will have noticed a few changes to the theme. There’s now a podcast bit on the front page and a Dummies bit in the sidebar. And a few other clean ups. If you spot any issues (like the titles in the How to Play and Review sections are screwy) please do let me know. And if you’re seeing a font like this for the post title (on the website) rather than the Saul Bass type font in the header, could you leave a comment.

I’m also rewriting the ebooks and giving them the same look as the blog. That might mean some of them disappear for a little while before they get a re-release.

And there are a lot of old/outdated news and window shopping posts. What do you think I should do with those? Delete them? Leave them? Rewrite them to make them more timeless?

Slowing Down

Realising I’d written 1,500 posts, ten ebooks and a 360 page paper book made me wonder if I’d written more about the ukulele than anyone else ever. Anyone know of any other contenders?

After doing all that, I’ve decided to slow down posts here. So I’ll be doing one-week-on, one-week-off for a while and seeing how that goes.

If you’re desperate for more, I’ll probably be upping the amount of stuff I post on Tumblr, Twitter and Google+. I’ve been posting a few previews and extra bits of tab to my circles on Google+. So if you’re on there add me and I’ll put you in the ‘Ukulele Players’ circle. Unless your only following me to get in my pants in which case I’ll add you to the ‘Pants’ circle (but I think circles are limited to 5,000 so that one is going to fill up quickly).

Favourite Posts

1,500 posts in and I’ve posted loads of stuff I love, a few things I used to like and now I’m not so sure about, some stuff I don’t like (those are the most popular), and plenty of deeply unpopular stuff.

Here’s a round-up of the stuff I like most.

My Favourite Tabs

Magnum P.I. Theme
Irish Washerwoman
Ellie Goulding – Starry Eyed
Duelling Banjos
Five Black Keys Riffs
Jonsi – Go Do
Sigur Ros – Hoppipolla
Penguin Cafe Orchestra – Music for a Found Harmonium
Harry Potter – Hedwig’s Theme
Jay-Z – Death of Auto-Tune
Iron & Wine – Naked As We Came
Elliott Brood – The Valley Town
James Bond Theme
Star Wars – Cantina Band
The Office: An American Workplace Theme
Match of the Day Theme

My Favourite Chords

Bon Iver/Kina Grannis – Michicant
Jonathan Coulton & GLaDOS – Want You Gone
Carly Simon – Nobody Does It Better
Mumford & Sons – The Cave
Mr B the Gentleman Rhymer – Chap-Hop History
Sophie Madeleine – Take Your Love With Me (The Ukulele Song)
Melissa Polinar – Beyond the Blue Horizon
Bon Iver – Skinny Love
Erika Eigen – I Want To Marry A Lighthouse Keeper
The Pogues – Streams of Whiskey
The Ramones – Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight)
Beirut – Elephant Gun
Gothic Archies – Scream and Run Away

My Favourite Interviews

Jim Tranquada
Cory McAbee
Bob Brozman
Kate Micucci

My Favourite Wednesday Posts

Podcast 8 with Helen Arney
Podcast 4 with Uke Punk
10 Things You Hear About Ukuleles That Might Be Bollocks
10 Things I Wish I’d Known About Ukuleles Before I Bought One
10 Things I Learnt From John King
10 Reasons It’s Easier To Learn Guitar Than Ukulele
Ten Reasons You NEED To Buy A New Ukulele

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