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J**S
I love exploring the ukulele
In this eighth decade of my life, I have found immense joy in getting reacquainted with the little instrument that brought me such pleasure back in the '50's during my college days in the dorm. We used to gather around in the evenings and twang away, singing all the ditties and favorites of the day. Songs from Hank Williams, Lefty Frizzel, "Five Foot Two," and such. Now, in my really free years, nothing brings me more joy than learning to play the ukulele as a real instrument of music. I find it very gratifying, This book has opened new challenges and motivation for me. At the moment, a young friend and I are working our way through the various techniques of tabbing, We may never arrive, but the pleasure is in the journey. Thank you. Judy Adams
K**I
A let down
Very disappointed at the content.The book is just a collection of sheets without any instruction.Example: It explains lightly in one paragraph what 3rds and 6ths are.Then proceed to show 12 pages of those notes in every key.But does not explain how you play this, whats the usage, how you improvise with it.The only part that is good is the hawaian turnarounds. It makes you play it with songs.
M**S
A treasure trove
This book is amazingly rich providing a ton of information rarely shown. Chords, arpeggios, strumming patterns, scales. Plus wonderful songs.
O**U
Great Companion Volume to Discovering the Ukulele: A Beginner's Guide ...
Couple this with the Beginner's Guide and you have a really good course.
D**S
Low G string players only!
First let me mention that this book assumes that you are playing an 'uke with a low G string. I certainly wish I had known that before buying! A large portion of the book will simply not sound right with standard reentrant ("my dog has fleas") tuning. Everything in the book is presented in both standard notation and TAB. There is very little written instruction.The book begins with pentatonic scales, presented in bare-bones fashion as ascending quarter notes. The purpose of the pentatonic scale is briefly explained, but no examples of its use are provided. This is followed by a similarly unadorned presentation of double-stop 3rds and 6ths in all major keys. These can be used to harmonize melodies, but again no musical examples are provided, just a kind of reference chart. Next, picking and fingering exercises, which are runs straight up and down each major scale, followed by scales in broken thirds. These are good exercises for any instrument. A handful of strumming and picking patterns (arpeggios)are given, followed by second position chords, which can be found on any of the more complete chord charts out there.In the last and best section of the book, 20 Hawaiian Turnarounds are given, four in each of 5 keys, followed by a collection of a half-dozen Hawaiian tunes which incorporate some of the turnarounds.This book certainly has some useful content, but could have been improved by more examples and more detailed instruction. Players without low-G strings are likely to be disappointed, as many of the scale exercises and turnarounds won't work on their instruments.
A**R
very simple and thin book
I like Daniel ho and Herb Ohta junior.I expected a detailed description of the ukulele master.However, This book is filled with only music, not details. So this book is very simple and thin but difficult to me.
M**Y
Classical Hawaiin fingerstyle
This is a perfect tutor for those wanting to progress from simple three chord strums on the ukulele to classical Hawaiin fingerstyle arrangements. The flaw in my playing has been an inability to improvise past the written tabulature. Daily practice with this work has developed my understanding of harmonic thirds and sixths, pentatonic and major scales and a stock pile of Hawaiin turnarounds together with beautiful arrangments of seven tunes both with simple and four fingered chord shapes and arpeggios. This is a treasure house for anyone who wants to develop their playing.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
5 days ago