Any Gypsy Jazz instruction for the uke?
I have done some searches but have not found anything. I would think that it would sound great on the uke!
Thanks for your help:nana:
You can find the chords for minor swing all over the place as well as numerous guitar tabs.
Check here to see what can be done with the tune on uke.
Maybe one of the clever tabbers can do something with that vid. Looks like he only goes up over the 12th fret once, for that last chord, so with a little twiddling even us soprano players might be able to use it.
The head for Djangology is easy, just find a guitar tab of it and play it on ukulele on the same frets. It'll be in a different key from Django's recording, but it's better that way on the uke. Brook's uke must be tuned higher, as it sounds half a step higher than that way. Ignore it, play it in the key below. The chords are
Part A
7657
7547
5435
5325
2210
0212
0000
1st ending 0000
2nd ending 0003
Part B
1114
1114
2225
2225
Play Part A again, second ending.
Repeat the whole progression, going right back into part A, 1st ending, for solos. Finish by playing the original melody for the whole head again.
J'Attendre is written for guitar and violin, so Brook has tweaked the arrangement for uke.
Two great Gypsy jazz tunes. Brook's solos are tricky, but hey, make up your own if you can't figure them out.
You can fit GDAE strings, Aquila make some really nice nylgut ones, available online from Elderly Instruments in the US.
They're made for soprano, on my concert I tune it to EBFsharpCsharp (sorry no hash-tags on this keyboard). It sounds great and fits with guitar accompaniment pretty well.
And then you can play any music written for violin, and leave the rhythm stuff to the guitar etc! Some transposition issues admittedly...