Hallelujah

hallelujah

✨ About the Song

Leonard Cohen wrote Hallelujah over the course of five years — literally hundreds of verses, rewritten, reshaped, obsessed over. When it finally surfaced on his 1984 album Various Positions, nobody cared. His label didn’t even release it in the U.S.
Then a decade later, Jeff Buckley covered it — and the world finally caught up.

Cohen’s version is slow, wry, and spiritual-but-not-religious: a man talking to God, to love, and to himself. Buckley’s take turned it into pure ache — an open wound sung in falsetto. Now it’s basically shorthand for “beautiful sadness.”

The song’s power lies in how personal it feels — it’s both prayer and confessional, sex and surrender. Whether you’re playing it in a candlelit room or for a slightly tipsy open mic crowd, it somehow always lands.


🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips

  • Chords: The “secret chord” bit’s not so secret: C – Am – F – G – E7 does most of the heavy lifting.
    • The verse progression: C – Am – C – Am – F – G – C – G
    • The famous “Hallelujah” line: C – F – C – G – C – G – C
  • Strumming pattern: Slow and steady D – D – U – U – D – U (or finger-pick alternating thumb–index–middle).
  • Tempo: 65–70 bpm — patient and reverent. Don’t rush the spaces; the silence is part of the song.
  • Tone: Soft, warm, and clear. Finger-picking works best — use your thumb for the lower strings and your index/middle for the melody.
  • Dynamics: Each verse should build just a touch — like a conversation that’s gradually getting more emotional — then ease off on the final “Hallelujah.”
  • Vocal tip: Don’t oversing. Cohen mumbled, Buckley soared — find your middle ground. Honest beats perfect.

🧠 Trivia You Can Drop Casually

  • Cohen wrote over 80 verses for the song; he performed different sets depending on the show and his mood.
  • It was Jeff Buckley’s 1994 version on Grace that made it legendary — then Shrek made it immortal (even though that one was Rufus Wainwright’s version).
  • There are now more than 300 recorded covers, from Bob Dylan to k.d. lang to Pentatonix.
  • Cohen once said, “This song explains everything, and it explains nothing. That’s the way it should be.” Classic Leonard.

🌈 Final Word

Play Hallelujah like you mean it — softly, slowly, and without ego. Don’t worry about flawless chords or pitch; let the imperfections ring.
If you’re not getting goosebumps by the third verse, play it again — you might’ve missed your own heart breaking.

Album:Various PositionsYear:1984Artist:Key:CDifficulty:Intermediate Download PDF
Song Sheet (PDF)
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