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Post by drewsky34 on Nov 23, 2021 17:45:02 GMT -5
Okay I learned Listen Up on guitar and wanted to do it the original way and the only video on YouTube I found of it was from the Unplugged concert. After that Noel started putting a capo on second fret. Every cover I’ve seen on YouTube is not the original chord sequence. Why does the original chord sequence not get any love?! That F# to F#M to B7 bitis tricky I won’t lie, is that why nobody plays it anymore?
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Post by Velo on Nov 23, 2021 18:21:22 GMT -5
Liam performed it in the original way, albeit down a step or two if that helps? but honestly, Noel never really played it much like the original recording, he changed the arrangement a few times in the band before finding something he was happier with when he started playing solo.
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Post by welshylad on Nov 24, 2021 3:21:38 GMT -5
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Post by thespiderandthefly on Nov 27, 2021 15:58:37 GMT -5
I love all versions, but the original chords on an acoustic are a bit challenging, especially the aforementioned bridge with the walk-down from F# (“one fine dayyyy…”)
Does anyone know any history on this tune? Was it ever considered for DM??
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Post by electricsunday on Nov 27, 2021 20:14:27 GMT -5
I remember showing my guitar teacher this song out of the chord songbook and he said the bridge you're talking about is an extremely common progression and showed me another way. I forget exactly what substitution he told me to make but he said one of the chords was just wasted movement and you could get the same notes on an easier chord.
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Post by drewsky34 on Nov 27, 2021 20:43:07 GMT -5
I remember showing my guitar teacher this song out of the chord songbook and he said the bridge you're talking about is an extremely common progression and showed me another way. I forget exactly what substitution he told me to make but he said one of the chords was just wasted movement and you could get the same notes on an easier chord. The bridge where it goes F#M, F#M7, F#7 (I think), B7, BM7, D, E? Any easier way to play that one would be good to know lol
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Post by electricsunday on Nov 27, 2021 22:34:03 GMT -5
Yeah ... but I'm looking at it now and it doesn't make sense to replace just one of those chords the way you have to change between them. Maybe he was talking about the A/C# in the chorus or the F#m right after it.
TBH, I play it on an electric (semi hollow) and once I overcame the fatigue of playing all those barre chords I just stuck with the original way so I never went back and asked him. That's a long song to have your index finger pressed against the fretboard until you're used to it, though.
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Post by thespiderandthefly on Nov 28, 2021 0:14:04 GMT -5
I remember showing my guitar teacher this song out of the chord songbook and he said the bridge you're talking about is an extremely common progression and showed me another way. I forget exactly what substitution he told me to make but he said one of the chords was just wasted movement and you could get the same notes on an easier chord. The bridge where it goes F#M, F#M7, F#7 (I think), B7, BM7, D, E? Any easier way to play that one would be good to know lol Haha, the death of my fat fingers. But yes, that exact run down is horrific without a capo 2 Check out that boneheaded Australian dude we all know and love. He has a good capo 2 bridge tutorial. If not, it’s just Wonderwall chords with a bit of spice. I’ll teach it to ya if you want.
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Post by albarncoxon on Dec 22, 2021 22:26:22 GMT -5
Try this for the bridge
One fine day... It wouldn't... F#m F#m7+ F#m7 B7 Bm D E --2-----2-----2----0------2----2----0--- --2-----2-----2----0------3----3----0--- --2-----2-----2----2------4----2----1--- --4-----3-----2----1------4----0----2--- --4-----4-----4----2------2----------2-- --2-----2-----2----2-----------------0--
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Post by oasismashups on Dec 24, 2021 18:47:19 GMT -5
I play this without a capo: (maybe mute the 1st string too)
x44200 F#m11 x43200 x42200 x21200 B7
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Post by drummert5 on Dec 24, 2021 20:17:21 GMT -5
I play this without a capo: (maybe mute the 1st string too) x44200 F#m11 x43200 x42200 x21200 B7 This is the way. How to avoid painful barre chords for a whole song? Recognize that strumming all 6 strings is rarely what you want.
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