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Curt Sheller | All Things `Ukulele and Jazz Guitar

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Jazz Ukulele

Jazz Ukulele lessons available through Curt Sheller

kala-archtop-BW-angle-sm.pngJazz Ukulele - There is a whole section of the site dedicated to Jazz Ukulele. With player links and information, "jazz" chords, scale, improv, comping, lessons, solo melody and chord arrangements, TABS and more…

Alternate Fingerings for F7

Lesson Code: UL118
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Alternate fingerings for F7 in C tuning. The same fingerings would apply to C7 in G tuning and G7 in D tuning.

These are taken from the Ukulele Chord of the Week lessons presented 2007.

Lessons Link

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Alterted Seventh Chords on Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL102
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Beyond basic open position chords, basic movable form chords and a core set of 4-part chords. There are just too many chords shapes too memorize. Learning the principles of how chords are constructed and the ukulele fingerboard are the way to go. Yu can then create more advanced chords like 9#11, 7#5-9, 13b5, 7+9 on the fly as needed from your core set of chords.

Lessons Link

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An Introduction to Creating Solo Ukulele Arrangements

Lesson Code: UL125
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Creating a solo ukulele chord arrangement is as simple as harmonizing a melody by playing a chord that has the melody note as the top note of the chord. This style of playing is called Chord Melody or Melody and Chord. The hard part comes with - What chord voicing? When should I play a chord? When are single notes OK? And a few other issues usually pop up.

Luckily we don't have to wait for monster chops, a massive chord vocabulary or endless hours of practicing scales and chords to play the ukulele in this style. Although practice is a good idea and never hurts, all we need are a few chords and single notes to have hours of ukulele fun. What you already know can lead to hours of enjoyment.

Lessons Link

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Building a Solid Jazz Chord Foundation for Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL103
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Beyond learning basic openposition ukulele chords. Most ukulele players struggle with advanced chords. These more sophisticated voicings, commonly called jazz chords, find a wide use in all forms of music and styles. These 4-part chords are the bread and butter of jazz ukulele.

Lessons Link

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Classic Endings for Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL03
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Two Feel, bVImaj7 bIImaj7, Basie Ending, Single, Double and Triple Tags, Chromatic, Take the 'A' Train Ending, Shave and a Hair Cut, Lawrence Welk Ending, . . . These are common songs ending that are used over and over in the standard song repetoire.

Lessons Link

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Cool Ukulele Chords

Lesson Code: UL34
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Cool Chords - These are the chords that don't typically show up in chord dictionaries or song books. They might show up in software programs that produce chords based on some underlying computer algorithm.

These are the chords players ask, "What is THAT chord"?

Bennt Chong is a master of these chords.

Lessons Link

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Cool Ukulele Chords - G7

Lesson Code: UL105
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

A cool chord is most likely a Free Form chord. These free form chords typically include open strings, wide stretches, displaced chord tones and or chord voicings. Plus they just sound cool.

Here is a cool sounding G7 chord.

Lessons Link

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Core Chords - Creating the Big Six from F7, 1st Voicing

Lesson Code: UL42a
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Taking a movable F7 chord, you can derive each of the 'big six' essential chords. 7, maj7, m7, m7b5, dim7, and aug7.

Lessons Link

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Core Chords - Creating the Big Six from F7, 2nd Voicing

Lesson Code: UL42b
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Taking a movable F7 chord, you can derive each of the 'big six' essential chords. 7, maj7, m7, m7b5, dim7, and aug7.

Lessons Link

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Core Chords - Creating the Big Six from F7, 3rd Voicing

Lesson Code: UL42c
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Taking a movable F7 chord, you can derive each of the “big six” essential chords. 7, maj7, m7, m7b5, dim7, and aug7.

Lessons Link

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Core Chords - Creating the Big Six from F7, 4th Voicing

Lesson Code: UL42d
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Taking a movable F7 chord, you can derive each of the “big six” essential chords. maj7, m7, m7b5, dim7, and aug7.

Lessons Link

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Core Chords - The Big Six - Building a Solid Chord Foundation

Lesson Code: UL42
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Core Chords is a series of lessons for building your 4-part chords. These chords commonly called jazz chords, are really just 4-part chords used in a wide range of musical styles.

The Big Six chords include: Seventh 7, Major Seventh maj7, Minor Seventh m7, Half Diminished Seventh or Minor Seven Flat Five diminished 7 (m7b5), Diminished Seventh o7 and Augmented Seventh +7. These six chords form a core set of chords.

Lessons Link

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Creating Introductions and Turnarounds for Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL01
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Introductions are a composed or improvised piece of music that introduces - sets the stage for - a song or composition. Introductions, or intro for short, are used in all types of music. In this lesson, the focus is on introductions in contemporary music.

Intros can be various lengths but are typically four measures long. They are mainly harmonic in nature, using chords without a melody. Single notes and intervals can be added for melodic color.

Lessons Link

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Diminished Scale for Ukulele - C Tuning

Lesson Code: UL25b
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

The Diminished scale is a symmetrical scale with a repeating pattern of whole steps and half steps. You only need to learn the Diminished scale in three keys to cover all 15 keys.

Lessons Link

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Exploring Jazz Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL123
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Wikipedia defines Jazz as a musical art form which originated at the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States from a confluence of African and European music traditions. The style's West African pedigree is evident in its use of blue notes, improvisation, polyrhythms, syncopation, and the swung note.

At a minimum to explore jazz or contemporary music on a ukulele you need a core set of chords and scales. It's this foundation or core that you can build on.

This lesson contains links and resources for developing as a jazz ukulele player. And, a great overview of what is needed as far as chords, scale and the essential elements that are needed to explore jazz on a ukulele.

Lessons Link

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Naming Chords on Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL20
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

A Chord can have alternate names based on how it is being used. A chord's function is an important determining factor in naming a chord. So unless you know the harmonic function you might not be able to accurately name it.

Lessons Link

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Practice Cycles and Sequences

Lesson Code: UL18
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Sequences and cycles for practicing scales, intervals, melodic sequences and arpeggios.

These sequences also help in learning where any interval is of a given note, the chord tones of chords and aide in memorizing scales.

Lessons Link

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Six Essential Scales for Ukulele

Lesson Code: UL04
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

The six essential scale are: Blues, Major Pentatonic, Mixolydian, Dorian, Aeolian, and Ionian.

There are two scales that can be the memorized and all other essential scales referenced from these two. These two scales are the Major and Natural Minor scales. The Major and Natural Minor scales are traditional scales and common scales in all forms of contemporary music. This lesson explores the Major and Natural Minor scales and their derivations.

From these two scales the Blues, Major Pentatonic, Mixolydiand and Dorian scale can be created.

Lessons Link

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The Major Scale

Lesson Code: UL124
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

The Major Scale or Ionian scale is a diatonic scale, made up of seven distinct notes, plus an eighth which duplicates the first one octave higher. In solfege these notes correspond to the syllables "Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Ti/Si, (Do)", the "Do" in the parenthesis at the end being the octave of the root.

The simplest major scale to write or play on the piano is C major, the only major scale that does not require sharps or flats. The C major scale uses only the white keys on the piano keyboard.

Lessons Link

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Transposing Chords

Lesson Code: UL05
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Transposition is the process of moving note, chord, scale or any musicial passage from one key to another key. All music can be transposed, from a single note to a complex musicial score. This lesson deals with transposing chords. This lessons covers transposing chords.

With the supplied ukulele fingerboard chart and knowing thenames of any chord. You can tranpose a chords to different keys.

Lessons Link

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Upper Partial Chord Tones

Lesson Code: UL109
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

Upper Partials or extensions are the 9th, 11th, and 13ths of a chord. The 9, 11 and 13 can be altered chord tones depending on chord type: examples b9, #9, #11, b13.

Lessons Link

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What is the different between a Scale and a Mode?

Lesson Code: UL110
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

A scale and mode can contain exactly the same notes. So when it is a scale and when is it a mode?

This lesson explores the content that determine when a scale is a mode.

Lessons Link

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Whole Tone Scale for Ukulele - C Tuning

Lesson Code: UL25
Published: December 31, 1969
Updated: December 31, 1969

Lesson Info

The Whole Tone scale is a symmetrical scale with an equal distance been each note or scale degree. Each scale degree is a whole step from the previous. You only need two whole tone scales to cover all keys.

Lessons Link

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Hard Copy Book: $12.95
PDF Download: $4.95

Ukulele for Guitar Players

This book is for current and former guitar players discovering the ukulele for the first time or returning to the instrument.

Ukulele for Guitar Players is a guide to transferring the accumulated experience and knowledge gained as a guitar played to the ukulele. Or exploring the possibilities that the ukulele offer. Covers chords, scale and an introduction to reading standard music notation on ukulele.

The ukulele is both a different instrument than the guitar and at the same time a lot like the guitar.

Guitar players that also play the ukulele find that it gives them a different and fresh look at how they also approach the guitar.

More info and complete samples of entire book.

Thanks for visiting and checking out my site!

Content is always being added and updated. So check-in often. Thanks, Curt

P.S. You may think from the look of it that Curt Sheller Publications is a slick, profitable business, but it's actually not (maybe a car payment a month, cheap car). I spend a lot and time money creating the content, lessons and books for this site (a labor of love), so if you dig my content and want to see more of it. I could use your help by spreading the word and maybe buying a book or two if you haven't already, to help defray the cost of running the site. Thanks in advance for your help. This is a labor of love and I'd do it even if I didn't make a lot of money, hey I don't!

You can also make a donation to the lesson-site fund. Button in the sidebar of the site.

If I'm not teaching, I'm working on this site and new lessons, books and goodies.

JAZZ.PHP | Updated: Wednesday, 20th July, 2011 @ 09:49pm

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