❄️ About the Song
“Let It Go” wasn’t just a Disney song — it was a cultural detonation. Elsa’s icy ballad became the battle cry of kids, drag queens, and office workers quietly losing their minds everywhere. Written by husband-and-wife team Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, it took the simple message of self-acceptance and turned it into a skyscraper of emotional catharsis.
When Idina Menzel belts “the cold never bothered me anyway,” it’s not about weather — it’s about liberation. The song hit #5 on the Billboard Hot 100, bagged an Oscar, and practically melted the internet. On ukulele, it’s pure drama with a grin: soaring chords, dynamic shifts, and those moments where you can’t help but lean in.
🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips
The film version is in A♭, but that’s a nightmare for open chords, so this version sits nicely in G major — singable, natural, and still huge. You’ll need G, D, Em, C, Am, Bm, and A7. (Capo on fret 1 to play in Ab)
Verses: [G] – [C] – [Am] – [D]
Chorus: [G] – [D] – [Em] – [C]
Strumming pattern: start gentle with down–down–up–up–down–up, around 90 bpm, and build to a strong, ringing full-strum for the chorus. This is all about dynamics — soft storytelling in the verse, then all-out sparkle in the chorus.
For extra drama, drop to fingerpicking (pluck 4–3–2–1) on the first verse, then strum with open gusto when the magic hits.
Singing tip: Start breathy and reserved, then let it rip. You’re not performing for others — you’re banishing your own inner snowstorm.
💡 Trivia You Can Drop Casually
- The songwriters originally wanted Elsa to be a villain. “Let It Go” was so powerful it made them rewrite the entire character.
- The sequence took over 9 months to animate — about 25 seconds of screen time per month.
- Demi Lovato’s pop cover version was used for the film’s end credits, but Idina’s original performance stayed the iconic one.
- The song has been translated into over 40 languages, including Icelandic, Arabic, and Māori — imagine all those global ukulele renditions.
🌈 Final Word
On uke, “Let It Go” is part anthem, part therapy. It teaches control and release in one go — whisper your way through the first verse, then let that final chorus fly.
Don’t aim for perfect pitch; aim for freedom. Even if your neighbours complain, just tell them you’re working through something.






