Chords for Graham Nash On The Beatles
Tempo:
132.15 bpm
Chords used:
G
A
B
A#
D
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[G]
[N] You received an advanced copy of Sgt.
Pepper which overwhelmed you listening to it.
The stunning finale to that album, of course, is the song A Day in the Life.
David Crosby, as it happens, was the first person outside of the Beatles and their recording team at EMI to hear that song.
He happened to show up on the very day when they were editing [F#m] onto the existing mix the final thunderous [G] piano chord.
David told me that after it ended he couldn't speak for several minutes.
And Michelle Phillips told me that she heard the song on the car radio and had to pull over [A] to weep.
If you don't mind my asking, how did A Day in the Life impact you?
[N] It's one of the greatest songs ever written.
It's one of the most adventurous songs ever written and recorded.
I don't think there'll ever be another Beatles.
I think that the universe put those four kids in the right place at the right time
and gave them the right talent to be able to move the hearts and minds and spirits of billions of people and continue to this day.
Very often when I'm warming up my voice with David and Stephen, we'll sing Beatles songs.
And their incredible simplicity and their incredible [C#m] melodic structure [C] is stunning to this [B] day.
I mean, with all due respect, what [A#] in this Western scale of music, there's what, 12 notes?
Are you kidding me?
[C#] The Beatles were unbelievable.
And I think we all knew it.
It's almost like Arlo Guthrie talking about Bob Dylan writing [A] songs and likening to a fisherman who is fishing upstream and catching all the big ones before they ever get down to the lower stream.
The Beatles [D] were the best band in the world.
There's [A#m] absolutely no question about it.
Our visitor to the Foxhole today has been Graham Nash, insanely talented polymathematic artist, prototype for the cool dude, digital [F#] pioneer, and author of Wild Tales, a rock and roll life newly issued in paperback by Three Rivers Press.
[D] Words to live by for you and for me.
[D#] Thank you so much for doing this for me and for our [A#] viewers, Graham.
This was a real honor.
That's going to do [B] it for this episode of the [N] Foxhole.
I'm your host, James Rosen, signing off from the Washington Bureau of Fox News.
You can follow me on Twitter at James Rosen FNC.
We'll see you next time.
[N] You received an advanced copy of Sgt.
Pepper which overwhelmed you listening to it.
The stunning finale to that album, of course, is the song A Day in the Life.
David Crosby, as it happens, was the first person outside of the Beatles and their recording team at EMI to hear that song.
He happened to show up on the very day when they were editing [F#m] onto the existing mix the final thunderous [G] piano chord.
David told me that after it ended he couldn't speak for several minutes.
And Michelle Phillips told me that she heard the song on the car radio and had to pull over [A] to weep.
If you don't mind my asking, how did A Day in the Life impact you?
[N] It's one of the greatest songs ever written.
It's one of the most adventurous songs ever written and recorded.
I don't think there'll ever be another Beatles.
I think that the universe put those four kids in the right place at the right time
and gave them the right talent to be able to move the hearts and minds and spirits of billions of people and continue to this day.
Very often when I'm warming up my voice with David and Stephen, we'll sing Beatles songs.
And their incredible simplicity and their incredible [C#m] melodic structure [C] is stunning to this [B] day.
I mean, with all due respect, what [A#] in this Western scale of music, there's what, 12 notes?
Are you kidding me?
[C#] The Beatles were unbelievable.
And I think we all knew it.
It's almost like Arlo Guthrie talking about Bob Dylan writing [A] songs and likening to a fisherman who is fishing upstream and catching all the big ones before they ever get down to the lower stream.
The Beatles [D] were the best band in the world.
There's [A#m] absolutely no question about it.
Our visitor to the Foxhole today has been Graham Nash, insanely talented polymathematic artist, prototype for the cool dude, digital [F#] pioneer, and author of Wild Tales, a rock and roll life newly issued in paperback by Three Rivers Press.
[D] Words to live by for you and for me.
[D#] Thank you so much for doing this for me and for our [A#] viewers, Graham.
This was a real honor.
That's going to do [B] it for this episode of the [N] Foxhole.
I'm your host, James Rosen, signing off from the Washington Bureau of Fox News.
You can follow me on Twitter at James Rosen FNC.
We'll see you next time.
Key:
G
A
B
A#
D
G
A
B
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _
[N] You received an advanced copy of Sgt.
Pepper which overwhelmed you listening to it.
The stunning finale to that album, of course, is the song A Day in the Life.
David Crosby, as it happens, was the first person outside of the Beatles and their recording team at EMI to hear that song.
He happened to show up on the very day when they were editing [F#m] onto the existing mix the final thunderous [G] piano chord.
David told me that after it ended he couldn't speak for several minutes.
And Michelle Phillips told me that she heard the song on the car radio and had to pull over [A] to weep.
If you don't mind my asking, how did A Day in the Life impact you? _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [N] It's one of the greatest songs ever written.
_ It's one of the most adventurous songs ever written and recorded. _ _ _
_ I don't think there'll ever be _ another Beatles.
_ I think that the universe put those four kids in the right place at the right time
and gave them the right talent to be able to move the hearts and minds and spirits of billions of people and continue to this day.
Very often when I'm warming up my voice with David and Stephen, we'll sing Beatles songs.
And their incredible simplicity and their incredible _ [C#m] melodic structure [C] is stunning to this [B] day. _
I mean, with all due respect, what [A#] in this Western scale of music, there's what, 12 notes?
Are you kidding me?
_ [C#] The Beatles were unbelievable.
And I think we all knew it.
It's almost like Arlo Guthrie talking about Bob Dylan writing [A] songs and likening to a fisherman who is fishing upstream and catching all the big ones before they ever get down to the lower stream. _
The Beatles [D] were the best band in the world.
There's [A#m] absolutely no question about it.
Our visitor to the Foxhole today has been Graham Nash, insanely talented polymathematic artist, prototype for the cool dude, digital [F#] pioneer, and author of Wild Tales, a rock and roll life newly issued in paperback by Three Rivers Press.
[D] Words to live by for you and for me.
[D#] Thank you so much for doing this for me and for our [A#] viewers, Graham.
This was a real honor.
That's going to do [B] it for this episode of the [N] Foxhole.
I'm your host, James Rosen, signing off from the Washington Bureau of Fox News.
You can follow me on Twitter at James Rosen FNC.
We'll see you next time.
[N] You received an advanced copy of Sgt.
Pepper which overwhelmed you listening to it.
The stunning finale to that album, of course, is the song A Day in the Life.
David Crosby, as it happens, was the first person outside of the Beatles and their recording team at EMI to hear that song.
He happened to show up on the very day when they were editing [F#m] onto the existing mix the final thunderous [G] piano chord.
David told me that after it ended he couldn't speak for several minutes.
And Michelle Phillips told me that she heard the song on the car radio and had to pull over [A] to weep.
If you don't mind my asking, how did A Day in the Life impact you? _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [N] It's one of the greatest songs ever written.
_ It's one of the most adventurous songs ever written and recorded. _ _ _
_ I don't think there'll ever be _ another Beatles.
_ I think that the universe put those four kids in the right place at the right time
and gave them the right talent to be able to move the hearts and minds and spirits of billions of people and continue to this day.
Very often when I'm warming up my voice with David and Stephen, we'll sing Beatles songs.
And their incredible simplicity and their incredible _ [C#m] melodic structure [C] is stunning to this [B] day. _
I mean, with all due respect, what [A#] in this Western scale of music, there's what, 12 notes?
Are you kidding me?
_ [C#] The Beatles were unbelievable.
And I think we all knew it.
It's almost like Arlo Guthrie talking about Bob Dylan writing [A] songs and likening to a fisherman who is fishing upstream and catching all the big ones before they ever get down to the lower stream. _
The Beatles [D] were the best band in the world.
There's [A#m] absolutely no question about it.
Our visitor to the Foxhole today has been Graham Nash, insanely talented polymathematic artist, prototype for the cool dude, digital [F#] pioneer, and author of Wild Tales, a rock and roll life newly issued in paperback by Three Rivers Press.
[D] Words to live by for you and for me.
[D#] Thank you so much for doing this for me and for our [A#] viewers, Graham.
This was a real honor.
That's going to do [B] it for this episode of the [N] Foxhole.
I'm your host, James Rosen, signing off from the Washington Bureau of Fox News.
You can follow me on Twitter at James Rosen FNC.
We'll see you next time.