


AP Tuner – Although it was obviously made with the guitar in mind, it works equally well for ukulele – or any other instrument for that matter. How can you know what notes to play if you don’t know what they sound like?ģ. Functional Ear Trainer – My former school music teacher (Mr Barnes – tall, lengthy face, insane hair) always used to say, “You don’t play music with your hands, you play it with your ears.” To which the idiotic, friendless, class moron would respond my bashing the side of his head against the keyboard (yes, it was me). Even though it is a lot less flexible than Winchord, I much prefer it because the interface is more enjoyable. Ukulele Chordfinder – Chord charts have never been so much fun. Brought to you by the good people at Uke Farm.ĥ. It includes a handy doodad which allows you to search the chords easily and insert them. Chordette – A collection of fonts with ukulele chord positions allowing you to insert chord diagrams into Word documents etc. Useful if you play other string instruments or you need to transpose tricky chords onto the uke.Ħ.

You can set the number of strings and tuning to anything you chose and it’ll spew out any chord you ask it to. Winchord – Another good program let down on the visual front. The package includes every uke shape you can think of (or every uke shape I can think of) – including all the distinctive RISA shapes – and many shapes that seem downright fanciful.ħ. Uke Fonts – tap away on your keyboard and be greeted by a string of ukuleles of various levels of obscurity. Uke-4-U – it’s exceptionally ugly, but it teaches beginners their first few chords and lets you strum along with a few simple songs.Ĩ. Ukulele Icons – A batch of cute little ukulele icons in. Tell your enemies that they may take our lives, but they’ll never take our free stuff.ġ0.
