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I like playing this with a capo on the 2nd fret. -tobykeithlover | 11/24/2004 |
I think the Emadd9 at the end of the chorus is actually a Cadd9 (you can hear the major sound if you listen close)
Otherwise great job :o) -Shantel | 11/26/2004 |
good job on the chords but the way u got the lines set up is a little hard to read when ur tryin to play it off the page not from memory lol
-AcousticCowboy1 | 1/1/2005 |
Wicked Fun song to play!! Good Tab keep up the good work! -Bufe | 1/26/2005 |
could someone please get the intro to this song? thanks -rsclfltts87 | 2/1/2005 |
I'm not sure what you mean by tabbing the intro...the original poster already tabbed it out. It's just a couple of chords hit on the first beat of each measure. If you're talking about the fiddle, which carries the melody, then you're on the wrong tab board.
-spellbound57196 | 4/29/2005 |
If you're playing by yourself and want to try to match the sound of the banjo and guitar combined, try a capo on the 3rd fret. Transpose the chords...play the E major chord form, followed by A major but opening up the G string instead of playing the second fret, followed by the B major form. The key is to let the B and high E strings ring out on the first two chords, alternate picking the lower and higher strings in the chords. It fills out the sound of both the banjo and guitar and sounds quite nice if you don't have a banjo to accompany you. This would also work if you had 2 or 3 guitars in the band, with one accoustic playing the capoed version and the others playing in standard tuning. Give it a shot. -spellbound57196 | 4/29/2005 |
This is my stinkin' favorite song! Keep on keepin' on! [>*] -chard | 5/10/2005 |
also sounds pretty solid if you play the Dsus7 instead of the D Good Job though! -mpingjr | 6/8/2005 |