How To Play Blues Ukulele PDF
How To Play Blues Ukulele PDF
How To Play Blues Ukulele PDF
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Contents
Introduction
Page 3
2 Blues Riffs
Page 23
5 Blues Soloing
Page 46
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Introduction
"Blues on the ukulele? Don't be ridiculous."
That's the reaction you're likely to get from most people. Don't listen to them.
There's a long history of blues ukers from 'Papa' Charlie Jackson through Rabbit
Muse to players like Jason Arimoto today. More importantly than that, it
doesn't matter which instrument you're playing the blues on - or even which
notes you're playing - but why you're playing them.
I was discussing the issue of blues on the ukulele with Todd Mauldin singer/guitarist with The Hellbusters and keen uker - and he quoted Cornel
West's response to being asked if he was optimistic about the future:
"I'm a blues man. A blues man is a prisoner of hope. Hope wrestles with despair,
but it doesn't generate optimism.
It just generates this energy to be
courageous, to bear witness, to see what the end is going to be. No guarantee,
unfinished, open-ended. I'm a prisoner of hope. I'm going to die full of hope."
And Todd added to this:
"A blues man with a ukulele is by definition a prisoner of hope... hope that this
little instrument will be able to express the soul of man. I encourage you to
approach the blues with your instrument without apology... you may be far
removed from "the land where the blues began" and of different economic,
social and racial strata than some blues exponents, but that isn't remotely
important... since clearly it resonates with you at a deep elemental level, as it
does with everybody who has the blues, which is every living human. The
freedom and rebellion worked for you. Good! Me, it's the spiritual side, the
battle of good and evil in the human heart and soul. Some just dig the rhythm.
We own it all in this art and when you know the "why", your individual, specific
particular "why", then the "what" is easy."
So once you've figured out why, the rest of the book will help you out with the
easy part of what to play.
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Almost all the examples in this book are played using the shuffle rhythm.
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|C
|C
| F7 | F7
| G7 | F7
|C
|C
|C
|C
|C
|C
|
|
|
Once you get to the end of the pattern, you can go straight back to the
beginning or finish up with one strum of the root chord (in this case C) as I
do in this example.
I've gone with the C5 chord shape for C. This gives the chord more
ambiguity which suits the bluesy sound. But going with the usual C chord
will also sound right.
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|A
|A
|A
| D7 | D7 | A
| E7 | D7 | A
|A
|A
|A
|
|
|
|1st chord
|1st chord
|1st chord
|1st chord
|1st chord
|1st chord
|
|
|
So in the key of C the first chord is C, the second chord is F7 and the third
chord is G7.
If you are familiar with chord theory, you'll recognise this as a I-IV-V:
|I
|IV7
|V7
|I
|IV7
|IV7
|I
|I
|I
|I
|I
|I
|
|
|
If you're not into chord theory and that makes no sense to you, ignore it!
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C#
F#7
G#7
G7
A7
Eb
Ab7
Bb7
A7
B7
Bb7
C7
F#
B7
C#7
C7
D7
G#
C#7
D#7
D7
E7
Bb
Eb7
F7
E7
F#7
|1st chord=G
|2nd chord=C7
|2nd chord=C7
|1st chord=G
|1st chord=G
|1st chord=G
|1st chord=G |
|1st chord=G |
|1st chord=G |
So you'd get
|G
|C7
|D7
|G
|C7
|C7
|G
|G
|G
|G
|G
|G
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|
|
|
|C
| F7
| G7
| F7
| Adim
| F7
|C
|C
|C
|C
|C
|C
G7
|
|
|
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The most common place to find variations in the 12 bar blues pattern is in
the turnaround, i.e. the last two bars of the progressions. Here's a
turnaround I like to use in the key of A:
Example 6
|A
| D7
| E7
| D7
| D7
| D7
|A
|A
|A
|A
| A A7 D Dm | A F7 E7
|
|
|
There's a lot going on in the last two bars of that progression. It creates a
great run of descending notes, an idea we'll come back to when we look at
turnarounds in more depth.
The strumming pattern for the last two bars is quite tricky. Here it is:
You can mix and match and play around with the patterns and come up with
your own variations.
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When I'm playing this one, I'm stopping the G string from ringing by bringing
my thumb over the neck and resting it against the G string.
Finally, two bars of G:
Example 7c
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Throw these into the 12 bar chord pattern and you get this:
Example 8
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The same thing can be done in any key - you can find a full list of patterns
in the folder marked 'Appendix'. For example, it would go like this in A.
Example 9
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There are plenty of variations of this pattern around. For example, you
could switch back to the original chord between the 6 and 7 chords like
this:
Example 10a
Or change the strumming pattern. This next example creates a little jump
in the rhythm by missing out one of the down strums.
Example 10b
This next example uses a triplet strum. For this one, I strum down with my
index finger, down with my thumb then up with my index finger. You can
see a demonstration by Lil Rev here.
Example 10c
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|A
|A
F#m
| A7
| Bm7 E7
| D7
| A D7
| Adim
|
| A E7+5 |
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| Cm | Cm | Cm | Cm |
| Ab7 | Ab7 | Cm | Cm |
| Ab7 | G7 | Cm | Cm |
|
|
|
|
C
C
C
C
| A7
| A7
| C7
| A7
|D7 G7 | C
|
|D7
| G7 |
|F
| Adim |
|D7 G7| C
|
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|C
|C
| F9 | F9
| G9 | F9
|C
| C7
|C
|C
| C F9
|
|
| C7 Ab9 G9 |
I'm using a Lust for Life inspired rhythm and it's a little tricky.
The strum pattern stretches across two bars. The pattern starts with three
down strums. You want to keep these strums fairly short. After you've
strummed, release the pressure on the chord until it stops sounding (but
you're still touching the string) to give it a staccato sound.
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After the three down strums, comes three up strums. Then you're down, up,
down, up until the end.
Example 14b
In the second bar, you have to slide down the entire chord shape from Ab9
to G9.
And while we're on the subject of interesting rhythms...
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When you're strumming this, it's important to keep your strumming hand
moving in a steady up-down rhythm. The up arrows are down strums and
the down arrows are up strums (it's confusing, I know).
For the rests (the diagonal line with a couple of dots sitting on it), you
strum but don't hit the strings. For the deadened notes (the rows of Xs), you
strum but rest your fretboard hand on the strings so they just make a
'chunk' sound.
It doesn't matter too much if you produce 'chunk' where a rest should be or
vice versa. But make sure you create the full chords in the right place to
make the syncopated rhythm.
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Bo Diddley would often throw in the same chord higher up the fretboard
and create something like this:
Example 16
Put them both together and you get example 17 (on the next page).
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Example 17
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2 Blues Riffs
As the blues developed it became increasingly common for blues songs to
be based on riffs (short, repeated musical phrase) rather than chords.
Blues musicians such as Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker - whose styles
we'll be covering in this section - extensively used riffs in their songs and
were a huge influence on the musicians of the blues revival in the 1960s. So
much so that bands reworked old blues songs with riffs - the most
successful of these being Cream's electrifying retake of Robert Johnson's
Crossroads.
This chapter takes a look at a number of different riffs and shows how you
can combine riffs, strums and the 12 bar pattern for the ultimate blues
accompaniment.
2.1 Muddy Waters Style Riff
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This is a guitar style way of playing it except I use my thumb rather than a
pick.
For a version that suits the uke more, you can add some chord notes to
flesh out the sound such as this version in G:
Example 19
This version also contains deadened notes (the crosses). These are produced
by resting your fretting lightly on the strings (just heavily enough to stop
the strings ringing) so that it creates a 'chunk' rather than a note.
To pick this one, I use my thumb to strum down on the G and C strings and
my index finger to strum up on the E and A strings.
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Again, I'm using my thumb to pick this one. But this time I'm also resting the
underside of my strumming hand against the string to deaden it slightly.
This is one of the few examples in the book not played with a shuffle
rhythm.
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Riffs can be arranged into the standard 12 bar blues pattern by shifting
them up to match the chord changes.
To create a 12 bar pattern from this riff in C, you'd need to move it up five
frets so it's in F:
Example 22
There are a couple of ways you can pick these patterns depending on how
fast you want to play them. The easy way is to use your thumb for all the
notes. But if you want to play it at a high tempo, you'll have to use your
index and middle fingers alternately (making a 'running man' type motion
with them).
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Putting all the patterns together in a 12 bar format would go like this:
Example 24
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Moving it up five frets gives you the pattern for the F part of the 12 bar
blues.
Example 25b
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Rather than just playing the riff in each key, you can mix things up a little
by switching between the riff and the chords like this.
Example 26
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They say every novel needs a beginning, a middle and an end. Equally,
every blues song needs a beginning, a miserable and an end.
Luckily for us, blues beginnings, middles and ends are pretty much
interchangeable. You can take an intro and use it as a turnaround or, with a
slight adjustment, as an outro.
In this chapter, we'll be looking at a few intro and turnaround options from
the likes of Robert Johnson and Stevie Ray Vaughan, umpteen different
ways to use chromatic notes for your intros and the minor change you have
to make to turn these into outros.
3.1 Stevie Ray Vaughan Style
3.2 Robert Johnson Style
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The last chord in bars one and two sound very discordant on their own. But
in the context, and when played quickly, they add movement to the
progression.
At the end of this phrase you can either go straight back to the beginning of
the 12 bar pattern or you can play an A chord to turn it into an outro.
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This version you can play just strumming. For the doubled notes I strummed
all of them downwards with my thumb. Then used my index finger for the
dampened notes and the full chords.
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Robert Johnson used extensive fingerpicking for his playing, which would
translate to something like this on the uke:
Example 29
Here I'm using my thumb to play the notes on the C string and my index
finger to play the notes on the E string. Then I switch to strumming for the
chords.
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You can play this example in the key of C just by moving everything up
three frets.
Example 30b
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This strummed version can be adapted in many ways and played fingerpicking style like this:
Example 31
In order to pick these examples, I'm using my thumb on the C string, index
finger on the E string and middle finger on the A string for the first half. For
the E7 chord, I move each finger down a string (so the thumb is on the G
string, index finger on the C string, middle finger on the E string and ring
finger on the A string). If you need a refresher on notation for fingerpicking,
you can find it here.
Another popular variation is this:
Example 32
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This version opens up the possibility of creating a little melody on the top
string alongside the descending pattern.
Example 33
This is a little tricky to play, but it's very effective so well worth practicing.
Using the re-entrant string, you can play this variation of example 29
Example 34
Here you are playing the same notes on the G string as you were on the A
string and leaving the E and A strings to ring open - creating a slightly
different feel.
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At the top of the arrow is a number. This indicates how much you should
bend the note. 1/2 means that you bend the string up 1 fret. In the
example above, you pick the note at the seventh fret as usual, then bend
the string until it is the same pitch as a note played at the eighth fret. This
takes a fair bit of practice to get right, particularly on the uke. Here's a
common lick with bends in the key of C.
Example 36
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In blues, you'll often hear bent notes along with stable notes.
In example 37 you play both the E and A strings at the seventh fret and
bend just the E string.
Example 37
Example 38 is similar but you play the E string, bend it, play the A string
(while the E string is still bent), then play the E string again and release the
note.
Example 38
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Varying the amount of bend and the speed will give you different forms of
vibrato. BB King, for example, has a very rapid vibrato.
As with bending, controlling vibrato on nylon strings is much more
challenging than steel strings. An alternative way of creating vibrato is to
rock you finger on the string creating a small movement within the fret.
This creates a more subtle form of vibrato.
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In this example, you play the E string at the third fret as usual then
hammer down your index finger at the fifth fret.
Example 41
Pull-offs are the exact opposite. First you play the higher note while
fretting the lower note as well. Then take your finger off so the lower note
sounds.
If you pull the string down very slightly when you release it, you can
produce a little extra volume in the string which means you can keep a
series of hammer-ons and pull-offs going indefinitely.
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Example 42
Hammer-ons and pull offs are often used as grace notes i.e. very short
notes before the note itself. They are tabbed like this:
Example 43
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This is a slide in 'from nowhere'. The slide is so quick, it's not clear where it
starts. You play it by starting to sliding from two or three frets lower than
the target note as soon as, or even slightly before, you pick the note.
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With bends being tricky on the ukulele, slides made a great substitute. For
example, the large bend at the end of example 36 is quite tricky and could
be replaced with a slide to make this:
Example 46
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5 Blues Soloing
Almost all blues solos are improvised. However, they are improvised within
tight boundaries. The most confusing insult I've ever received was, "That's
not improvising, you're just making it up as you go along." As oxymoronic as
that seems, there is a truth in it. Improvising isn't just playing anything at
all. To be effective, it has to be more focused.
The blues form is one of the most restrictive there is. Most blues solos
contain no more than six notes, and many just five.
Every blues player has a set of licks (short musical phrases) that they can
pull out during a solo and create variations on. This chapter takes you
through three different scales you can use as a basis for your improvising
and gives you plenty of licks based on these scales.
5.1 Minor Pentatonic Scale
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On the mp3, and with all the scales patterns, I start out with the root chord
(in this case C) to set the tone for the scale.
And this on the fretboard:
In this diagram, the red squares indicate the notes that fall within the C
minor pentatonic with the filled in squares being the root notes. Later on,
it's going to be important that you know which notes in the scale are the
root notes.
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You can use any of the notes in this pattern to solo over a chord progression
in the key of C (you can use the backing tracks in the MP3 folder or record
your own).
For example, here's the sort of lick you could play using these notes:
Example 48
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Here, the root note (C) is the first and last note of the pattern.
To play over a chord progression in D, all you have to do is shift the pattern
up two frets so the root notes are now Ds (C string second fret and D string
fifth fret).
If you wanted to play in F, you'd move the pattern up so the pattern starts
on the fifth fret.
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To illustrate the idea, take this very simple (and boring) lick using the C
minor pentatonic scale:
Example 50a
In the key of D, every note in the lick would be two frets higher:
Example 50b
You can find tab for the minor pentatonic scale in every key in the
appendix.
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This pattern contains the same notes as the first pattern we looked at but
with the notes in a different position on the fretboard e.g. the fifth fret on
the C string is the same as the first fret on the E string.
There's a slight difference between patterns and scales. Scales always start
and end with the root note, whereas this pattern - and the ones that follow
- contain the notes of the scale in any order. The idea is to have these
patterns in your mind as you're improvising and select notes from them.
Because the pattern itself doesn't start or end with the root note, you need
to be careful to emphasize the root note - the ones that are blocked in red.
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Playing with the second position patten opens up new sounds and new licks.
It is probably the most popular pattern for playing blues licks as it is the
first position of the scale on the guitar.
Example 54
On the mp3 you can hear it played slowly on its own, then up to speed with
a backing.
Example 55
And you can combine notes from this pattern and the first position pattern.
Here's a simple example going from the second position to the first:
Example 56
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And here's another, slightly more involved, one going in the opposite
direction:
Example 57
Like the first scale shape, this one can be moved up and down the neck to
fit with the key you're playing in.
So D would be two frets higher like this:
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This shape is particularly handy when you're playing in the key of A since
you can play any of the strings open.
Or this:
Example 59
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The bend in this example is slightly different as it is done with the index
finger. This is a little tougher to do and might take a little practice.
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This pattern works well in the key of D where you can use plenty of open
notes.
Example 66
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This pattern fits with the original, first position pattern to give you this:
So you can play licks that mix these two patterns together such as this.
Example 68
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Example 69
In this phrase you have the 'question' ending on the A string which is
sustained over the answer played mainly on the reentrant string.
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The extra note fits into some of the positions more comfortably than others
- you can find a full list of blues scale patterns in the appendix. It fits into
the fourth position nicely.
Example 72
In the same way we did with the minor pentatonic in Example 53, you can
use the twelve bar blues and the blues scale together to create a solo blues
piece such as this. Again, it's a two bar intro followed by a 12 bar blues
pattern.
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The same is true all the way up the neck. Any of the A minor pentatonic
patterns will work as a C major pentatonic.
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Probably the most famous blues song featuring the major pentatonic is
Hideaway by Freddie King and later covered by the Eric Clapton era
Bluesbreakers.
Here's something in a similar style.
Example 76
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Once you're familiar with both the minor and major pentatonic scales, you
can try combining notes from both of them into a single phrase.
This gives you plenty of notes to choose from. Here's one pattern in the key
of C:
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Chuck Berry regularly used notes from both minor and major pentatonic
scales in ways like this.
Example 78
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I'm finishing off this chapter with one of my favourite ways to finish a song,
here's an outro - in the key of A - which uses notes from the major
pentatonic, minor pentatonic and blues scales. It's one of the most
ridiculous licks I've ever played and, therefore, a whole lot of fun.
Example 79
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Moderate
h = 80
Example 33
44
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If you have any questions, queries or comments, I'd love to hear from you.
You can email me at
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or
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Credits
Cover photo: e-uke by R.W.W. used under creative commons licence.
Fonts: Header - Hotel Coral Essex by Jason Ramirez
Titles - Boris Black Bloxx
2008 HowToPlayUkulele.com