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by bench_soup
3236 days ago
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"miss out on the unusual tuning quirk present 6-stringed instruments tuned to thirds" A ukulele is tuned to thirds as well. It is basically the same as a four string guitar with a capo on 5th fret (with the typical quirk of having the lowest string being an octave higher) "I'd also say go with 6 strings because the typical chords can have more than 4 notes." Typical chords for a beginner are minor and major chords which uses only 3 notes.
And the augmented 7th have 4 notes which leaves you with quite some chords to play. You will be limited by extended dominant 9th,11th and 13th but I wouldn't call those typical. I think a ukulele can be fine to start as you'll get some very quick progress, but its limitations will come very quick as well. |
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5th fret represents going up at most 3 whole notes, not 8.
"Typical chords for a beginner are minor and major chords which uses only 3 notes."
Those are 'power chords' and not your full basic A-G chords. Your basic base E-chord is E-B-E-G#/Ab-B-E on a regular guitar and on a uke it's E-B-E-G#/Ab. Not even a major or minor, just the basic full chord itself runs at least four notes.
"I think a ukulele can be fine to start as you'll get some very quick progress, but its limitations will come very quick as well."
The limitations become apparent around day two when you realize the E you're playing on a uke doesn't sound as full or bright as an E played on a guitar. I put mine down after a week and never looked back. That was... 23 years ago.