Chords for Alison Krauss & Union Station Granite Mills REVIEW Russell Moore #bluegrass #alisonkrauss #newmusic
Tempo:
118.8 bpm
Chords used:
Eb
E
D
Db
F
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret

Jam Along & Learn...
Alice in Kraus and Union Station, Granite Mills.
So, super, super amazing
sounding, cool acoustic intro.
ominous sounding though.
and
guy.
Moore.
[D] before, and a [Eb] bunch of people commented how awesome Russell [Db] Moore was when they were excited
So, super, super amazing
sounding, cool acoustic intro.
ominous sounding though.
and
guy.
Moore.
[D] before, and a [Eb] bunch of people commented how awesome Russell [Db] Moore was when they were excited
100% ➙ 119BPM
Eb
E
D
Db
F
Eb
E
D
Alice in Kraus and Union Station, Granite Mills.
This song is amazing.
So, super, super amazing
sounding, cool acoustic intro.
It is very ominous sounding though.
And when the [Bb] lyrics come in and
the singing comes in, I was expecting Alice [Eb] in Kraus.
It's actually a guy.
I [E] wouldn't have known
who it is, [Eb] but it is this guy Russell Moore.
The reason I know [E] that is I've done [Eb] an Alice in Kraus
song [D] before, and a [Eb] bunch of people commented how awesome Russell [Db] Moore was when they were excited
for him.
I guess this was [F] in the bluegrass world, you [D] knew this was coming.
I listen to [E] songs to
review, but I'm not in the bluegrass world, so I [Dm] didn't know this was coming.
But oh my gosh,
what an [Db] amazing, amazing voice this Russell Moore guy has.
He sounds great.
Lyrics are very, very
sad about a tragedy, a fire, I think, at a factory or somewhere where, if this is not a made-up story,
I don't think it is.
It doesn't sound made up.
Like 300 [D]-some people died.
Russell's letting you
know his opinion of the fire and the whole situation [Eb] throughout the song.
He actually says,
my opinion, I'm pretty sure if I remember right, that's what he said.
[N]
This is how you sing.
For
anybody listening to this, if you want to know how to sing, listen to this.
Listen to this guy,
Russell Moore, sing Granite Mills.
No autotune, just a beautiful, amazing, crafted voice.
This is
great.
This is what you're supposed to do in music.
It's great.
In between the verses, you get great
people playing instruments.
At one point, I think it's between one verse, maybe it's a mandolin
playing some stuff.
Between one of them, you got a violin.
But they're letting the instruments come
out in between the verses, which is really cool.
It's not all the instruments.
Just one shines here
and there.
The music goes harder, it seems to me, as it goes.
He's telling the story, and the music's
getting more and more into it.
You hear all the typical stuff in it.
You hear the banjo.
You hear
the violin. _
I can't tell what all the different instruments are, but they sound great.
But I'm
blown away by this guy's voice.
Everybody in the comments when I did this first song were like,
this is Russell Moore, Russell Moore.
I was like, oh, we'll see if this song comes out.
I'll listen
to it, who Russell Moore is.
Oh my [Eb] goodness.
Great, great, beautiful voice.
[F] If you don't like
bluegrass, I don't care.
[Db] Just go check out
This song is amazing.
So, super, super amazing
sounding, cool acoustic intro.
It is very ominous sounding though.
And when the [Bb] lyrics come in and
the singing comes in, I was expecting Alice [Eb] in Kraus.
It's actually a guy.
I [E] wouldn't have known
who it is, [Eb] but it is this guy Russell Moore.
The reason I know [E] that is I've done [Eb] an Alice in Kraus
song [D] before, and a [Eb] bunch of people commented how awesome Russell [Db] Moore was when they were excited
for him.
I guess this was [F] in the bluegrass world, you [D] knew this was coming.
I listen to [E] songs to
review, but I'm not in the bluegrass world, so I [Dm] didn't know this was coming.
But oh my gosh,
what an [Db] amazing, amazing voice this Russell Moore guy has.
He sounds great.
Lyrics are very, very
sad about a tragedy, a fire, I think, at a factory or somewhere where, if this is not a made-up story,
I don't think it is.
It doesn't sound made up.
Like 300 [D]-some people died.
Russell's letting you
know his opinion of the fire and the whole situation [Eb] throughout the song.
He actually says,
my opinion, I'm pretty sure if I remember right, that's what he said.
[N]
This is how you sing.
For
anybody listening to this, if you want to know how to sing, listen to this.
Listen to this guy,
Russell Moore, sing Granite Mills.
No autotune, just a beautiful, amazing, crafted voice.
This is
great.
This is what you're supposed to do in music.
It's great.
In between the verses, you get great
people playing instruments.
At one point, I think it's between one verse, maybe it's a mandolin
playing some stuff.
Between one of them, you got a violin.
But they're letting the instruments come
out in between the verses, which is really cool.
It's not all the instruments.
Just one shines here
and there.
The music goes harder, it seems to me, as it goes.
He's telling the story, and the music's
getting more and more into it.
You hear all the typical stuff in it.
You hear the banjo.
You hear
the violin. _
I can't tell what all the different instruments are, but they sound great.
But I'm
blown away by this guy's voice.
Everybody in the comments when I did this first song were like,
this is Russell Moore, Russell Moore.
I was like, oh, we'll see if this song comes out.
I'll listen
to it, who Russell Moore is.
Oh my [Eb] goodness.
Great, great, beautiful voice.
[F] If you don't like
bluegrass, I don't care.
[Db] Just go check out