Topic: acoustic tunes
What new song are Chordians learning on your acoustic guitar??
i got this one down, looking for more
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere/www.g … 25206.html
Badeye
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Guitar chord forum - chordie → Acoustic → acoustic tunes
What new song are Chordians learning on your acoustic guitar??
i got this one down, looking for more
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere/www.g … 25206.html
Badeye
Howdy Badeye,
I was headin home the other day listening to XM radio , the Coffeehouse channel and heard a song by Billy Joe Shavers that you would really like. I couldn't find it on youtube by Billy Joe but there is a version by Waylon Jennings. The song is "Slow Rolling Low" I have to get a copy by Billy Joe his version is so good. It is a bluesy simple tune but a good one.
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere/www.r … rollin_low
That reminded me of another Billy Joe Shaver song "Ride Me Down Easy" so I been playing both songs and learning the lyrics.
Ride me down Easy has great lyrics , that song fits me just right.
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere/www.r … n-easy-crd
I've always like Billie Joe Shaver's "I'm Going to Live Forever", but I can't get the pattern figured out. C'est la vie. Something to work towards in time I suppose.
- Zurf
Howdy Badeye,
I was headin home the other day listening to XM radio , the Coffeehouse channel and heard a song by Billy Joe Shavers that you would really like. I couldn't find it on youtube by Billy Joe but there is a version by Waylon Jennings. The song is "Slow Rolling Low" I have to get a copy by Billy Joe his version is so good. It is a bluesy simple tune but a good one.
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere/www.r … rollin_low
That reminded me of another Billy Joe Shaver song "Ride Me Down Easy" so I been playing both songs and learning the lyrics.
Ride me down Easy has great lyrics , that song fits me just right.
Thank you Wlbaye, these are next on my list. Stay at it Zurf, you can do it.
have a great day....... Badeye
One I am trying to remember that i already do with the use of the lyrics is " Caledonia" the dougie McLean song all about my wonderful country, the best country in the whole world!!!
I got asked to do this a few times the other week when i was playing in the pub but i never had the lyrics with me. I am always forgetting the words to the second part in the second verse as well as the second part in the first.
I have done it so many times I would have thought i would know it off by heart.
Having the lyrics in front really is a bad comfort zone sometimes.
Ken
"Killing me Softly with His Song" is being added to my little list of songs... it has 2 new chords for me... the "dreaded chords" for newbies LOL! Nothing too exciting to the veterans, but I'm excited that a little over a month in and I'm working on a song with "so much" going on and a slew of chords (not just three)... and I know them! LOL!
Wlbaye - on that Slow Rollin Low, what does the chord C/G mean? I've seen that before and am confused. It looks like a C chord on the chart with the 6th string open... why is it called a C/G? I really need to learn music theory, I'm guessing the answer is in the notes that are being played with that open string. Thanks!
Good Morning,
That is a good question, as you probably know I am not a teacher or great at explaining theory. Russell, Jerome and Southpaw41 are experts on theory.
Back to the question, I call chords like C/G slash chords and I think of them as a chord with a G note added or a bass note of G added to a C chord. That is not the way the chord chart shows it though.
This explains it better than I can.
Slash chord
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In popular music a slash chord or slashed chord is a chord whose bass note or inversion is indicated by the addition of a slash and the letter of the bass after the root note letter. It does not indicate "or". (Rooksby 2004, p. 20)
For example, a C major chord (C) in second inversion is written C/G, which reads "C slash G". If B was the bass it would be written C/B (making a major seventh chord in third inversion), which is read "C slash B". Some chords may not otherwise be notated, such as Ab/A (Latarski 1991, p. 25). Thus, a slash chord may also indicate the chord form or shape and an additional bass note.
In popular music, where the particular arrangement of notes is less important than some other forms, slash chords are generally used only when the specific bass note is important. A common example in guitar based music is in the I-V-VIm progression. By placing the third of the V chord in the bass, a descending scale is created in the bass. For example, in the key of G major this would be the chords G, D/F#, Em. That progression has the descending bassline G, F#, E. This type of slash chord contains diatonically occurring notes. In traditional notation it would be written using figured bass symbols.
I believe the chord chart you were talking of on Slow Rolling Low may be wrong or maybe one of our experts can help up out and explain why it is posted 032010 and called a C/G I would play it 332010
Great Question
This reminds me of a song that you can hear a descending bass line on
I am gonna do a new video of this song and it's chords do a descending bass line.
"Mr Bojangles" Starts out on C chord with C being the bass note next to C/B with B the bass note x20010 then C/A x02010 then C/G 332010 Then to a F chord hitting the F Bass note. So from playing the first C chord you descended with a C Bass note B A G and to F.
Really a fun song to play and get your fingers walking. The C chord is a great chord when starting out. I always leave my index finger planted and walk with the others, it gives you a home base so you don't get lost.
I believe the chord chart you were talking of on Slow Rolling Low may be wrong or maybe one of our experts can help up out and explain why it is posted 032010 and called a C/G I would play it 332010
that makes more sense to me. The explanation that you posted was what I was thinking except that I knew the open 6th string was an E! LOL! I laugh, cuz I really don't know what notes I'm playing when I play a chord (yet... although I can guess as I know a bit about music from my sight singing years) but I do know what the open strings are (thank GOD there's only 6!) So yeah, if anyone can chime in and let us know if that chord chart is wrong or if there's something that's missing in the explanation that'd be great! Might have to ask this somewhere else tho as it's off topic here.
But... while we're on it... so when you play a "slash chord" do you always pluck out that bass note? You wouldn't actually strum the whole thing as a chord right (cuz then it would actually be a different chord?)??? I'm assuming a "slash chord" will always mean pluck this different bass note (denoted after the slash) then strum the chord (before the slash). Or is this something that's also left up to one's interpretation?
I'm excited to hear your Bojangles! I'll look forward to seeing it in my subscriptions!!
As a rule I most always hit the bass note of a chord first. It is the tonic or root note of the chord like the C chord starts out 5 th string 3rd fret is a C note . You can strum , hit the bass and strum or when finger pickin your thumb hits the bass note of the chord and whatever pattern you are using from there. Alternating bass , you still start with the C and on the next beat you can remain on the C chord and just lift your ring finger of the C to the G note on the sixth string and alternate each beat back and forth but you always start on the C note first when doing this.
I have a Country Strumming Video that covers the alternating bass.
I am doing Mr. Bojangles in a fingerpicking walking bass line I am doing it in 4/4 time. Mr Bojangles was written in 3/4 time or waltz time but my friend SouthPaw41 gave me permission and his approval to do it in 4/4 time so I'm hoping the critics aren't too hard on me
What new song are Chordians learning on your acoustic guitar??
This is my latest work in progress... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3e8bw3Bd … re=related almost got it but not quite yet
This one also http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1JBm-BF … annel_page same story close but not quite yet...
Cool stuff Pix. Here's one to learn for kitchen jams..
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere?url=h … ner=zorba1
Badeye
That's cool Badeye! Man her index finger has to be tired by the end of the night http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cqg3kcwAgso Just thought it looked kinda odd the way she picks the bass note with the thumb and then flicks the index out for the following strum. Seems like it would be easier with a pick but I guess she is playing a classical....
Here's another I've been enjoying playing a lot recently http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qw69J_HW … re=related An older James Hunter tune "Mollena". It's basically a D Bm G A progression. Fun to play and sing... That one and "Pencil Thin Mustache" by Jimmy Buffet http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tn7l0FJM … p;index=13 have been getting played a lot lately A bit of a break from the newer stuff I usually jam
Since you brought up Melanie (I loved her music) here is another of hers that is easy and fun to play.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MsYux3ZpblQ
Thanks for posting, enjoyed em both.
badeye too
Here is a silly song Casey and I are working up.
Casey's guitar playing is not yet up to holding down chords during the tuba solo, so I guess we will have to sing la la's over that part or paste the tuba solo in later in our vid.
toots
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVkBO_OlII0
Try "Toes" by Zac Brown Band cool song and easy too play
One I am trying to remember that i already do with the use of the lyrics is " Caledonia" the dougie McLean song all about my wonderful country, the best country in the whole world!!!
I got asked to do this a few times the other week when i was playing in the pub but i never had the lyrics with me. I am always forgetting the words to the second part in the second verse as well as the second part in the first.
I have done it so many times I would have thought i would know it off by heart.Having the lyrics in front really is a bad comfort zone sometimes.
Ken
Well thanks!
After this post was made in this thread I have forced myself to sing nothing but Caledonia and within 24 hours I have got it. I have memorized the song. It does help that I have been playing it for a few years wit hlyrics and chords in front. Like I said it is a comfort zone thing, tonight I will do it without paper in front.
I might even record a version for you tube. ( but not tonight)
Ken
One I am working on from Dougie MacLean " Ready For The Storm" I can play it through just fine fingerpicking. I am working on the intro picking and the break picking.
I have a friend that I graduated from high school that played steel guitar with Kathy Mattea. He was considered the best in Nashville. He fell on some hard times, but has picked himself up and is playing again even in poor health. The Transatlantic Sessions were something special.
Dougie with Kathy Mattea
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wv4Wpychxh8 Ready For the Storm
Another I am working on by Dougie
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1DCtFLEV_o This Love Will Carry
Try "Toes" by Zac Brown Band cool song and easy too play
Boss song! Love it http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9A9TvZS … p;index=14 Gonna add that one to the list. Sounds like a crowd pleaser. Thanks! -Pix
Wow, He's got lots of really cool stuff!!! Check out the use of the violin at 0:45 in this vid of "Where The Boats Comes From" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViL_xFWP … re=related
Am learning a couple at the moment - "You do something to me" - Paul Weller (not too difficult, but can't quite sing it & don't want to transpose or use capo), & "Tears in Heaven" - Clapton. The latter thanks to Jamplay - but pretty difficult for me, am thinking I might never get this one!
Upyerkilt - thanks for the reminder about Caledonia, will look that up. Do Sassenachs need special permission from your majesty to play this??
Cheers!
. Do Sassenachs need special permission from your majesty to play this??
Cheers!
lol not at all. Ye can even change the lyrics to suit, I dont mind,
I also found "you do something to me" quite hard to play and sing if I remember right.
Ken
I've been on a 10 yr. hiatus from playing the guitar ...LOL ...although I learned how to play way back in the early '70s. So now, I'm starting out slow with a few simple tunes by Taylor Swift ..."The Best Day" and "White Horse" which I can play pretty well.
Next on my agenda is playing "House of the Rising Sun" by The Animals ...arpeggio style.
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