Topic: When You Look Up The Chords To A Song...
........ and they give you the chords and chorus to just the first couple of verses and then nothing?
I know they expect me to remember what I played in the first verse and chorus, because (as in "Stand By Me") it's the same thing over and over, but I just can't do that - I really am that forgetful.
So what I did many years ago was print the whole song out, leaving plenty of spaces to fit the chord names right on top of the word where they change. All the way down the page.
Do any of you have to do that?
I try to help myself by saying the chord names as I change to them:
"When the G has come, And the Em land is dark.
And the C is the D light we'll G/D."
But when the verses change, it still leaves me behind. Also, one can't really sing it that way, can one?
Bass? No problem! One of the easiest songs on bass I have ever played. And it really gets the crowd up off the chairs, as does the bass run to (Your Love Has Lifted Me) "Higher and Higher", by Jackie Wilson. Take a look, novice bassists.
Any opinions?
Thanks
Bill
Fender GDO300 Orchestral - a gift from Amy & Jim
Rogue Beatle Bass
Journal: www.wheretobud.blogspot. com