There have been several threads like this but I can’t come up with exactly what I’m looking for, sooo…
I’ve been playing for a little while now and I’m pretty well set with the basic open chords. I’m looking for a few not-so-hard but fun-to-play songs to broaden my repertoire while increasing my skills.
I like everything, just to narrow it down a bit. Any suggestions?
“Knocking on Heaven’s Door” is just D-A-G-A over and over.
So is “Crimson and Clover.”
“Village Green Preservation Society” is just G-D-C-G.
“Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” can be played over E-Em-A-A7 for the verse, G-C-D for the chorus (I think, I don’t have a guitar with me).
“Eight Days A Week” is also D-A-G-D (I think, I’m air-guitaring) for the verse, with a B7 and a G for the “Eight Days a Week, I luh-uh-uh-uh-uv you” part.
Tons of rock n’ roll songs are three major chords with the root-4th-5th relationship. You just learn to hear it after a while.
Lots of Creedence stuff can be played based out of “G”… I play them that way to avoid having to screech the vocals…
I play “Fortunate Son” transcribed to D C and G, for instance.
WWW.OLGA.NET is a great resource for finding chords songs are in… Pick a song, or artist you want to play, look it up at OLGA. I personally ingnore the tab, but the ones with “crd” have the chords and enough lyric to get you started playing them.
I will think of more specific songs and put them in here later… good luck!
Heh, that’s one of the few songs I figured out how to play on my own (I’m a decent guitarist but don’t have perfect pitch). That and ‘The Wooden Song’ by the Butthole Surfers.
Most of the slow acoustic and/or clean electric intros to old Metallica songs are very simple to play, and sound cool. I know the slow intro to about every Metallica song, ever (though there are many that I don’t know the rest of the song, heh heh).
I’ll also throw in a vote for Crosby, Stills, and Nash’s (and Young’s?) Southern Cross. It’s A, G, D, repeated, knocking on the guitar in between. It’s been years since I’ve had the sheet music, but I’ve still got the lyrics in my fingers and the structure in my fingers. Thanks for giving me an excuse to tune my guitar, by the way!