I do it kind of weird, I do it with one finger it’s just something that I picked up from a guy named Tommy Emmanuel but here is how I play the E minor just so you know if you’re falling and it looks weird but yeah so I’m going to go one, two, and three, and I’m going to switch to that D at the end of three, so beyond that upstroke and then I can kind of just play these open strings then I go to the C so that’s always nice whenever you can like kind of play open strings between the chords it’s a cool sound and then I go to a C chord in the second measure after 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 back to that D, E minor, that basically goes twice so those 4 bars are this 1st four bars of the chorus then you do the same thing with the E minor you just stay on the C and then you’re back to the 1st section which would be that’s how you play the course so one more time just with the whole chorus here it goes 1, 2, 3, 4, next up is the bridge cool so right now we’re at about two minutes and 34 seconds into the song and we come out of that chorus and we hit an E minor chord and it’s just 1, 2, 3, I kind of think of this as like a little channel, a little transition and then that lands us right on the bridge and then we’re into the breakdown section. That’s the 1st section, then we’re going to head into the chorus we’re going to transition over to an E minor chord so couple things you can play the E minor like this the way most people do to a three. There are more prevalent like flowing with it, like that in the groove and then I move to an F chord and what’s written on the chart you know the tab is F over C which is kind of taking an F chord and playing the middle notes of it which would be three to one and in case you haven’t noticed I am playing with the capo on the 1st fret so my chords are bumped up one fret so really it’s like we’re playing G shapes the concert is A flat you know it’s everything up a half-step but just start simple you know think G and have for an out and then the thing that’s cool about me playing this for an F is the next chord is C over G and look at how easy that transition is from an F over C to a C over G all I do is bring those fingers up one string and this is a great C chord because I can play all six strings on this sequel typically when you play a C you know you don’t want to play the low E so it’d be just for one strum, one upstroke on that F and then I’m on C and then you do the exact opposite go back to the F, F, F, go to G, so it kind of goes backwards so G, F, C, C, F, G. ![]() The first measure starts with my hands always going back and forth and I do this little rest in there one and two and one and three and two and four and sometimes they sneak through. I’m going to make it easy for you to transition, so I’m starting on that G and the way I play it is my third finger on the 3rd fret 6th string and then that arcs over to mute the 5th string and then I’ve got the next three strings open and my pinky on the 1st string. ![]() For this main groove, I’ve got a couple of chords I’ve got a G shape, an F, and a C over G and these might not be the way that you traditionally play those chords but if you follow me on this song.
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