Unlock Big Changes in Your Ukulele Playing with Daniel Ward’s Meditative Arpeggio

From the Summer 2017 issue of Ukulele | BY DANIEL WARD

The arpeggio is a handy tool that outlines not only the chord structure of the music, but also drives the rhythm in unique ways, and can even carry melody within the pattern. This is great news for ukulele, which is set up perfectly for this kind of playing.

An arpeggio is a group of notes within a chord which are played one at a time instead of all at the same time. The word arpeggio comes from the Italian word arpeggiare, which literally translates as “to play on a harp.” In this lesson, we will look at a simple arpeggio that has the power to quickly unlock big changes in your playing, whether you are a beginner or a seasoned musician. This lesson is so easy to learn that we need to be careful not to miss some of the rich benefits that come from this kind of practice.

Before we get started, let’s talk about the fingers that do the plucking. Whether you play right-handed or left-handed, the plucking hand is the hand that “speaks.” Although the hand doing the fretting takes care of a large part of the music, the instrument can only sing as well as the skill of the speaking hand’s touch. Here’s a quick way to get your fingers on the strings and start to get a feel for this. Play strings 4-3-2-1 with your thumb, index, middle, and ring fingers and repeat. Over and over.

Ukulele Lesson Arpeggio Daniel Ward Fingerpicking Pattern

Let’s look at the music!


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This lesson is the very first “meditation” taken from my book, Arpeggio Meditations for Ukulele. Each lesson concentrates on a specific picking-pattern that is made into a song. By looping a group of arpeggiated chords and playing them, mindfully, over a long period of time, you will quickly become a better musician.

Ukulele Lesson Arpeggio Daniel Ward Fingerpicking

Here are some of the things you can work on while looping through this, or any piece of music:

  • Pull the best sound from each string
  • Listen to your tone and shape it
  • Play through the chord changes as smoothly as possible
  • Build a strong steady rhythm that you can really feel
  • Try some dynamics, playing softer or louder in sections
  • Enhance the hidden melodies within the song by making one or two notes stand out in each arpeggio grouping

There are hundreds of ways to add to this lesson to any music you work on. Be creative, but remember to always make music. Even if you are just whacking through a song or playing a scale, take the time to listen and enjoy the sound you are creating. The more you listen, the more you can shape it.

Enjoy your meditation.

This excerpt is taken from Arpeggio Meditations for Ukulele by Daniel Ward.

https://dev.ukulelemag.com/stories/ukulele-lesson-get-more-control-over-your-sound-and-rhythm-daniel-ward