How to Slide Notes on Your Ukulele
A slide is a way of transitioning between notes by shifting a finger along the ukulele string. Slides can transition between two fretted notes in either direction along the string. A big advantage of slides is that they allow you to move up and down the fretboard seamlessly.
You can use a whole range of slide techniques, as described here and demonstrated in the video about sliding notes.
Sliding up on your ukulele
The tab for a slide up is a slanted line between the notes pointing up:
To play an upward slide:
Fret the first note as usual and pluck it.
The first note is the fifth fret of the C-string in this example.
Most people find that they have most control over the middle finger of their fretting hand, so start by using that.
Keep the pressure on the string constant and slide your middle finger up the string to the next fretting position.
Let the movement come from your elbow (as if you’re moving up or down the fretboard without the slide) and keep the shape of your hand fixed.
Keep the string ringing at the target fret (the final note you want to play), in this case the seventh.
Keep your slides swift and smooth. The sound needs to be continuous — you shouldn’t be able to hear the individual notes as you are sliding. If you can hear the individual notes, the result is a particular type of slide called a glissando.
Sliding down on your ukulele
As well as sliding up to a new note, you can also slide down. The tab for a slide down is a slanted line between the notes pointing down, in this case sliding from the seventh fret to the fifth:
Sliding in on your ukulele
You can use slides as a way to move into a note, adding an effective flourish. The big difference is that this slide has an indeterminate starting position; it seems to slide in from nowhere:
Start with your finger two frets below the target note.
This starting place is only a suggestion, but it’s a good place to start when you’re perfecting the technique. When you’re confident with it, try shorter or longer slides in.
Begin sliding up to the note.
Pick the note a split second after you start sliding.
Stop at the target note and let the string ring.
Only pick the note after you’ve started sliding, because that’s what gives the impression of the note sliding in from nowhere.
You can also slide downward into a note by starting two frets higher than the target note.
Sliding out on your ukulele
If you can slide into a note, you can also slide out of a note as well:
Fret and play the note as usual.
Slide the note downwards and slowly release the pressure as you’re sliding.
Stop fretting the string so that you can no longer hear the note (you can vary the distance, but between two and four frets is normal).
Stop sliding.
You can also slide out and up: just change the direction.
Slowly release the pressure of your fretting as you slide out of the note. That should make the sound gently fade out so that you don’t hear the end of the slide.
As with any soloing technique, sliding into and out of a note is most effective when used sparingly. Sliding into a note is a great way to start a phrase and sliding out gives a phrase a great ending.

Ukulele Glossary
aDF#B tuning
A tuning method in which each string is tuned two frets higher than the standard gCEA tuning, producing a higher pitch and closer tuning to a guitar.

Ukulele Glossary
barre chord
A chord played with a finger pressed across more than one string.

Ukulele Glossary
bridge
The part of the ukulele attached to the front that holds the strings below the soundhole. The two main types of bridge are one where you tie the strings to the bridge, and one where you knot the end of the string and thread it through a slit.

Ukulele Glossary
capo
A device that straps around the neck of a ukulele and holds down all the strings.

Ukulele Glossary

Ukulele Glossary
chord
Two or more notes played simultaneously.

Ukulele Glossary
chord diagram
A graphic that shows where to place your fingers in order to play a chord on a stringed instrument.

Ukulele Glossary
chord family
A group of six chords with each containing notes from the same scale.

Ukulele Glossary
fret
n. A strip of metal placed vertically across the fretboard of a stringed instrument that marks different pitches of the notes. The higher up the fretboard, the higher the note is musically. v. to press down on the strings of a stringed instrument to play certain notes.

Ukulele Glossary
fret marker
A dot on the fretboard of stringed instrument that makes it easier to locate frets. Typically, ukuleles have fret markers on the 5th, 7th, and 10th frets.

Ukulele Glossary
fretboard
The strip of wood that runs along the neck of a stringed instrument just behind the strings.

Ukulele Glossary
fretted string
A string you play while holding it down at a certain fret.

Ukulele Glossary
friction tuner
A mechanism for tuning stringed instruments in which you turn a peg that tightens or loosens the strings and keeps the strings in tune through friction.

Ukulele Glossary
gCEA tuning
The current most popular method of ukulele tuning, in which the fourth string is tuned to a high g note, and the subsequent strings are tuned to C, E, and A, respectively.

Ukulele Glossary
geared tuner
A guitar-type tuning mechanism in which the tuning pegs are geared. Geared tuners allow for more precise tuning than friction tuners.

Ukulele Glossary
hammer-on
A technique in playing stringed instruments in which you bring a finger down on a string sharply and swiftly to sound a note.

Ukulele Glossary
headstock
The place at the end of the fretboard of a stringed instrument that holds the tuning pegs. (It shows the logo of the instrument’s maker.)

Ukulele Glossary
low-G tuning
A ukulele tuning method in which you replace the high, thin g-string with a low, fat G-string, then tune the other strings to C, E, and A.

Ukulele Glossary
moveable chord
A chord in which you fret every string.

Ukulele Glossary
neck
The long piece that sticks out of the body of a stringed instrument.

Ukulele Glossary
nut
The piece the strings sit on as they go from the fretboard to the headstock.

Ukulele Glossary
open chord
A chord with at least one string played open, or not fretted.

Ukulele Glossary
open string
A string you play without fretting.

Ukulele Glossary
pick-up
A device that detects sound and turns it into electrical impulses which can then be amplified.

Ukulele Glossary
re-entrant tuning
A method of tuning in which the two outside strings produce the high notes, in contrast with typical low-to-high tuning.

Ukulele Glossary
root
The first chord in a chord family.

Ukulele Glossary
saddle
The thin, usually white piece that the strings rest on near the soundhole.

Ukulele Glossary
scale length
The length of the part of the string played.

Ukulele Glossary
soundhole
The round hole on the front of a stringed instrument that lets the sound out.

Ukulele Glossary
staff
A set of five horizontal lines and four spaces that represent musical notes.

Ukulele Glossary
standard notation
A method of representing the melody lines of songs on staves.

Ukulele Glossary
Swiss army strumming pattern
A down, down-up, up-down strumming rhythm.

Ukulele Glossary
tablature; tab
A method of representing musical notes for stringed instruments with lines and dots, indicating which string to play and which fret to use.

Ukulele Glossary
time signature
Musical notation that indicates the number of beats in a measure and the value of each note.

Ukulele Glossary
tremolo picking
Picking the same note repeatedly at a rapid tempo to produce a fluctuation in volume. This method allows you to play very long notes that otherwise would stop sounding.

Ukulele Glossary
tuner
1. The part of a stringed instrument that holds the strings. 2. A device used to calibrate the strings of an instrument to the correct pitch.

Ukulele Glossary
vibrato
A warble added to the end of a note accomplished by repeatedly picking a string very quickly, varying the pitch.