🕯 About the Song
“Ceremony” is the sound of Joy Division becoming New Order — a farewell and a rebirth in the same breath.
It was one of the last songs Ian Curtis wrote before his death, and the first single the remaining members recorded after renaming the band.
The lyrics are cryptic, poetic, and aching — fragments of faith, regret, and emotional distance — carried by that instantly recognisable guitar arpeggio and driving bassline.
On ukulele, the bleak grandeur melts into something intimate and fragile. The song becomes less about walls of sound and more about quiet persistence — a hymn for those still here.
🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips
We’ll play it in C major, which captures the feel of the original D without pushing your vocal range too far. (Capo on 2nd fret to play in D)
You’ll need C, F, G, and Am.
Verse progression: [C] – [F] – [C] – [G]
Chorus: [Am] – [G] – [F] – [C]
Keep the rhythm steady, like a heartbeat — around 110 bpm.
Strumming pattern:
down–down–up–up–down–up (keep it crisp and driving, no swing).
Use your index finger for short, percussive strokes; let chords ring briefly, then choke them off with your palm for that clipped post-punk feel.
If you want to capture the original guitar arpeggio on a low-G uke, try this picking figure over C:
A |-----0-------0-------|
E |---0---1---0---1-----|
C |-0-------0-----------|
G |---------------------|Singing tip: Don’t dramatise — keep your tone calm, detached, almost resigned. The beauty of the song lies in its restraint.
💡 Trivia You Can Drop Casually
- “Ceremony” was written and performed live by Joy Division, but never recorded in studio before Ian Curtis’s death.
- The surviving members released it as New Order’s debut single in 1981.
- Two distinct versions exist: the raw “green sleeve” edition (with Curtis’s lyrics mostly intact) and the later, cleaner “cream sleeve” re-recording with Bernard Sumner on vocals.
- The song’s title and tone make it one of the most-covered tracks in the New Order catalogue — everyone from Radiohead to Xiu Xiu has paid tribute.
- Many fans consider it the emotional bridge between Closer and Movement.
🌈 Final Word
“Ceremony” is where grief found rhythm — the sound of survival wrapped in melancholy.
On ukulele, it becomes something gentler but no less powerful: the same song, now whispered instead of shouted.
Play it softly, steadily, and let the space between chords carry the ghosts.






