Skip to song content

Billie Eilish - Six Feet Under Ukulele Chords

ChordsBm, A, G, Em
Strumming↓-↓↑-↑↓↑

Before you play, tune your ukulele and use the tools below to set up your view and flow.


[Bm]Help I lo[A]st mysel[G]f agai[A]n
But [Bm]I [A]remember [G]you
[Bm]Don’t come ba[A]ck it won’[G]t end wel[A]l
But I [Bm]wish [A]you’d tell me [G]to


Our love is [Bm]six feet [A]under
I can’t [G]help but [A]wonder
If our [Bm]grave was [A]watered by the [Em]rain
Would roses [G] [Bm]bloom?
Could roses [G] [Bm]bloom? [A] [G]again


[Bm]Retrace my [A]lips [G]erase your [A]touch
It’s [Bm]all too [A]much for [G]me
[Bm]Blow [A]away like [G]smoke in [A]air
How [Bm]can you die [A] [G]carelessly


Our love is [Bm]six feet [A]under
I can’t [G]help but [A]wonder
If our [Bm]grave was [A]watered by the [Em]rain
Would roses [G] [Bm]bloom?
Could roses [G] [Bm]bloom?


[G]They’re playin us out, [A]layin us down [Bm]tonight
And [G]all of these
Clouds [A]cryin us back to [Bm]life
[A]But you’re cold [G]as a knife


[Bm]Six feet [A]under
I can’t [G]help but [A]wonder
If our [Bm]grave was [A]watered by the [Em]rain
[G] [Bm]Bloom… [G] [Bm]bloom, [A] [G]again


[Bm]Help I lo[A]st mysel[G]f agai[A]n
But [Bm]I [A]remember [G]you

AlbumSix Feet Under
Year2016
KeyBm
DifficultyEasy

How to play Six Feet Under on Ukulele (Step-by-step)

Billie Eilish - Six Feet Under on ukulele requires 4 chords and 5 core chord transitions. You can find the full step-by-step guide below. Before you start, tune your instrument. The song uses the ↓-↓↑-↑↓↑ pattern; practice it muted first, or simplify to downstrokes while you learn the changes.

Six Feet Under uses these transitions most often: Bm → A (19), A → G (16), and G → Bm (13). These transitions may feel a little challenging at first, but with steady practice you can play this song quickly.When you are ready, begin with Bm - A chord transition.

1. Bm → A chord transition

To move from Bm to A;

  1. While playing Bm, lift your ring finger from G string fret 4.
  2. Slide your index finger on C string from fret 2 to fret 1.
  3. Place middle finger on G string fret 2.
Bm to A

2. A → G chord transition

To move from A to G;

  1. Slide your index finger on C string from fret 1 to fret 2.
  2. Slide your middle finger from G string fret 2 to A string fret 2.
  3. Place ring finger on E string fret 3.
A to G

3. G → Bm chord transition

To move from G to Bm;

  1. While playing G, lift your middle finger from A string fret 2.
  2. Keep index finger on C string fret 2.
  3. Lift your ring finger from E string fret 3 and place it on G string fret 4.
G to Bm

4. A → Em chord transition

To move from A to Em;

  1. Lift your index finger from C string fret 1 and place it on A string fret 2.
  2. Slide your middle finger from G string fret 2 to E string fret 3.
  3. Place ring finger on C string fret 4.
A to Em

5. Em → G chord transition

To move from Em to G;

  1. Lift your index finger from A string fret 2 and place it on C string fret 2.
  2. Slide your middle finger from E string fret 3 to A string fret 2.
  3. Lift your ring finger from C string fret 4 and place it on E string fret 3.

A short, data-driven summary of the chord flow in Six Feet Under.

  • Six Feet Under includes 79 chord transitions, 5 of them unique.
  • These transitions represent 0.02% of all chord transitions in Ukulelearn.
  • Six Feet Under contains 4 of the top 25 transitions across Ukulelearn.
  • These transition patterns show how Six Feet Under connects to the rest of Ukulelearn. Mastering them helps you move to similar songs faster.
    After A, the most likely next chords across Ukulelearn are D (29%), G (13%), and E (12%).
    • A → G: 13%
    • A → Bm: 8%
    After Bm, the most likely next chords across Ukulelearn are G (25%), A (19%), and Em (13%).
    • Bm → G: 25%
    • Bm → A: 19%