Twinkle Twinkle Little Star – Easy Reading Guitar Tab

Here is an easy to read and easy to play guitar sheet of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star in guitar tab. It’s been designed in Adobe Illustrator for a custom look and easy to read for young beginners. Ideal to use as teaching material.


Related: This sheet is included in this premium PDF ebook: First Guitar Book – Easy Reading (Scales and Melodies) →
Related: Twinkle Twinkle Little Star – Ukulele Easy Reading Tab

Twinkle Twinkle Little Star – Ukulele Easy Reading Tab

Here is an easy to read and play sheet of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star in ukulele tab. It’s been designed in Adobe Illustrator for a custom look and easy to read for young beginners. The sheet is ideal to use as teaching material for young ukulele students.


Related: This sheet is included in this premium PDF ebook: First Ukulele Book – Easy Reading (Scales and Melodies) →
Related: Twinkle Twinkle Little Star – Guitar Easy Reading Tab

Sheet 1 – Easy Reading Ukulele Scale Exercises

Over the last few years of teaching ukulele (and 9 years of teaching guitar) I have noticed young beginners in particular struggle to get to grips with reading tab, but it’s sometimes any age. They get confused over which string the top line of the tab is. Usually they think it’s the 4th string at the top of the tab because it’s at the top of their ukulele when they look at it, and they find it hard to get over this being the other way around at first!

Also, students often get distracted by other things on the sheet music and often ask questions like; “what does TAB mean”, “do we play 4 4 at the start?”, “what do these notes mean? (pointing to the notes above the tab), or say things like “the numbers are too small”, “I keep getting lost” (again with regards to the numbers being small and getting lost because they have taken a while looking down at their instrument trying to find fret 2 on the 3rd string, for example).

So as a teacher I decided to create a range of sheets like this one to make both my life easier and to help my students get to grips with reading tab quicker for playing scales, melodies and exercises. I have created the sheet using Adobe Illustrator. I intend to post more of these sheets and similar ones for playing chord progressions, and I will release one or two ebooks based on these. There are also be guitar ones.

How to read the sheet

  • On exercise 1, read all 4 strings at once from left to right.
  • You will play in this order: Play the open string (that is the 0) on string 3 and then press down on fret 2 of the 3rd string and then play that string to make the note.
  • Then in a similar way play 0 1 3 on string 2, then 0 2 3 on string 1.
  • Next, do all of this in reverse.
  • Finally, repeat all of this a further 3 times so that you will have been around 4 times in total.
  • Play exercise 2 – 4 in the same way.

 


Related: This sheet is featured in the premium ebook First Ukulele Book – Easy Reading.
Related: Sheet 1 – Easy Reading Guitar Scale Exercises.

Sheet 1 – Easy Reading Guitar Scale Exercises

Over the last 9 years of teaching guitar I have noticed young beginners in particular struggle to get to grips with reading guitar tab, but it’s sometimes any age. They get confused over which string the top line of the tab is. Usually they think it’s the 6th string at the top because it’s at the top of their guitar when they look at it, and they find it hard to get over this being the other way around at first!

Also, students often get distracted by other things on the sheet music and often ask questions like; “what does TAB mean”, “do we play 4/4 at the start?”, “what do these notes mean? (pointing to the notes above the tab), or say things like “the numbers are too small”, “I keep getting lost” (again with regards to the numbers being small and getting lost because they have taken a while looking down at their instrument trying to find fret 3 on the 4th string, for example).

So as a teacher I decided to create a range of sheets like this one to make both my life easier and to help my students get to grips with reading tab quicker for playing scales, melodies and exercises. I have created the sheet using Adobe Illustrator. I intend to post more of these sheets and similar ones for playing chord progressions, and I will release one or two ebooks based on these. There will also be ukulele ones.

How to read the sheet

  • On exercise 1, read all 6 strings at once from left to right.
  • You will play in this order: Play the open string (that is the 0) on string 6 and then press down on fret 3 of the 6th string and then play that string to make the note.
  • Then in a similar way play 0 2 on string 5, then 0 2 string 4, 0 2 string 3, then 0 3 on string 2, then 0 3 on string 1.
  • Next, do all of this in reverse.
  • Finally, repeat all of this a further 3 times so that you will have been around 4 times in total.
  • Play exercise 2 and 3 in the same way.

Related: This sheet is featured in the premium ebook First Guitar Book – Easy Reading.
Related: Sheet 1 – Easy Reading Ukulele Scale Exercises.

16 Beginners Guitar Chords

Get Free PDF Download →

Here is a sheet of beginners open chords. It has been made using Adobe Illustrator.

Here’s a quick ‘how to’ for reading the sheet.

  • The vertical lines are the strings and they have string numbers underneath (there are 6 strings in total)
  • String 1 refers to the thinnest string and string 6 refers to the thickest. At first, it feels like it should be the other way around but make sure to learn and teach it this way because everywhere refers to them this way.
  • The horizontal lines are the frets. The ‘boxes’ or ‘rows’ that this creates are what we call frets. This can be confusing because those metal bars on the fretboards are the frets, but when we say ‘play fret 3, that means to put your finger in between the 2nd and 3rd raised metal fret.
  • The frets have been numbered 1 to 4 on the left hand side of each chord box. So, for the Em chord, you will be putting both fingers on Fret 2. One finger on string 4, fret 2, and another on string 5, fret 2.
  • The finger numbers are inside the blacked out circles and are for a guide. You may used different fingers as preferred.
  • The X above a string means to not strum that string.
  • The O above a string means that you will be playing this string too even though there are no fingers pressed down on it. It’s easier though just to look for the X’s and follow those, and just ignore the O’s.
  • The thick line at the top of the chord box is the ‘Nut’. This is usually a white plastic bit at the end of the neck where the guitar adjoins the head, which holds each string on their way through up to the tuning pegs.
  • Strum all required strings with one swift movement to perform a chord, making sure to play the correct amount of string (look out for the X’s). For example, Em is all 6 stings, and D is only the first 4 strings.
  • Each chord has a name, which is above the chord. anything with an ‘m’ after it is a minor chord, so Em is spoken as “E minor”. Chords with just a letter are major chords, so A is spoken as “A major”, or sometimes it is just spoken as “A”. Chords with a number after are just spoken as “A 7″ or G 6”.

 


Related:

100 beginners chord progressions for Guitar (Premium)

100 beginners chord progressions for Ukulele (Premium)

(PREMIUM) – Christmas Songs Ebook – Guitar, Ukulele and Lyrics

Buy Now →

9 years of preparing songs for teaching at Christmas later, and I have created this refined ebook for guitar and ukulele. It includes sheet music with TAB for both melody and chords parts. I have arranged the sheet music myself, so I could aim the ebook at beginners, but I have not changed melodies or structures. I have presented the sheet music in the most simplistic way whilst also aiming to provide a challenge to players that have been learning for a while.

Contains Sheet Music for both guitar and ukulele, and Lyrics Sheets, which can all be printed an unlimited amount of times by the purchaser. Ideal for guitar teachers and ukulele teachers.

The download contains 4 seperate ebooks. One with them all in, and then 3 seperate ebooks for easy printing of guitar, ukulele and lyrics.

  • Jingle Bells
  • Deck The Halls
  • We Wish You A Merry Christmas
  • We Three Kings
  • Silent Night
  • Christmas Is Here

There are both chords and melodies (including ukulele and guitar TAB) for the 5 public domain Christmas songs. There are also guitar and ukulele chords for the original Christmas song called ‘Christmas Is Here’.

Buy the ebook →

Jingle Bells in C – Chords & Melody – Guitar & Ukulele

The sheet music below includes guitar chords, guitar melody, ukulele chords, ukulele melody and lyrics for the popular traditional Christmas song, Jingle Bells.

Jingle Bells is in the public domain so there are no copyright issues for printing and performing this song.

The chords have been written out to be played with rhythm. This rhythm is aimed to be accessible for beginner guitar players and ukulele beginners.

Guitar Chords & Melody

Ukulele Chords

Ukulele Melody

(PREMIUM) – Grade 3-4 Ebook – Scales, Arpeggios, Barre Chords and Guitar Solo Exercises

Buy Now →

The Buy Now button will take you to the product page. There you can download a free 9 page preview by clicking the ‘Preview’ link at the top right of the cover image.


3. Contents
4. Introduction
5. Scales & Arpeggios: Grade 3 – Fretboard Shapes
6. Grade 3 Scales in G
7. Grade 3 Scales in A
8. Grade 3 Scales in B
9-10. B minor pentatonic scale exercises (8th notes)
11 . Grade 3 Arpeggios in A, B and G (major & minor)
12-13. Arpeggio Chord Progressions
14. Notes on the Fretboard for Grade 3+
15. Grade 3 barre chord shapes
16. Part 1 – grade 3 barre chord progression exercises
17. Part 2 – grade 3 barre chord progression exercises
18. 12 bar blues solo in G
19. Guitar Solo in Gm
20. 12 bar blues solo in A
21. Fallout Guitar Solo in Em
22-23. Grade 3 Chords, Scales and Arpeggios Exercises
24. Grade 4 barre chord shapes
25. Part 1 – grade 4 barre chord progression exercises
26. Part 2 – grade 4 barre chord progression exercises
27-29. B minor pentatonic scale exercises (8ths, triplets and 16th notes)
30-32. Grade 4 Chords, Scales and Arpeggios Exercises
33. Songwriting Cheat Sheet

Introduction

  • Guitar teachers can print the book or single sheets for their students.
  • Guitarists can teach themselves following on from a strong basic foundation in reading and playing
  • Guitarists that want to build up a foundation in the core aspects of Grade 3-4.

About the book

This Grade 3-4 ebook is a compilation of almost 9 years of preparation work teaching guitar. I have included guitar lesson sheets that I have prepared and revised many times over the 9 years to be the best they can be for use with my lessons.

To create the book I selected only the best sheets from my selection of many more that I created for teaching with. I printed them all out and arranged them into a coherent order. Finally, I created and modified a few more just to make the book run smoothly.

I have included only the sheets, rather than add lots of teaching text you might normally find in tuition books. This is partly to limit the amount of pages for those printing, and also to give teachers using the books freedom to put their own take on the lesson sheets. Personally when I get a tuition book for myself, I tend to go straight to the exercises. This will probably make it harder for self taught players, so to anyone getting stuck reading the book I would recommend giving it a go and if you get stuck, research how to read the parts you struggle with. There are plenty of youtube videos out there and help articles that you will find to help. Sometimes youtube videos lack sheet music and written parts, so you should be able to use this book alongside these popular methods of learning, if you are not learning with a teacher.

Guitar teachers can use this ebook as a guide for their own teaching. These are the core parts of grade 3-4 but it does not nearly cover every aspect of these levels, so you can dip in and out of this book with your teaching. Let the book provide a fundamental knowledge to the student and loosely give structure and a guide to your teaching and allow yourself to go off on tangents as you and the students move through the book. The key thing here is to tailor your teaching to the students, because they’re all different and will require different paths to explore their own style and learning experience.

Each topic in the book is briefly covered. There is much more depth you could go into, and this is encouraged. So far, I have already released another ebook that works more on rhythms with barre chords in chord progressions at grade 3-4 level called 10 Group Chord Exercise Sheets – Grades 1-4.

Free Preview / Buy Now →

10 easy strumming rhythms for beginners

This lesson plan is great for beginner guitarists and ukulele players. The D = Down and U = Up markings are used widely online, and are easy to follow for beginners and all. This sheet is best used by a teacher because they will instantly know how to demonstrate the rhythms. For those self taught players, if there are spaces in between like this “D D D D” then they are one beat each, but if they are joined like DUDU then they are quavers (8th notes), which are half a beat, so they are faster.

For complete beginners, try starting with chords like Em and Am on guitar, and C, Am and F on ukulele, as they can be played fairly easily and learned without reading.

Strumming Lesson With Basic Chords

D = DOWN
U = UP

Practice these chords with each rhythm: G, Em, F, E7, C, D, Dm, A, Am, G7.

Repeat 4x each:

  1. D D DU D
  2. DUDUD D
  3. D DUDUD
  4. D D D DU
  5. DUD D D
  6. D DUD DU
  7. DU UD D
  8. D DU UD
  9. DUDU UD
  10. DU UDU U

(PREMIUM) – 10 Group Chord Exercise Sheets – 3 Ebooks – Guitar & Ukulele

Buy Now →

People that might find this book useful

● Guitar and Ukulele groups can use these as warm ups or practice exercises
● Guitar & Ukulele teachers can print the book or single sheets for their students (unlimited printing)
● Students can teach themselves if they have some reading knowledge
● Supplementary learning material for students that have guitar lessons

Contents Highlights

10 exercise sheets, containing a total of 27 individual exercises. There are 3 books; Guitar Chords (Grade
1-2), Guitar Barre Chords (Grade 3-4), Ukulele (Grade 1-2).

About the book

As my students progress up to grade 3 and 4 level they move on to barre chords, so this book has been
made for those players, to play along with the other ability levels in the youth music group. Perhaps there
will be other groups in the world that will find this useful in a similar type of group scenario. For many others,
the books can also be used as exercise books for the individual instrument level, and therefore there are 3
seperate ebooks included in the online download.

Free Previews

Page 3: Guitar Grade 1-2 ebook

Page 3: Ukulele Grade 1-2 ebook

Page 3: Guitar Grade 3-4 Barre Chords ebook

Final Thoughts

I hope that this book provides a useful set of lesson material for guitar teachers and ukulele for grade 1-4
levels. I also hope that it is used by self taught players, or by players that are having lessons and are
looking for extra things to work on.

– Theo Lawrence / TL Music Lessons

Buy Now →

Dynamics

Here is a list of dynamic markings you might encounter in drum sheet music. This list will be updated as more dynamic markings are thought of, and will start out as a basic list of fundamental dynamics notation.

  • pp (pianissimo = very soft/quiet)
  • p (piano = soft/quiet)
  • mp (mezzo piano = medium quiet / medium soft)
  • mf (mezzo forte = medium loud)
  • f (forte = loud)
  • ff (fortissimo = very loud)
  • a wide version of this shape: < (crescendo = gradually getting louder)
  • a wide version of this shape: > (diminuendo = gradually getting quieter)
  • > these arrows above the notes are accents, which indicate that you play loud on this note only.

5 beginners Guitar & Ukulele Chord Exercises with E7, D, Em, Am

These exercises are for practicing chord changes using a selection of basic chords. Each quarter note (crotchet) is 1 down strum, so on the first exercise, Em has 8 down strums, then Am has 8 down strums and then you repeat the exercise until you have been aroud 4 times. Take the speed slow to allow time for changing chords. Aim for a steady and slow constant speed before increasing the tempo afterwards. Keep going around the repeats for a while on each exercise.

The guitar and ukulele exercises 2-5 are compatible with each other so you can even play these exercises in groups with guitars and ukuleles together.

These exercises are featured in the Basic beginners book 1 for Guitar & Ukulele.



Related (Premium): Basic beginners book 1 for Guitar & Ukulele.

Exercises 13 and 14 from the 50 Guitar & Ukulele Chord Exercises ebooks

Using the easy open chords, follow the rhythms and down/up markings shown on the sheet.

Exercise 13

Exercise 13 – strum down for 2 beats, then down up down up. The counting would be “1 (2) 3 + 4 +”.

Exercise 14

Exercise 14 – strum down for 1 beat, down up (small space) up down. The counting would be “1 2 + (3) + 4”.

The counting in brackets are where you count but don’t strum anything.

Guitar

Ukulele

 


For all 50 exercises, purchase the PDF ebooks here:

50 GUITAR Chord Exercises Ebook →
50 UKULELE Chord Exercises Ebook →

30 essential productivity apps, business management tools and other apps or websites that help to run an online business and a local music teaching business

Here is a list of 30 essential productivity apps, business management tools and other apps or websites that help to run an online business and a local music teaching business.

The list here is what suits me and keeps me going as an individual business. There are other things I use but these are the main ones. These may not be suitable for everyone but they are all things that I happily recommend to others. Some are obvious, like the google products, but you might find a few that you haven’t heard of in the list.

Below the list is more information about how I use the things in the list to operate my businesses.

1. Google Calendar & synced to phone calendar (scheduling and also useful for setting reminders at specific times)
2. Google Docs / Spreadsheets (for creating invoices, records of who has paid, income spreadsheets). For offline and advanced database use, Libre Office Sheets and Calc are free and are just as good as Word and Excel imo.
3. Google Drive (access everything on the move; lesson plans, ebooks, records of who has paid invoices)
4. Google Keep (for saving photos or notes on the move)
5. Gmail (email)
6. Google Maps & Belkin Phone Holder (replaced sat nav)
7. Google Contacts (can group contacts into categories such as school names)
8. Remember The Milk (to do list, web and mobile app)
9. Mailchimp (mailing lists)
10. Payhip (for selling ebooks)
11. Paypal (payment processing)
12. Bandcamp (for audio downloads)
13. Ditto Music (digital distribution for music)
14. Sentric Music / Hit Licence (pitching music to tv / film etc)
15. BBC Weather Web / App (Try to dress for the weather)
16. WhatsApp (Reluctantly stay in close contact for certain projects)
17. Adsense (advertisement revenue)
18. Phone’s native clock, countdown timer and calculator
19. Heart Internet Web Hosting and Domains (to power the websites)
20. Drupal & WordPress (CMS for websites)
21. Spotify (always have access to songs that I need to teach)
22. DaTuna app (tune guitars using phone – android)
23. Justin Guitar metronome app
24. Abelton Live 9 (Suite) – Education Price (DAW for making music)
25. Dropbox or Wetransfer.com (sending / sharing large files)
26. Landr (Cheap and Easy Mastering Service)
27. Adobe Photoshop & Adobe Illustrator (for all artwork needs such as posters, music artwork, ebook covers, web banners etc.)
28. Adobe Acrobat Pro (for creating ebooks from single pdf files)
29. Guitar Pro (for creating lesson plans and sheet music for ebooks)
30. Quickbooks Self Employed (Used for Invoicing students’ parents every half term and for forwarding email receipts to record them in Quickbooks. It is basic, but it suits my needs.)

 


I do most of my work from a desktop computer. It’s pretty old school I know but actually I like sitting down at the desk and getting immersed and then being able to walk away and leave it, rather than have the temptation of trying to work on the sofa (I know some people that prefer the sofa though!). I keep my mobile contract slim and use a cheap to mid range phone, which is a smart phone, but it doesn’t cost loads.

My bookkeeping, teaching schedules, invoices, paid lists, have all been done using my own system of documents and spreadsheets that are quite refined and easy to use for my business now. I have recently moved onto Quickbooks Self Employed for invoices, which has made writing and sending them easier. My process to record payments for school lessons used to be to input it into a spreadsheet, then copy and paste into a ‘paid’ documents file for each given half term and school, and delete the pupil’s name that has been paid for. I would then check who still needs to pay. My invoices use a template I made and I had a copy of that in the same folder as the paid file for each half term and school name. The invoices always include payment info and at the top of that list is bank transfer details because that form of payment has the least admin for me. I then export that as a pdf file and email the parents at the start of a half term. Mostly I have to make different ones for each half term and ammend for different pupils if they have missed lessons or have not paid for a half term.

I also have a spreadsheet of all of my pupils in each school and their instrument and time details, and rows of checkboxes so I can print them off and use them as a rota for the half term. In high schools the rotas need to have time slots added to the rota. For primary schools, they are too hectic and unpredictable to make rigid timetables for, so I don’t bother. At the start of a new half term, I will copy over all the files from the previous half term and begin editing them for the next one. Usually the amount of weeks per half term changes so there is always something to change. I leave an extra list of pupils per school in the paid files so that I can copy them into a fresh ‘unpaid’ area below, and then I can delete them off as they pay.

I keep an up to date copy of parents’ email addresses in Google contacts and group them into different schools and also give them instrument tags incase I need to email all of the guitarists for something at once. I always try to email the parents using the bcc send field, and this is easy on a computer with a mouse because you can select all the contacts from google contacts, and click to send email, then drag all the addresses into the bcc field. I also have a mailchimp list but it’s not easy to keep that updated as well so I tend not to use it. I do for my website subscribers though.

For my websites www.learndrumsforfree.com and www.learnguitarforfree.com most of the files are hosted on the websites. I learned how to make websites before starting to teach, which has really given me the tools to build an online business too. I learned html and css using an O’Reilly book and the rest followed from there. Actually it all started from the coding features on myspace when bands could change the styles on their pages and adding in banners etc. My sister does web design and artwork in the music industry and she said that probably started her off too, or gave her the coding bug. I use dreamweaver to edit code because the colours are useful, but other free ones are available, and filezilla for ftp file transferring.

I use payhip for all of my pdf ebooks, which is the best I have found. It links to paypal for payments and it has just added a feature to automatically add customers to mailchimp lists. People that download free ebooks are added to my regular subscriber list for upadtes of free blog posts, and paying customers are added to a special list, which I send info of new ebook products to when they are released. Bandcamp is used in a similar way for audio and music, although their mailing list integration is not as good so I can’t really use that effectively at the moment unless I set up more accounts and then export email addresses to the appropriate subscriber lists.

I have found that social media is pretty much a waste of time for my online business at the moment but the mailing list is great, and actually pinterest generates the most hits, so I do chose to get rid of all but the pinterest. It’s all about finding what works for your business and choosing the right platforms to get the most out of your time and effort.

I get many hits per day on both sites quite often and almost all the traffic is organic from search engines. It’s taken years to build up so it really is a lot of hard work but adding to it “little and often” really helps build up a huge site over time. Most of my ebook sales follow searching for free stuff from organic google searches and then discovering the ebooks. I believe this is called a “fremium” business model. When I launch a new ebook and send it to my paying customers mailing list, I usually get quite a few sales from them, so that is really useful for me and them.

Hopefully this gives gives you ideas for your own online business. I tried in the past setting up my own ubercart shopping cart and hosting everything myself, but I had to switch to payhip due to new EU tax rules on digital products. It was too hard to manage myself but payhip and bandcamp both sort sll this out for you. For every ebook sale, payhip takes off the tax, which is different depending on each country, from the money I receive, so they literally take care of everything without me needing to register to pay tax in every country. It completely took the hassle away from thiose new laws.

I also make music and play in a band so I have an unlimited ditto music subscription to release to spotify and itunes etc. whilst bandcamp is the best, not all customers are used to that so you kind of have to make things available where the customers are.

Guitar Pro is the best in my opinion! I’ve tried Sibelius but that’s probably only better for orchestral stuff. Guitar Pro is amazing for most instrumentsl sheet music writing, including guitar, drums, ukulele, bass and even instruments such as flute and piano. I always use it for all of my sheet music. I even use it to export midi to Abelton sometimes, rather than using the piano roll to input midi.

Abelton has been great for making music from midi, recording my own music, making backing tracks, and for teaching other music production. The education price helped me to buy it. Landr is a quick, easy and cheap way to finish off tracks so they are ready to release. The mastering is pretty good. I subscribe for a month and then cancel it when I am done.

All of the chaos that is my schedule is fairly organised with Remember The Milk and Google Calendar. Both can set tasks and appointments to repeat weekly or as often as needed, which is really useful. I use both services on the desktop and synced to my phone. My email is also really important for my business. I sometimes send emails to myself with important TO DO list items for that day, so I can’t possibly miss them.


Related: (www.learndrumsforfree.com) 10 tips and advice for running your own drum teaching business

Computer Games Music – PDF Ebook – Ukulele, Guitar, Bass Sheet Music with TAB

GUITAR: Get The Free PDF ebook Download →
UKULELE: Get The Free PDF ebook Download →
BASS GUITAR: Get The Free PDF ebook Download →

Also available for Drums


Full Ukulele Tab sheet music for 11 computer music songs. ‘Computer Games Music’ uses the MIDI from songs written by TL Music Lessons for teaching purposes using ‘Guitar Pro’ software. The MIDI is run through various synths in Abelton Live and the songs have been made faster. Drums and Bass Guitar have also been added to the original 10 Acoustic Guitar & Ukulele Songs.

Audio

In addition to this free sheet music download, the 11 track album ‘Computer Games Music’ by TL Music Lessons is available on Spotify, Bandcamp and other stores.

About the Sheet Music

Most of the pieces have 3 difficulty levels, so therefore there are 60 pages in the guitar book and 49 pages in the ukulele book ebook to accommodate all of the versions. The fast pace of the songs pushes up the difficulty level quite high in places. A slower, acoustic version of the songs can be found here. The bass ebook has 15 pages and there is only 1 difficulty level.

These could potentially be used as performance pieces in schools, or maybe even exams as a free choice piece if you ask an exam board. Feel completely free to use the audio as a backing track by downloading it from itunes or bandcamp etc and using it to play along with.

About The Music

Last year I made an album of 10 songs to teach with, and created 6 ebooks for the instrument parts. This year, I made an album of 11 songs called ‘Computer Game Music’.

This year I exported the MIDI files from 8 of those songs, plus 3 new ones, and began adding synths to the MIDI in my music production software Abelton Live 9 to create music that I think would sound good in computer games. I found it quite easy, quick and enjoyable to do when I initially messed about with one of the songs for fun. I then decided to start the project, which only took about a month of spare time to create the new album of songs. I also added drums and bass guitar to the tracks to finish them off.

The drums were created by me in Abelton using the MIDI piano roll and a drum rack. I really enjoyed this! I then transcribed the drum loops into actual drum sheet music for people to learn to play along with the music if they wanted to.

The drum sheet music has a wide range of ability levels from complete beginner (Canon in C), right up to grade 8 with some complicated syncopation at high speeds. All of the drum loops were created specifically for these songs. I tried to make the majority of the beats playable by a real drummer. I was able to transcribe and transpose most of the beats without altering them, but there were some that would need extra hands, such as the hand claps and clave polyrhythms, so these have been left out or modified where I thought appropriate.

Music makers and music producers can feel free to use the drum loops audio and midi as they wish. You may freely use them in your own compositions. School pupils may also use the drum loops pack as they wish for school projects or coursework, if this is within the guidelines of the work.

I hope that the songs can be used by a range of abilities. I would say most or all ability levels would find challenges throughout the album, depending on which instrument you look at. They are all quite challenging in places.

I hope that the songs can be used by more advanced players. Initially the previous album of music was created for grades 1-3 (guitar and ukulele only), but now for this new one, I would say most or all ability levels would find challenges throughout the album, depending on which instrument you look at. They are all quite challenging in places.
I also hope that the songs can be used as backing tracks for performances, for example in schools, and possibly as part of marked school performances or maybe even as free choice pieces in grade exams.

I also hope that my students will enjoy listening to the album after getting to know the songs in their different style.

Whilst the songs have not been created for any particular computer game, I will try to get some of the music featured in actual games. I think they would work well with platform and retro type games.

(PREMIUM) – Guitar & Ukulele Basic Beginners Book 1

Since writing this ebook, I have developed some ‘Easy Reading’ guitar and ukulele scales and melodies ebooks, so although this page says ‘Book 1’, you might want to take a look at those easy reading books first, especially for younger players.


 

2 for 1: The premium download includes 1 book for guitar and 1 book for ukulele.

Buy Now →

People that might find these books useful

  • Guitar & Ukulele teachers can print the book or single sheets for their students
  • Students can teach themselves to learn the basics if they have some reading knowledge
  • Supplementary learning material for students that have guitar lessons
  • Beginner ukulele players and guitarists looking for some easy songs or exercises to get started with

Contents Highlights

17 topics of study for guitar and ukulele that is aimed at complete beginners. The book has a mixture of public domain songs, easy scales, easy melody exercises and easy chord exercises.

Teaching Notes

The books are designed so that even age 5 or 6 could play some of the pieces and exercises, so it starts off very easy with simple melodies such as Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, that almost everyone can play to some extent in their first lesson. There is however content for all ages in this book and the majority of content is designed to be played by all ages.

The book also takes a while to move onto chords. Like I said at the start of the post, I have developed some ‘Easy Reading’ books recently and at the time of updating this page for a new website launch (Jan 2019), I also have some ‘Easy Reading Chords’ ebooks in the pipeline, which have worked really well with my students. Check out the ebooks section and look for the Easy Reading Chords books – they’ll probably be available by the time you read this.

Example Page from the Guitar ebook:

Full Contents

3. Contents
4. Introduction
5. Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
6. Ice Cream
7. Canon in C – 2 sections
8. Silent Night in C – melody
9. 4 finger note / string / fret exercises
10. C major and A minor scales for beginners melodies
11. Canon in C – 3 sections
12. 2 melody exercises in C major
13. 2 melody exercises in A minor
14. Autumn Leaves
15. One Drop
16. Em and Am Chord Exercises 1-12
20. 5 Easy Chord Progressions with E, A, D, Em, Am, Dm (Free Preview)
21. Robin Reddocke – chords
22. C major scale practice with chords
23. Silent Night in C – chords + melody
24. Melody Exercises – A minor scale

About the book

The book is designed for use with teaching students with reading from as early as the first lesson if they are capable. All of the sheets are supposed to be achievable fairly quickly and easily by guitar and ukulele students of any age. Even students from the age of 5 or 6 could play some of these sheets. A teacher using this book would need to gauge the ability of the student. Often having something written down helps the student so even if they cannot read much of the music, they will be able to understand fret numbers and hopefully chord boxes too.

The best thing about these books is that the guitar and ukulele versions are compatible so if you happen to have beginner guitar and ukulele students in the same group, then you will be able to use these books to play along together. I don’t have many of these groups and they don’t always have a lesson together, but sometimes it works really well to have guitar and ukulele students playing together or learning in a group.

Final Thoughts

I hope that this book helps people get started quickly with learning guitar or ukulele and playing along to songs with others. The aim of this book is to progress quickly through it and to provide satisfaction through achieving. I hope to break down the barriers to getting started with learning guitar and ukulele with this book.

Buy Now →

Exercises 9 and 10 from the 50 Guitar & Ukulele Chord Exercises ebooks

Two interesting exercises to try for free here for the guitar and ukulele. Both exercises are a lot harder on the guitar. In the ebook sometimes the ukulele chords are harder – it depends which chords are being used. The rhythms are exactly the same for both so guitar and ukulele players could work on these and play them together.

Exercise 9

This one has a bit of a spooky sound, changing from E minor 7 to E diminished. The ukulele chord shape can just be slid down one fret. For the guitar, a few of the fingers can slide across too – it’s not a huge chord change once you get used to it.

Exercise 10

On guitar, all you need to do is add on the little finger (pinky) for the chord changes. For ukulele, you just need to take one finger off to change to Fadd9. Just watch out for the rhythm on this one because the first note lasts for two beats. You need to count 1 2 3 4 and only strum on beats 1 3 and 4.

Guitar

Ukulele


For all 50 exercises, purchase the PDF ebooks here:

50 GUITAR Chord Exercises Ebook 
50 UKULELE Chord Exercises Ebook

Deck The Halls – Guitar, Ukulele and Bass Melody and Chords Sheet Music with TAB

Photo Credit: Brendan C

Here’s a quick and easy melody to play on Christmas day that everyone knows. In the sheet music you will find the notation and guitar tab for playing the melody on guitar, ukulele or bass guitar. There are also chords above the melody, which can be played as an accompaniment.

Guitar Melody

Ukulele Melody

Bass Melody

Christmas Is Here feat. Snejana

Back in October (2016) my guitar student Snejana asked ‘Can we write a Christmas Song?’.

We liked it so much that we ended up recording it, and here it is!

You can listen to the song here, and even download it if you like it here:

Stream / Download on Bandcamp

Stream on Spotify

Written and produced by Theo Lawrence & Snejana
Lyrics & vocals by Snejana
Cover Art edited by RogueSkins.

Merry Christmas!


Lyrics

VERSE

Cadd9 C/B Dsus4 x2
Cadd9 C/B G Dsus4 x2

Christmas is here where lots of good cheer will come around
Christmas is here where lots of good cheer will come around
The fire is burning the candles are lit our hearts are warm and full of joy.
The sky is dark the stars are shining brightly and Jack Frost’s outside making everything sparkle nicely

PRE CHORUS

Cadd9 G Dsus4 x6

Woah oh oh oh
Woah oh oh

Christmas is here it’s official
Don’t be alone this Christmas
Invite a couple friends over and have some fun
And that’s why it’s Christmas

CHORUS

G Cadd9 Em7 Dsus4 x8

Christmas trees fairy lights baubles everywhere
Christmas trees fairy lights baubles everywhere
Can’t you see Christmas cheer and carols all around
Don’t you worry you’ll get a carol at your doorstep

Christmas is here don’t fear Santa’s on his way
There’s some snow on a slope and people sledding down it
Baubles are shining in some people’s faces
And that is why it’s gonna be Christmas time

BRIDGE

G Dsus4 Em7 Cadd9 x4

woah oh oh oh oh…..
Christmas time
Christmas time
It’s just Christmas time

CHORUS

G Cadd9 Em7 Dsus4 x9 (Then end on G)

Christmas trees fairy lights baubles everywhere
Christmas trees fairy lights baubles everywhere
Can’t you see Christmas cheer and carols all around
Don’t you worry you’ll get a carol at your doorstep

Christmas is here don’t fear Santa’s on his way
There’s some snow on a slope and people sledding down it
Baubles are shining in some people’s faces
And That is why it’s Christmas time

Wouldn’t be any other time, cus it’s Christmas time


Credits

Written and produced by Theo Lawrence & Snejana
Lyrics & vocals by Snejana
Backing vocals by The Guilsfield Cupcakes
Sleigh Bells performed by students of TL Music Lessons
Cover Art edited by RogueSkins.

Silent Night in C – Melody and Chords – Guitar, Ukulele, Piano, Violin, Flute

Photo Credit: Alice Popkorn

This song is also featured in the Christmas Songs Ebook for Guitar, Ukulele and Lyrics.

Silent night is one of the best Christmas songs for beginner guitarists to play chords with, for both guitarists and ukulele players.

Silent night is a public domain Christmas song.

The sheet music contains the guitar chords and ukulele chords for the song, along with sheets for the melodies too. There are also versions for piano, flute and violin.

There are only 3 chords needed: C, F and G.

 

Guitar Melody

Ukulele Melody

Flute / Violin Melody

Piano Melody & Chords (Left and Right Hand)

Guitar Chords

Ukulele Chords

PDF – Easy – Silent Night Ukulele in C
PDF – Medium – Ukulele Chords with Strumming – Silent Night in C