Ukulele chord

Gm6 Ukulele Chord

Looking for the Gm6 chord on your ukulele? It is a two-finger shape, not hard but new at first. Your fingers go on the C and A strings. The steps below show exactly where each one sits.

A two-finger shape. Here is how to play Gm6, step by step.

At a glance
  • Notes: G, Bb, D and E
  • Frets: 0 2 0 1
  • Tuning: g C E A
Tuning
Lefthanded

Gm6 ukulele chord details

Type
Minor 6th
Also known as
G minor sixth
Formula
1 b3 5 6
Intervals
G (root), Bb (minor 3rd), D (perfect 5th), E (major 6th)
Notes
G, Bb, D and E
Frets
0 2 0 1
Difficulty
Medium
Tuning
Standard (g C E A)

How to play the Gm6 chord

Here is the Gm6 chord step by step:

  1. Put your middle finger on the 2nd fret of the C string.
  2. Put your index finger on the 1st fret of the A string.
  3. Leave the g and E strings open.
  4. Strum all four strings.

Take it slowly the first few times and it will start to feel natural. New to these grids? Have a look at how to read a ukulele chord diagram.

What notes are in the Gm6 chord?

The Gm6 chord is built from four notes: G, Bb, D and E (the root, minor 3rd, perfect 5th and major 6th). The added sixth lifts a minor chord out of pure sadness into something more bittersweet.

Want to go further?

Once Gm6 feels comfortable, its close relatives are worth exploring: try G7, Gmaj7, Gm and G. It works as a richer color alongside the basic chords you already know. When that feels good, work on switching between chords faster. When you are ready, try some easy ukulele songs.

All G chord variations

All chords →

Triad

Seventh

Sixth

Suspended

Ninth

Extended

Added

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