Author |
Message |
Chris McKenna
Member Username: Maccattack
Post Number: 1 Registered: 05-2005
| Posted on Wednesday, July 06, 2005 - 11:31 am: | |
Ive been looking for tabs for this song for years. Anyone?? |
Enrico Bongiovanni
Member Username: Boil
Post Number: 6 Registered: 05-2005
| Posted on Sunday, July 24, 2005 - 06:22 pm: | |
you can find it here, as well as some other go-b's songs http://www.ozmusic-central.com.au/oztabs/ghi/gobetweens_the/ |
Guy Morton
Member Username: Guym
Post Number: 1 Registered: 09-2005
| Posted on Sunday, September 11, 2005 - 11:55 pm: | |
I can't hear a D7 in this song...if anything it sounds like a Dsus2 (ie, open E on a normal open D chord). Anyone else have a view? |
Guy Morton
Member Username: Guym
Post Number: 2 Registered: 09-2005
| Posted on Sunday, September 11, 2005 - 11:56 pm: | |
or a sus4, ie D with G on the top string |
Peter Azzopardi
Member Username: Pete
Post Number: 119 Registered: 09-2004
| Posted on Tuesday, September 13, 2005 - 01:32 am: | |
I'm not too good on chord names, Guy, but I always played this song with an open E in place of a F# (Dsus2?). Personally, I can't hear a D7. |
Guy Morton
Member Username: Guym
Post Number: 3 Registered: 09-2005
| Posted on Tuesday, September 13, 2005 - 06:32 am: | |
Yes, that's what i reckon too (the open E makes it a sus2), and sometimes it's a sus 4 (d+g) just before the change to the G. www.gootar.com is a great resource for finding chord names from fingering patterns - go to http://www.gootar.com/guitar/index.html and just tell it what you're playing and it'll tell you what the chord is (in a variety of key contexts) |
Rick Hawkins
Member Username: Hamlet
Post Number: 4 Registered: 01-2008
| Posted on Monday, January 14, 2008 - 05:57 am: | |
More likely to be Dsus2 and/or Dsus4 than D7, though I haven't tried it yet. 7th chords, more correctly known as dominant 7th chords (as opposed to major 7th chords) are more common in blues and jazz and pop music from the first half of the 20th century. In the 60s, with the rise of the influence of folk music in pop, suspended chords began to attain much more importance than dominant chords, in fact, chords that were very popular in the 20s, 30s and 40s |
Anthony Unregistered guest
| Posted on Wednesday, December 23, 2009 - 11:10 am: | |
I don't think it is a G either... anyone have any ideas? |
Ann Heffernan Unregistered guest
| Posted on Friday, July 24, 2015 - 10:54 am: | |
Does any one have the music for the oboe component of Bye Bye Pride? |