Topic: new to Chordie, asking about creating song books

I've gone over the site and haven't seen any links or instructions about creating song books in MY SONGBOOK, or how to move songs into my song book.  Can anyone out there send information about this?

RD

Re: new to Chordie, asking about creating song books

Hi Davidtreeoflife
Welcome to Chordie
To add a song to your My songbook..
Sign in. Go to the song you want in your songbook on the right of the screen you will see a box with a section in the box which says Songbook ADD just click on the ADD and the song should be saved to your Mysongbook.
ark

Re: new to Chordie, asking about creating song books

to arkady - I do not find the box on the right of the screen!

Jefke

Re: new to Chordie, asking about creating song books

Make sure you've opened up the song all the way so you're viewing the entire lyrics and chords/tab.
Then go all the way over to the right and to the bottom of the page... you'll see boxes... it's in the third box from the bottom. 

Songbook ADD ... click on Add!  smile

Welcome to the forum!

Art and beauty are in the eyes of the beholder.
What constitutes excellent music is in the ears of the listener.

Re: new to Chordie, asking about creating song books

I do have guitar chored songs for tanya tucker songs,would really like to post these on your website. Kind regards, Valh

Re: new to Chordie, asking about creating song books

valh wrote:

I do have guitar chored songs for tanya tucker songs,would really like to post these on your website. Kind regards, Valh

Valh - Chordie does not host any songs, it's more of a search engine finding songs that are hosted on other sites and putting them into a nice friendly format that is easily searchable.  Please read the FAQ here for more info: http://www.chordie.com/faq.php

That said, once you have your song  hosted elsewhere on the internet, if you would like it to show up in Chordie during the next indexing you may submit the link here:  http://www.chordie.com/addurl.php

Art and beauty are in the eyes of the beholder.
What constitutes excellent music is in the ears of the listener.