Chords for Windy Hill Bluegrass

Tempo:
110.9 bpm
Chords used:

G

D

C

F

Bb

Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Show Tuner
Windy Hill Bluegrass chords
Start Jamming...
[Em] Yeah, are we opening with the uh
Are you at the [A] setlist?
No, we're doing [G] Tommy at the setlist.
We're doing Pee Dee Hill and then uh
And then uh
Wendy Rick's phone number ain't it?
Agreed.
[E] Well, we are Wendy Hill and we [Cm] are uh
Really [Gb] stoked to be back in Amnesia.
We've been out and about.
We've been out and about, you [Eb] know, representing Northern California.
We're gonna get some bluegrass music.
[A] [G]
[C] [D]
[A]
[C] [D]
[G]
[C]
[D] [G]
[D]
[C]
[D] [G]
[C] [G] Hey man, young man.
Sing [D] down the road like a green-headed [G] bee.
You know, there's not many young, traditional [Am] bluegrass bands.
[E] We just have so much fun doing it.
We get the crowd [G] going and uh
So many of our friends come to see us and they're like,
Look at you, look at [Gb] Ryan and Kyle and Johnny [G] up there just killing it.
And uh
You know, we take it really seriously. And [D] uh
We love it and I think people [D] recognize that in me.
[Em] They're like, wow, these guys are having a great time.
[F] Some of my best friends in high school,
[Eb] Henry, who's [Bb] a mandolin player, and my friend Danny Wegner.
And um
They kind of pioneered the whole bluegrass movement
in terms [F] of our group of high school buddies.
That's how I started listening to a lot of the music I was listening to back then
was just my friend.
Danny [F] and Henry both got banjos and
I [C] remember at some point I was like, [F] wow, that's really cool.
And I know I can do that as well.
And
[Bb] I started playing it and uh
My roommates would just be like, Ryan, turn that thing [G] down.
I played the same song, Cripple Creep, over and over again.
I guarantee you I played that song at least a thousand or two thousand times.
[Bb] Henry and I first started playing [F] music together
and we learned how to play bluegrass together.
And then [C] Kyle came out to Colorado where we started the band
and he [B] learned [Bb] bluegrass from the first steps with us.
We [N] were doing this, we were like, yeah, we're picking.
You know, it's not like I'm a bass scholar.
[F] You know, like I'm just learning.
Like, I [N] was lucky enough to be a live music fan
so much to the point that I liked what my friends were doing
and they were cool enough to be like, hey, come on, like, get down, play the bass.
I know a lot of my [D] friends don't truly like [G] bluegrass music.
You know, like, [Ab] they're into it when they come and see us
[C] because it's a live thing.
But, you know, music is subjective.
So to be fortunate enough to have success is
[Cm] [Bb]
really cool, you know?
[Eb] [Eb]
[F]
[Bb] The [E] main reason why bluegrass has really [B] stuck with us
is it's so fundamentally based on live performances.
That's what bluegrass is all about.
That's how it started back in the schoolhouses and [B] the churches
and even over the [E] radio.
Yeah, just back in the day.
The fiddle, yeah.
[Gb] This is the coolest thing about this music.
It's the learning process.
Our band's doing really well.
We're getting [B] a lot of attention and we're getting better.
And, [E] you know, our hearts are in it.
We want to do it as much as we can and see what we can do.
[Em] [D] [A]
Okay, I think that's all we got.
[N]
Key:  
G
2131
D
1321
C
3211
F
134211111
Bb
12341111
G
2131
D
1321
C
3211
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[Em] _ Yeah, are we opening with the uh_
Are you at the [A] setlist?
No, we're doing [G] Tommy at the setlist.
We're doing Pee Dee Hill and then uh_ _ _ _
_ _ And then uh_
Wendy Rick's phone number ain't it?
Agreed. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [E] _ Well, we are Wendy Hill and we [Cm] are uh_
Really [Gb] stoked to be back in Amnesia.
We've been out and about. _ _
We've been out and about, you [Eb] know, representing Northern California.
We're gonna get some bluegrass music.
[A] _ _ _ [G] _ _ _
_ _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [C] _
_ _ [D] _ _ _ [G] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [D] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [D] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ _ [G] Hey man, young man.
Sing [D] down the road like a green-headed [G] bee.
You know, there's not many young, traditional [Am] bluegrass bands.
[E] We just have so much fun doing it.
We get the crowd [G] going and uh_
So many of our friends come to see us and they're like,
Look at you, look at [Gb] Ryan and Kyle and Johnny [G] up there just killing it.
And uh_
You know, we take it really seriously. And _ [D] uh_
We love it and I think people [D] recognize that in me.
[Em] They're like, wow, these guys are having a great time.
_ [F] Some of my best friends in high school,
[Eb] Henry, who's [Bb] a mandolin player, and my friend Danny Wegner.
And um_
They kind of pioneered the whole bluegrass movement
in terms [F] of our group of high school buddies.
_ That's how I started listening to a lot of the music I was listening to back then
was just my friend.
Danny [F] and Henry both got banjos and_
I [C] remember at some point I was like, [F] wow, that's really cool.
And I know I can do that as well.
And_
[Bb] I started playing it and uh_
My roommates would just be like, Ryan, turn that thing [G] down. _
I played the same song, Cripple Creep, over and over again.
I guarantee you I played that song at least a thousand or two thousand times.
[Bb] Henry and I first started playing [F] music together
and we learned how to play bluegrass together.
And then [C] Kyle came out to Colorado where we started the band
and he [B] learned [Bb] bluegrass from the first steps with us.
We [N] were doing this, we were like, yeah, we're picking.
You know, it's not like I'm a bass scholar.
[F] You know, like I'm just learning.
Like, I [N] was lucky enough to be a live music fan
so much to the point that I liked what my friends were doing
and they were cool enough to be like, hey, come on, like, get down, play the bass.
I know a lot of my [D] friends don't truly like [G] bluegrass music.
You know, like, [Ab] they're into it when they come and see us
[C] because it's a live thing.
But, you know, music is subjective.
So to be fortunate enough to have success is_
[Cm] _ _ [Bb] _
really cool, you know? _ _ _ _ _
_ [Eb] _ _ _ _ _ _ [Eb] _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ The [E] _ main reason why bluegrass has _ _ really [B] stuck with us
is it's so fundamentally based on live performances. _
_ That's what bluegrass is all about.
That's how it started back in the schoolhouses and [B] _ the churches
and even over the [E] radio.
Yeah, just back in the day. _
The fiddle, yeah.
_ _ [Gb] This is the coolest thing about this music.
It's the learning process.
Our band's doing really well.
We're getting [B] a lot of attention and we're getting better.
And, [E] you know, our hearts are in it.
We want to do it as much as we can and see what we can do.
[Em] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Okay, _ I think that's all we got. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [N] _