21 Sep 12 - 05:53 AM (#3408135) Subject: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Northerner I am learning to play ukulele and guitar (going to classes). The teacher provides us with song sheets. These are OK to practise on in class but I wouldn't want to play them at a folk club as they are very hackneyed and uninspiring. I sing British folk songs, currently unaccompanied. I prefer to have the music as well as the chords and lyrics. I do have a few song books as well as searching for material online. Part of my problem is that I sing contralto so I have to transpose material - sometimes awkward chords. It's frustrating. I'm currently looking for good songs that use the C family that I can play on my uke. I don't need the chord diagrams. Any ideas on ways to make this easier? |
21 Sep 12 - 06:11 AM (#3408144) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: GUEST,matt milton I've only very recently bought a uke. (Banjo and guitar are my main things.) I more or less instantly found that Wildwood Flower is very easy to play on the uke. OK, so it's not a British folk song, but well worth a go. Cue more knowledgable Mudcatters than me weighing in to point out the English origins of this song or something! :) You can play a really simple version of it just alternating strumming the uke completely openly with a chord that's just one finger on the 2nd fret of the C string and first fret of the E string. |
21 Sep 12 - 06:26 AM (#3408153) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Northerner Thank you Matt. I believe I have come across that one on YouTube. I'll check it out. I will check it out. I don't mind singing a few American songs. I can understand the teachers' needs - they have to cater for students from varied backgrounds and they also don't want to be spending too much money. I think they will be quite happy for me to provide them with occasional songs to use in class provided that they are at the right level for the other students. "Yellow Submarine" is fine in class but I am not going to sing it at a folk club... |
21 Sep 12 - 11:08 AM (#3408227) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: GUEST,Easy Yes Wildwood flower carter family song very simple 3 chords. I find British Folk on the whole have rather had chords, especially for arthritic fingers like mine. But for Irish Trad, country and some folk, Martin Dardis's site unitedirelandtripod.ie (0r com?) or just put in martin dardis. Most of the songs have been reduced to simple chords for buskers and 3 chord merchants like me. Also Roughstock Country and Classic country have good sites. One English song I'd reccomend is Sammy's Bar by Cyril Tawney, easy chords and always goes down well for me |
21 Sep 12 - 01:26 PM (#3408288) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Northerner Thank you Easy. I'll check these out. Of course the chords may no longer be easy if I have to transpose the music into another key. |
21 Sep 12 - 05:52 PM (#3408431) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Tootler Diane, here is a list of songs I do in C on ukulele all of which you can do in a folk club. Blowin' in the Wind Calico Printer's Clerk Coulter's Candy Deportees Sloop John B Last Thing on my Mind Mormond Braes On Raglan Road Ramblin' Boy Down by the Sally Gardens Whiskey in the Jar Follow the Heron Four Pence a Day So Long it's Been Good to Know You Jovial Beggarman She Walk's Alone Green Banks of Grain PS I'm conscious I have a PM from you I need to reply to. I will try and deal with it soon. |
21 Sep 12 - 07:33 PM (#3408467) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Northerner Hello Geoff. Thank you, I'll check out those songs. I already have the chords for Blowing In The Wind as I play it in class and it's in the right key for me. I had also discovered that Mormond Braes uses similar chords. I need to check whether the songs are in the right key for my voice. My voice is lower than average. I have a good voice but it is not an average voice. I played guitar when I was younger and found that I needed to transpose every song. When you transpose music you can get some awkward keys. Anyway I'll try the songs on your list. Thank you very much! |
22 Sep 12 - 12:46 AM (#3408555) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Genie Here are some forum threads that may give you some ideas, NorthernerTwo chord songs seeking two chord songs two chord songs needed There are also a LOT of three-chord songs. Most of Woody Guthrie's songs, many country songs, blues, Gospel and folk ballads -- too many to list. But here are a few easy ones: Goodnight, Irene Roll On, Columbia (almost the same melody as "Irene") This Land Is Your Land 500 Miles Sixteen Tons Proud Mary Four Strong Winds You Ain't Goin' Nowhere I'll Fly Away Keep On The Sunnyside The Frozen Logger The Gambler (4 easy chords) MTA (Wreck Of The Old 97) Paradise (John Prine) Last Night I Had The Strangest Dream I Saw The Light Margaritaville Come Back, Paddy Reilly The Wild Rover Hobo's Lullaby Green Rolling Hills Of West Virginia La Bamba Cielito Lindo Red River Valley Kisses Sweeter Than Wine On The Wings Of A Dove |
22 Sep 12 - 01:39 AM (#3408561) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Artful Codger There are several threads that list good uke songs and "three-chord" songs. I find that even the 3-chord songs really need a few more transition chords or alternate chords to be musically satisfying, but that doesn't sound like a problem for you. I find the best songs to start with are the ones I already know (that's hundreds completely by memory and tens of thousands that I know the tunes and major chunks of). Browse through your tunebooks and play through your recording collections, paying attention to the songs you like where there only seem to be a limited number of chords. There are also large song compendiums like (dare I mention it?) Rise Up Singing; most of the songs included have only simple chords. One reason I like ABC notation is that many ABC converters (like the folkinfo.org ABC Converter) support transposition, which includes transposition of embedded chord names. So you can search Mudcat or folkinfo.org or JC's Tunefinder or The Session or abcnotation.org for suitable songs; they all use ABC extensively (or even exclusively), though often the ABCs have only the dots, not any chord symbols. If you have lyrics in plain-text form with embedded chords, you can try an online transposing utility such as these: Tab-Transposer: http://tabtransposer.com/ logue chord changer: http://www.logue.net/xp/ To find a chord for ukulele or other standard 4-string instrument (like mandolin), try this site: ChordFind.com 4-string chord finder: http://4stringchords.com/ Unlike most online chord utilities I've seen, this one can find chords relative to any starting fret position on the neck. It can also "name that chord" given the fingered fret positions. |
22 Sep 12 - 04:07 AM (#3408575) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Northerner Thank you Genie and Artful Codger. I will look through all those. I will also give this thread a mention when I go to my classes this week as there may well be other students who would enjoy finding some easy songs to practise on. |
22 Sep 12 - 04:41 AM (#3408579) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: Genie I agree with the Codger. There are a lot of ways to make a 2 or 3 chord instrumental background more interesting, with passing cords, modulations (e.g., shifting from the major to the 7th in places), doing melody runs, etc. In fact, I had been playing Jambalaya for years before I heard someone mention it had only two chords and discovered it actually did. It's so easy to play the melody on Jambalaya, on guitar in the key of G, anyway, that I seldom actually played the full chords, but mainly did Carter-family style melody runs, sometimes hitting two strings at once. (It might be harder to do that on a uke or in some other keys.) |
22 Sep 12 - 04:58 AM (#3408584) Subject: RE: Easy chord songs for uke and guitar? From: AnneMC I found heaps of great free downloadable ukulele song books (with ukulele chord diagrams for learners) simply by entering "ukulele booklet + pdf" in a Google search. Many ukulele clubs have free pdf song books on their websites. You don't have to print a whole booklet, just choose the pages that you want. Also the Chordie web site will give you a lot of songs, and you can select to show the ukulele chord diagrams. Also you can transpose at the site. |