Say Hello, Wave Goodbye

ukulele chords say hello wave goodbye

🩷 About the Song

“Say Hello, Wave Goodbye” is the tender heart hiding inside all that 1980s synth sleaze — a breakup song that feels cinematic in its sadness.
Marc Almond’s theatrical delivery and Dave Ball’s icy synth backdrop made it sound like love falling apart in neon light.

It’s torch-song melodrama set to an electronic pulse: messy, beautiful, and unashamedly human.
Now, with Dave Ball’s passing, the song hits even harder — a bittersweet wave goodbye to one of synthpop’s true architects.

On ukulele, the electronics melt away and what’s left is pure heartbreak: gentle, smoky, and startlingly intimate.


🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips

We’ll play it in G minor, the original key — haunting but playable.
You’ll need Gm, Eb, F, Bb, and D7.

Verse progression: [Gm] – [Eb] – [F] – [Bb]
Chorus: [Gm] – [F] – [Eb] – [Bb] – [D7]

Strumming pattern: slow and sultry down–down–up–up–down–up at around 65 bpm.
Keep the strumming hand light; this isn’t a march — it’s a sigh.

Alternatively, fingerpick gently (pluck 4–3–2–1) for that candlelit melancholy.
Let each chord ring and bleed into the next.

Singing tip: Don’t belt — breathe. Marc Almond delivers it half like a whisper, half like a confession. Draw out the vowels, especially in “goodbye.”


💡 Trivia You Can Drop Casually

  • Released in 1981, the song was Soft Cell’s follow-up to “Tainted Love.”
  • Dave Ball’s minimalist synth arrangement was inspired by torch songs and film soundtracks — Sinatra meets synths.
  • The title inspired David Gray’s 1998 cover, which reintroduced the song to a new generation.
  • Marc Almond once said the song was “a film in my head — sad lovers in a rain-soaked London.”
  • Following Dave Ball’s passing (2025), fans have revisited it as a quiet farewell to a musical pioneer.

🌈 Final Word

“Say Hello, Wave Goodbye” is proof that heartbreak doesn’t have to scream — sometimes it just sighs through a pink haze and walks away.
On ukulele, it becomes small and personal again — the kind of song you play late at night when the world’s gone quiet.

So play it slow, let it ache, and raise a quiet thanks to Dave Ball — the man who made sadness sound beautiful.

Album:Non-Stop Erotic CabaretYear:1981Artist:Key:GmDifficulty:Intermediate Download PDF
Song Sheet (PDF)
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