

When it comes to the ukulele, standard notation has some serious shortcomings. Sharps and flats are indicated with a sharp (#) or flat ( b) before the note like this: You might have noticed that none of the notes we’ve discussed are sharp or flat. This blank tab and staff paper will also work for any.
Ukulele tab notes sheet free#
Like tab, you read music left to right with notes that are vertical are played at the same time e.g. Use this free printable ukulele tab and staff paper for notating your own ukulele tabs & melodies. The D hangs underneath the stave, and the C is on a line drawn underneath it. On the uke, there are two notes that fall below this: C and D. If you’re not familiar with the word ‘egbdf’, there are plenty of mnemonics to remember it such as Every Good Boy Deserves Football (or any other f-word you think a boy might enjoy). The notes that fall in between the lines spell “FACE” from bottom to top. Anyway, we’ll only play the string (or strings) that has a number on. Watch out: if we come across a 0, we will pluck the string on which it appears, without pressing any fret. Whether the stems of the notes go up or down doesn’t make any difference at all. That is to say, if we see, for example, a 2 on the first line, we’ll press the second fret of the first string and we’ll make it sound. Here are the notes as they compare to the tab Each time you shift up a position, you go up to the next white key on the piano (C,D,E,F,G,A,B etc.) The dots can appear on the lines or between them. Notes are indicated by the position of the dots: the higher up the stave a dot is, the higher the note. Like tab, there are a bunch of horizontal lines (known as a stave), but that’s where the similarity ends. So I’m just going over how musical notation indicates pitch.
Ukulele tab notes sheet full#
There are certain similarities with tab such as rhythms and repeats (there’s a full guide to reading ukulele tab here). I thought I’d knock together a short post in the hope of making all those squiggles and splatters a little more decipherable. For some reason, there are a few ukulele books that use only standard notation (such as the Jumpin’ Jim books and some of the Ukulele Masters series).


Compared to tabs, reading standard notation is a complete pain in the arse.
