Chords for Feel Good Inc. Guitar Lesson Gorillaz
Tempo:
68.7 bpm
Chords used:
Ebm
Db
Ab
Bbm
E
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Alright, these are the chords of the chorus of Feel Good Ink by Gorillaz.
It's all bar chords.
So the first bar chord is an E flat minor.
You're going to bar across the 6th fret, meaning you use your first finger and pinch down all
six strings across the 6th fret.
If you're more advanced, you can actually try to miss the low E string here, but if
you're a beginner, it's just easiest just to clamp all six strings down.
And then with the remaining three fingers here, I'm going to create an A minor chord
shape up here.
So the frets end up being 6, 6, 8, 8, 7, and then the 6th fret on the high E string is
already held down by the bar.
And these three fingers are creating an A minor shape, [Am] like you would create down here,
[E] [Gb] up on the 6th, above the 6th fret [Ebm] here.
The next chord is going to be a D flat major bar chord.
So we're going to go down to the 4th fret now and bar across that.
[N] The best way to do it, if you can learn how to do this from the get-go, is to actually
bar across and then use your three fingers here individually to create an A chord across
the D, G, and [Gb] B strings, just like you would down here.
Use these three fingers, do that up here, [E] and bar down like that.
Now I didn't [Db] learn like that, unfortunately.
So [Eb] that's not the easiest way for me to do it.
What I do is I actually collapse my third finger across these three strings on the 6th
fret [Db] [Gb] [C] and then play
[Ab]
a
chord like that.
[Eb] The A flat minor chord is next.
You're going to stay barred across the 4th fret and with your 3rd and 4th [Em] fingers, you're
going to create an E minor chord shape, just like you would down here.
E minor chord, so the frets in this [Ab] chord are going to be 4th, 6th, [Abm] 6th, 4th, 4th, 4th.
[Ab]
And then we're going to do a B [G] flat minor chord, which is just the same exact chord
moved upward two [Bbm] frets.
[Gm] When I say up, I mean up in [Bb] sound, [E] not up towards the ceiling.
We're talking about music, so [Bbm] we use musical terms.
[Bb] I move up two frets, so [D] the frets here are 6, 8, 8, 6, 6, 6, across there.
All together we [Ebm] have E minor, D flat, [Ab] A flat minor, [Bbm] B flat minor, [Ebm] A flat [Db] minor, D flat,
[Abm] A flat minor, [Bb] B flat minor.
[Ebm] [Db] [Abm]
[Bbm] [Ebm] And there you go.
That's the
It's all bar chords.
So the first bar chord is an E flat minor.
You're going to bar across the 6th fret, meaning you use your first finger and pinch down all
six strings across the 6th fret.
If you're more advanced, you can actually try to miss the low E string here, but if
you're a beginner, it's just easiest just to clamp all six strings down.
And then with the remaining three fingers here, I'm going to create an A minor chord
shape up here.
So the frets end up being 6, 6, 8, 8, 7, and then the 6th fret on the high E string is
already held down by the bar.
And these three fingers are creating an A minor shape, [Am] like you would create down here,
[E] [Gb] up on the 6th, above the 6th fret [Ebm] here.
The next chord is going to be a D flat major bar chord.
So we're going to go down to the 4th fret now and bar across that.
[N] The best way to do it, if you can learn how to do this from the get-go, is to actually
bar across and then use your three fingers here individually to create an A chord across
the D, G, and [Gb] B strings, just like you would down here.
Use these three fingers, do that up here, [E] and bar down like that.
Now I didn't [Db] learn like that, unfortunately.
So [Eb] that's not the easiest way for me to do it.
What I do is I actually collapse my third finger across these three strings on the 6th
fret [Db] [Gb] [C] and then play
[Ab]
a
chord like that.
[Eb] The A flat minor chord is next.
You're going to stay barred across the 4th fret and with your 3rd and 4th [Em] fingers, you're
going to create an E minor chord shape, just like you would down here.
E minor chord, so the frets in this [Ab] chord are going to be 4th, 6th, [Abm] 6th, 4th, 4th, 4th.
[Ab]
And then we're going to do a B [G] flat minor chord, which is just the same exact chord
moved upward two [Bbm] frets.
[Gm] When I say up, I mean up in [Bb] sound, [E] not up towards the ceiling.
We're talking about music, so [Bbm] we use musical terms.
[Bb] I move up two frets, so [D] the frets here are 6, 8, 8, 6, 6, 6, across there.
All together we [Ebm] have E minor, D flat, [Ab] A flat minor, [Bbm] B flat minor, [Ebm] A flat [Db] minor, D flat,
[Abm] A flat minor, [Bb] B flat minor.
[Ebm] [Db] [Abm]
[Bbm] [Ebm] And there you go.
That's the
Key:
Ebm
Db
Ab
Bbm
E
Ebm
Db
Ab
Alright, these are the chords of the chorus of Feel Good Ink by Gorillaz.
It's all bar chords.
_ _ _ So the first bar chord is an E flat minor.
You're going to bar across the 6th fret, meaning you use your first finger and pinch down all
six strings across the 6th fret.
If you're more advanced, you can actually try to miss the low E string here, but if
you're a beginner, it's just easiest just to clamp all six _ strings down.
And then with the remaining three fingers here, I'm going to create an A minor chord
shape up here.
So the frets end up being 6, 6, 8, 8, 7, and then the 6th fret on the high E string is
already held down by the bar.
And these three fingers are creating an A minor shape, [Am] like you would create down here,
_ [E] [Gb] up on the 6th, above the 6th fret [Ebm] here.
_ _ _ _ _ The next chord is going to be a D flat major bar chord.
So we're going to go down to the 4th fret now and bar across that.
[N] The best way to do it, if you can learn how to do this from the get-go, is to actually
bar across and then use your three fingers here individually to create an A chord across
the D, G, and [Gb] B strings, just like you would down here.
Use these three fingers, do that up here, [E] and bar down like that.
Now I didn't [Db] learn like that, unfortunately.
So [Eb] that's not the easiest way for me to do it.
What I do is I actually collapse my third finger across these three strings on the 6th
fret [Db] _ _ _ [Gb] [C] and then play_
[Ab]
_a
chord like that.
[Eb] The A flat minor chord is next.
You're going to stay barred across the 4th fret and with your 3rd and 4th [Em] fingers, you're
going to create an E minor chord shape, just like you would down here.
_ E minor chord, so the frets in this [Ab] chord are going to be 4th, 6th, [Abm] 6th, 4th, 4th, 4th.
_ [Ab]
And then we're going to do a B [G] flat minor chord, which is just the same exact chord
moved upward two [Bbm] frets.
_ [Gm] When I say up, I mean up in [Bb] sound, [E] not up towards the ceiling.
We're talking about music, so [Bbm] we use musical terms.
[Bb] I move up two frets, so [D] the frets here are 6, 8, 8, 6, 6, 6, across there.
All together we [Ebm] have E minor, D flat, [Ab] A flat minor, [Bbm] B flat minor, [Ebm] A flat [Db] minor, D flat,
[Abm] A flat minor, [Bb] B flat minor.
[Ebm] _ _ [Db] _ _ [Abm] _
_ [Bbm] _ _ [Ebm] _ _ And there you go.
That's the
It's all bar chords.
_ _ _ So the first bar chord is an E flat minor.
You're going to bar across the 6th fret, meaning you use your first finger and pinch down all
six strings across the 6th fret.
If you're more advanced, you can actually try to miss the low E string here, but if
you're a beginner, it's just easiest just to clamp all six _ strings down.
And then with the remaining three fingers here, I'm going to create an A minor chord
shape up here.
So the frets end up being 6, 6, 8, 8, 7, and then the 6th fret on the high E string is
already held down by the bar.
And these three fingers are creating an A minor shape, [Am] like you would create down here,
_ [E] [Gb] up on the 6th, above the 6th fret [Ebm] here.
_ _ _ _ _ The next chord is going to be a D flat major bar chord.
So we're going to go down to the 4th fret now and bar across that.
[N] The best way to do it, if you can learn how to do this from the get-go, is to actually
bar across and then use your three fingers here individually to create an A chord across
the D, G, and [Gb] B strings, just like you would down here.
Use these three fingers, do that up here, [E] and bar down like that.
Now I didn't [Db] learn like that, unfortunately.
So [Eb] that's not the easiest way for me to do it.
What I do is I actually collapse my third finger across these three strings on the 6th
fret [Db] _ _ _ [Gb] [C] and then play_
[Ab]
_a
chord like that.
[Eb] The A flat minor chord is next.
You're going to stay barred across the 4th fret and with your 3rd and 4th [Em] fingers, you're
going to create an E minor chord shape, just like you would down here.
_ E minor chord, so the frets in this [Ab] chord are going to be 4th, 6th, [Abm] 6th, 4th, 4th, 4th.
_ [Ab]
And then we're going to do a B [G] flat minor chord, which is just the same exact chord
moved upward two [Bbm] frets.
_ [Gm] When I say up, I mean up in [Bb] sound, [E] not up towards the ceiling.
We're talking about music, so [Bbm] we use musical terms.
[Bb] I move up two frets, so [D] the frets here are 6, 8, 8, 6, 6, 6, across there.
All together we [Ebm] have E minor, D flat, [Ab] A flat minor, [Bbm] B flat minor, [Ebm] A flat [Db] minor, D flat,
[Abm] A flat minor, [Bb] B flat minor.
[Ebm] _ _ [Db] _ _ [Abm] _
_ [Bbm] _ _ [Ebm] _ _ And there you go.
That's the