Chords for Second One to Know Guitar Lesson and Tutorial - Chris Stapleton
Tempo:
103.3 bpm
Chords used:
Bb
Eb
F
C
Fm
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[C] [Bb] [G] [Eb] [F]
[Eb]
[C] The second one to know is a song from Chris Stapleton who co-wrote it along with Mike Henderson.
The song's in the key of C blues, but we'll cape up to the third fret on both the acoustic
and the electric guitar so that we can play like we're playing A blues chord shapes.
The acoustic and the electric play a very similar part throughout the whole song, almost
identical, but we will break away on the electric guitar and we'll learn that bridge solo that
Chris Stapleton does and we'll also rock out at the end.
[Bb] [G] [Cm] [Fm]
[Bb] [C] [Gm] [Eb] [F]
[Bb] [C] Don't [G] put my love [Eb] on that [F] earth, [Eb] [F] [Bb] [C] [Bb] never let [G] anything [Cm] that [F] hot be cold.
[Fm] [Cm] If you [Bb] ever change [G] your [Cm] mind, [F] wanna leave [Eb] my love [F] behind, [Bb] [C] just [Gm] let me be the second
[F] one to know.
[Eb] [Fm] [Gm] [F] [Bb] [F] Yeah, the second [Eb] one to [Cm] know.
[Bb] [G] [Fm] [Eb]
[Gm] To [Cm]
[Fm] [Cm] [Fm] [Eb]
[F] [Cm] [C]
[Gm] [F]
[G] [Cm] [Gm]
[C] [Gm] [Eb] [Fm] [Eb]
[F] [Bb] [C] [Bb] [G] [Fm]
[F] [Bb] [C] start, let's get a capo on the third fret and we're in standard tuning for second one to know.
The acoustic guitar is really playing a very similar part.
You could almost teach it in the same lesson.
We'll do them separate just because that's how we do it, but it's basically the same
rhythm part that drives us through the whole song and then there's a number of variations
that we're going to encounter that we'll talk about.
But the main progression that we're going to learn first here is this.
[Bb] [G] [Eb] [F] [F]
[Bb] [C] [Bb] [G] [Eb] [Fm] [Eb]
[F] [Bb] [C] All right, [F] and even that very last part at the end, [Bb] [C] that's one of the variations we play
in the verse.
We play something different at the end of the choruses, but we'll go over all that.
Let's start by learning just what I just played.
Okay, let's get these chord shapes.
We're going to start with an A bar chord.
Let's open A string, second fret of D, second fret of G, and we [Bb] really don't want
Back to the [C] A.
Down, down, mute, [Eb] mute, [G] down, down, down, [A] mute, mute, down, [Fm] down, down,
mute, [Eb] mute, [F] down, down, down, [Bbm] mute, mute, down, down, two, [Bb] three, [C] G.
[Gm] [Eb] [F]
[Eb] [F] [Bb] [C] [Gm] [F]
[F] [Bb] Chorus.
If you already took the acoustic lesson for a second one to know, and you're just trying
to play the rhythm on the electric now, you almost don't even need to take it because
they really are identical, except for the parts that we break away in the solo and in
the outro, which we'll learn in its separate tutorial next.
But I thought I'd teach it again on the electric because it's more fun to learn it for those
of you that just really want to learn the electric rhythm and not the acoustic when
we've got the right tone.
[C] And Chris Davidson's got this cool super reverb-y tone.
To me it just sounds like you've got a bridge pickup, preferably a tube amp just cranked
to where it's starting to break up a little bit, maybe a little extra overdrive, but not
much, not a ton of overdrive, and then just plenty of reverb.
Just a lot of reverb, crank it up.
The main progression that we'll learn first, this is what we do over the intro to, is this.
[Bb] [G] [Cm] [Fm] [Eb] [Fm]
[Bb] [C] [Gm] [Eb] [F] [Eb] [F]
[Bb] [C] In this tutorial we'll look at the solo for second one to know.
We'll pick it up right after [Fm] that second chorus.
[Eb] [Gm] We'll do the rest of that solo.
Then we'll also do what we hear at the outro at the end of this tutorial.
Pretty similar tone to the rhythm.
It's a bridge pickup and then sounds like kind of a cranked up tube amp, just a little
bit of overdrive, not too much, and then a good amount of reverb.
This is all tabbed out beneath the video player at 6stringcountry.com, so pull those up.
Here's how it looks.
One, two, and three, and four, and.
[Cm]
[F] [Eb]
[C] [Eb] [Gm]
[Cm]
[Bb] [Fm] [Eb]
[C] [Bb] [C]
[F] [Cm] [Gm]
[Fm] [Bb] [Cm] [Bb] [G]
[Eb] [F] [Eb] [Fm] [Bb] [C] [Gm]
[Eb] [F] [Eb] [Bb] [C] [Gm]
[Cm] [Fm] [Fm] [C]
[Eb]
[C] The second one to know is a song from Chris Stapleton who co-wrote it along with Mike Henderson.
The song's in the key of C blues, but we'll cape up to the third fret on both the acoustic
and the electric guitar so that we can play like we're playing A blues chord shapes.
The acoustic and the electric play a very similar part throughout the whole song, almost
identical, but we will break away on the electric guitar and we'll learn that bridge solo that
Chris Stapleton does and we'll also rock out at the end.
[Bb] [G] [Cm] [Fm]
[Bb] [C] [Gm] [Eb] [F]
[Bb] [C] Don't [G] put my love [Eb] on that [F] earth, [Eb] [F] [Bb] [C] [Bb] never let [G] anything [Cm] that [F] hot be cold.
[Fm] [Cm] If you [Bb] ever change [G] your [Cm] mind, [F] wanna leave [Eb] my love [F] behind, [Bb] [C] just [Gm] let me be the second
[F] one to know.
[Eb] [Fm] [Gm] [F] [Bb] [F] Yeah, the second [Eb] one to [Cm] know.
[Bb] [G] [Fm] [Eb]
[Gm] To [Cm]
[Fm] [Cm] [Fm] [Eb]
[F] [Cm] [C]
[Gm] [F]
[G] [Cm] [Gm]
[C] [Gm] [Eb] [Fm] [Eb]
[F] [Bb] [C] [Bb] [G] [Fm]
[F] [Bb] [C] start, let's get a capo on the third fret and we're in standard tuning for second one to know.
The acoustic guitar is really playing a very similar part.
You could almost teach it in the same lesson.
We'll do them separate just because that's how we do it, but it's basically the same
rhythm part that drives us through the whole song and then there's a number of variations
that we're going to encounter that we'll talk about.
But the main progression that we're going to learn first here is this.
[Bb] [G] [Eb] [F] [F]
[Bb] [C] [Bb] [G] [Eb] [Fm] [Eb]
[F] [Bb] [C] All right, [F] and even that very last part at the end, [Bb] [C] that's one of the variations we play
in the verse.
We play something different at the end of the choruses, but we'll go over all that.
Let's start by learning just what I just played.
Okay, let's get these chord shapes.
We're going to start with an A bar chord.
Let's open A string, second fret of D, second fret of G, and we [Bb] really don't want
Back to the [C] A.
Down, down, mute, [Eb] mute, [G] down, down, down, [A] mute, mute, down, [Fm] down, down,
mute, [Eb] mute, [F] down, down, down, [Bbm] mute, mute, down, down, two, [Bb] three, [C] G.
[Gm] [Eb] [F]
[Eb] [F] [Bb] [C] [Gm] [F]
[F] [Bb] Chorus.
If you already took the acoustic lesson for a second one to know, and you're just trying
to play the rhythm on the electric now, you almost don't even need to take it because
they really are identical, except for the parts that we break away in the solo and in
the outro, which we'll learn in its separate tutorial next.
But I thought I'd teach it again on the electric because it's more fun to learn it for those
of you that just really want to learn the electric rhythm and not the acoustic when
we've got the right tone.
[C] And Chris Davidson's got this cool super reverb-y tone.
To me it just sounds like you've got a bridge pickup, preferably a tube amp just cranked
to where it's starting to break up a little bit, maybe a little extra overdrive, but not
much, not a ton of overdrive, and then just plenty of reverb.
Just a lot of reverb, crank it up.
The main progression that we'll learn first, this is what we do over the intro to, is this.
[Bb] [G] [Cm] [Fm] [Eb] [Fm]
[Bb] [C] [Gm] [Eb] [F] [Eb] [F]
[Bb] [C] In this tutorial we'll look at the solo for second one to know.
We'll pick it up right after [Fm] that second chorus.
[Eb] [Gm] We'll do the rest of that solo.
Then we'll also do what we hear at the outro at the end of this tutorial.
Pretty similar tone to the rhythm.
It's a bridge pickup and then sounds like kind of a cranked up tube amp, just a little
bit of overdrive, not too much, and then a good amount of reverb.
This is all tabbed out beneath the video player at 6stringcountry.com, so pull those up.
Here's how it looks.
One, two, and three, and four, and.
[Cm]
[F] [Eb]
[C] [Eb] [Gm]
[Cm]
[Bb] [Fm] [Eb]
[C] [Bb] [C]
[F] [Cm] [Gm]
[Fm] [Bb] [Cm] [Bb] [G]
[Eb] [F] [Eb] [Fm] [Bb] [C] [Gm]
[Eb] [F] [Eb] [Bb] [C] [Gm]
[Cm] [Fm] [Fm] [C]
Key:
Bb
Eb
F
C
Fm
Bb
Eb
F
_ [C] _ _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Eb] _ [F] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Eb] _
_ _ _ [C] _ _ _ The second one to know is a song from Chris Stapleton who co-wrote it along with Mike Henderson.
The song's in the key of C blues, but we'll cape up to the third fret on both the acoustic
and the electric guitar so that we can play like we're playing A blues chord shapes.
The acoustic and the electric play a very similar part throughout the whole song, almost
identical, but we will break away on the electric guitar and we'll learn that bridge solo that
Chris Stapleton does and we'll also rock out at the end. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Cm] _ _ [Fm] _ _
_ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [F] _ _
_ [Bb] _ [C] Don't [G] put my love [Eb] on that [F] earth, [Eb] _ [F] _ [Bb] _ [C] [Bb] never let [G] anything [Cm] that [F] hot be cold.
[Fm] _ _ [Cm] If you [Bb] ever change [G] your [Cm] mind, [F] wanna leave [Eb] my love [F] behind, [Bb] [C] just [Gm] let me be the second
[F] one to know.
[Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Gm] _ [F] _ [Bb] [F] Yeah, the second [Eb] one to [Cm] know.
[Bb] _ [G] _ _ [Fm] _ _ [Eb] _
[Gm] _ To _ _ [Cm] _ _ _
_ [Fm] _ [Cm] _ [Fm] _ _ _ [Eb] _ _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ [Cm] _ [C] _ _
_ _ [Gm] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [G] _ [Cm] _ _ _ [Gm] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Eb] _
[F] _ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Bb] _ [G] _ _ [Fm] _ _
[F] _ _ [Bb] _ [C] _ start, let's get a capo on the third fret and we're in standard tuning for second one to know. _ _
The acoustic guitar is really playing a very similar part.
You could almost teach it in the same lesson.
We'll do them separate just because that's how we do it, but it's basically the same
rhythm part that drives us through the whole song and then there's a number of variations
that we're going to encounter that we'll talk about.
But the main progression that we're going to learn first here is this.
_ _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Eb] _ [F] _ _ [F] _
_ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Eb] _
[F] _ [Bb] _ _ [C] _ All right, [F] and even that very last part at the end, [Bb] _ [C] that's one of the variations we play
in the verse.
We play something different at the end of the choruses, but we'll go over all that.
Let's start by learning just what I just played.
Okay, let's get these chord shapes.
We're going to start with an A bar chord.
Let's open A string, second fret of D, second fret of G, and we [Bb] really don't want_
Back to the [C] A.
Down, down, mute, [Eb] mute, [G] down, down, down, [A] mute, mute, down, [Fm] down, down,
mute, [Eb] mute, [F] down, down, down, [Bbm] mute, mute, down, down, two, [Bb] three, [C] G.
_ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [F] _
[Eb] _ [F] _ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Gm] _ _ _ [F] _
_ [F] _ [Bb] _ _ Chorus.
If you already took the acoustic lesson for a second one to know, and you're just trying
to play the rhythm on the electric now, you almost don't even need to take it because
they really are identical, except for the parts that we break away in the solo and in
the outro, which we'll learn in its separate tutorial next.
But I thought I'd teach it again on the electric because it's more fun to learn it for those
of you that just really want to learn the electric rhythm and not the acoustic when
we've got the right tone.
[C] _ _ _ And Chris Davidson's got this cool super reverb-y tone.
To me it just sounds like you've got a bridge pickup, preferably a tube amp just cranked
to where it's starting to break up a little bit, maybe a little extra overdrive, but not
much, not a ton of overdrive, and then just plenty of reverb.
Just a lot of reverb, crank it up. _
The main progression that we'll learn first, this is what we do over the intro to, is this.
_ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Cm] _ [Fm] _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ _
[Bb] _ [C] _ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [F] _ [Eb] _ [F] _
[Bb] _ [C] In this tutorial we'll look at the solo for second one to know.
We'll pick it up right after [Fm] that second chorus.
[Eb] _ [Gm] _ We'll _ _ do the rest of that solo.
Then we'll also do what we hear at the outro at the end of this tutorial.
Pretty similar tone to the rhythm.
It's a bridge pickup and then sounds like kind of a cranked up tube amp, just a little
bit of overdrive, not too much, and then a good amount of reverb.
This is all tabbed out beneath the video player at 6stringcountry.com, so pull those up.
Here's how it looks.
One, two, and three, and four, and. _ _ _
_ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ [Eb] _ _
_ _ _ [C] _ [Eb] _ _ [Gm] _ _
_ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _
_ [Bb] _ [Fm] _ _ _ [Eb] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ [Bb] _ [C] _ _ _ _
_ [F] _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ [Gm] _ _
_ [Fm] _ _ [Bb] _ _ [Cm] _ [Bb] _ [G] _
[Eb] _ [F] _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Bb] _ [C] _ _ [Gm] _
_ [Eb] _ [F] _ [Eb] _ [Bb] _ _ [C] _ [Gm] _
_ [Cm] _ [Fm] _ _ [Fm] _ _ [C] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Eb] _
_ _ _ [C] _ _ _ The second one to know is a song from Chris Stapleton who co-wrote it along with Mike Henderson.
The song's in the key of C blues, but we'll cape up to the third fret on both the acoustic
and the electric guitar so that we can play like we're playing A blues chord shapes.
The acoustic and the electric play a very similar part throughout the whole song, almost
identical, but we will break away on the electric guitar and we'll learn that bridge solo that
Chris Stapleton does and we'll also rock out at the end. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Cm] _ _ [Fm] _ _
_ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [F] _ _
_ [Bb] _ [C] Don't [G] put my love [Eb] on that [F] earth, [Eb] _ [F] _ [Bb] _ [C] [Bb] never let [G] anything [Cm] that [F] hot be cold.
[Fm] _ _ [Cm] If you [Bb] ever change [G] your [Cm] mind, [F] wanna leave [Eb] my love [F] behind, [Bb] [C] just [Gm] let me be the second
[F] one to know.
[Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Gm] _ [F] _ [Bb] [F] Yeah, the second [Eb] one to [Cm] know.
[Bb] _ [G] _ _ [Fm] _ _ [Eb] _
[Gm] _ To _ _ [Cm] _ _ _
_ [Fm] _ [Cm] _ [Fm] _ _ _ [Eb] _ _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ [Cm] _ [C] _ _
_ _ [Gm] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [G] _ [Cm] _ _ _ [Gm] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Eb] _
[F] _ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Bb] _ [G] _ _ [Fm] _ _
[F] _ _ [Bb] _ [C] _ start, let's get a capo on the third fret and we're in standard tuning for second one to know. _ _
The acoustic guitar is really playing a very similar part.
You could almost teach it in the same lesson.
We'll do them separate just because that's how we do it, but it's basically the same
rhythm part that drives us through the whole song and then there's a number of variations
that we're going to encounter that we'll talk about.
But the main progression that we're going to learn first here is this.
_ _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Eb] _ [F] _ _ [F] _
_ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Eb] _
[F] _ [Bb] _ _ [C] _ All right, [F] and even that very last part at the end, [Bb] _ [C] that's one of the variations we play
in the verse.
We play something different at the end of the choruses, but we'll go over all that.
Let's start by learning just what I just played.
Okay, let's get these chord shapes.
We're going to start with an A bar chord.
Let's open A string, second fret of D, second fret of G, and we [Bb] really don't want_
Back to the [C] A.
Down, down, mute, [Eb] mute, [G] down, down, down, [A] mute, mute, down, [Fm] down, down,
mute, [Eb] mute, [F] down, down, down, [Bbm] mute, mute, down, down, two, [Bb] three, [C] G.
_ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [F] _
[Eb] _ [F] _ [Bb] _ [C] _ [Gm] _ _ _ [F] _
_ [F] _ [Bb] _ _ Chorus.
If you already took the acoustic lesson for a second one to know, and you're just trying
to play the rhythm on the electric now, you almost don't even need to take it because
they really are identical, except for the parts that we break away in the solo and in
the outro, which we'll learn in its separate tutorial next.
But I thought I'd teach it again on the electric because it's more fun to learn it for those
of you that just really want to learn the electric rhythm and not the acoustic when
we've got the right tone.
[C] _ _ _ And Chris Davidson's got this cool super reverb-y tone.
To me it just sounds like you've got a bridge pickup, preferably a tube amp just cranked
to where it's starting to break up a little bit, maybe a little extra overdrive, but not
much, not a ton of overdrive, and then just plenty of reverb.
Just a lot of reverb, crank it up. _
The main progression that we'll learn first, this is what we do over the intro to, is this.
_ [Bb] _ [G] _ [Cm] _ [Fm] _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ _
[Bb] _ [C] _ [Gm] _ _ [Eb] _ [F] _ [Eb] _ [F] _
[Bb] _ [C] In this tutorial we'll look at the solo for second one to know.
We'll pick it up right after [Fm] that second chorus.
[Eb] _ [Gm] _ We'll _ _ do the rest of that solo.
Then we'll also do what we hear at the outro at the end of this tutorial.
Pretty similar tone to the rhythm.
It's a bridge pickup and then sounds like kind of a cranked up tube amp, just a little
bit of overdrive, not too much, and then a good amount of reverb.
This is all tabbed out beneath the video player at 6stringcountry.com, so pull those up.
Here's how it looks.
One, two, and three, and four, and. _ _ _
_ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ [Eb] _ _
_ _ _ [C] _ [Eb] _ _ [Gm] _ _
_ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _
_ [Bb] _ [Fm] _ _ _ [Eb] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ [Bb] _ [C] _ _ _ _
_ [F] _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ [Gm] _ _
_ [Fm] _ _ [Bb] _ _ [Cm] _ [Bb] _ [G] _
[Eb] _ [F] _ [Eb] _ [Fm] _ [Bb] _ [C] _ _ [Gm] _
_ [Eb] _ [F] _ [Eb] _ [Bb] _ _ [C] _ [Gm] _
_ [Cm] _ [Fm] _ _ [Fm] _ _ [C] _ _