👢 About the Song
“These Boots Are Made for Walkin’” is the sound of a smirk turned into a song — part swagger, part warning. Written by Lee Hazlewood and made iconic by Nancy Sinatra, it’s pure 1960s sass in go-go boots: all bassline, attitude, and revenge.
Nancy’s delivery is ice-cold cool — she doesn’t shout, she states facts. On ukulele, it’s irresistibly rhythmic. You can’t recreate the iconic bass line exactly, but you can channel its pulse: stomping, sharp, and full of confidence.
This is the uke with eyeliner and bad intentions.
🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips
We’ll play it in E minor, keeping that original smoky, bluesy feel.
You’ll need Em, A7, G, and D.
Verse progression: [Em] – [A7] – [Em] – [A7]
Chorus: [G] – [A7] – [Em] – [D]
Strumming pattern: a steady down–down–chuck–up–down–chuck around 110 bpm.
Keep it tight and percussive — like footsteps in rhythm.
Mute the strings between strums with your strumming hand for that walking-bass thud.
If you want to mimic the famous bass riff, you can pick this on low G uke:
Bass riff (intro / between lines)
A |-------------------|
E |-------------------|
C |-----------0-2-----|
G |-0-0-2-0-2---------|Play it between lyric phrases — it sounds wickedly effective.
Singing tip: Nancy barely moves her voice — all attitude, no vibrato. Smile like you know something your audience doesn’t.
💡 Trivia You Can Drop Casually
- The song was written for a man to sing — Lee Hazlewood — but Nancy insisted it worked better from a woman’s point of view. She was right.
- Those boots in the video? Real go-go boots — and they changed pop fashion overnight.
- The song hit #1 in both the US and UK in 1966, cementing Nancy’s badass image.
- Its signature bass line has been sampled in more than 50 songs across genres — from pop to hip-hop.
🌈 Final Word
“These Boots Are Made for Walkin’” isn’t just a song — it’s a strut. On ukulele, it’s delightfully cheeky: part groove, part grin.
Play it with swagger. Let your downstrokes stomp. Every muted strum should sound like a heel hitting the floor.
By the last chorus, you’ll have the uke equivalent of leather boots and dark sunglasses.






