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Guitar chords forBruce Springsteen: Further onHere is the Guitar chords for "Further on" by Bruce Springsteen. To get the complete songlist of this band please visit the index for Springsteen bruce tabs, bass tabs, chords and CD reviews. |
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Date: Thu, 13 Mar 2003 14:30:18 -0500 From: Rod Nolan
Subject: s/springsteen_bruce/further_on.crd Bruce Springsteen Further On (Up The Road) from The Rising transcribed by Rod Nolan (rodnolan@yahoo.com) standard tuning - capo at 1st fret all chord shapes and names indicated are relative to capo - actual chord is one semitone higher this song doesn't really follow a nice set structure which makes it more interesting and challenging to play. I've tried to describe it as I see it but I'd love to hear your interpretation. Here's mine: intro verse 1 chorus verse 2 chorus verse 3 this verse breaks the trend: although the number of bars in what I've called bridge / verse 3 is the same as a regular verse, the lyric pattern and the chord pregression for the first two lines (what I've called the bridge) is different. So, in the song, it feels like the verse is starting where I've indicated but there are two less lines, which are taken up by the preceeding bridge chorus solo verse 4 verse 5 this verse is similar to verse 3 in that it's preceded by that bridge bit again... chorus bridge (2x) chorus (2x) after the Em that ends the first chorus, lead in to the second with a G chord ... end the song with 9 downstroke strums on Em the bridge bit is pretty cool because the first time (verse 3) it follows the chorus and the second time it's wedged right in between two verses (4 and 5)... very versatile set of bars! enough analysis! if you listen to the song you should be able to follow the chords as I've written them. I figured this song out on an acoustic but the distorted electric in the song does lots of embellishments on the basic chords so you'll have to play around a bit to figure them out. I think the electric probably plays barre chords with lots of agile little-finger hammer-ons... or maybe the electric is in an open tuning? your interpretations??? EADGBe EADGBe EADGBe EADGBe 022000 320033 x32010 xx0323 Em G C D 0:00 (intro) Em (4x) 0:14 (verse 1) Em where the road ... G and the seed ... Em where the gun ... G and the bullet's ... C D where the miles ... G D in blood ... (chorus) C D Em I'll meet you ... 0:44 (verse 2) Em got on my ... G and my smilin' ... Em my lucky ... G and a song ... C D I got a ... G D to keep me ... (chorus) C D Em and I'll meet ... 1:15 (bridge) D further on ... Em further on ... 1:23 (verse 3) Em where the way ... G and the night ... C D one sunny mornin' G D we'll rise ... (chorus) C D Em and I'll meet ... 1:46 [solo] 2:16 (verse 4) Em now I been ... G just doin' ... Em searchin' through ... G lookin' for ... (bridge) D if there's a ... Em well brother ... (verse 5) Em but I got ... G burnin' in ... C D so let's take ... G D as they go (chorus) C D Em and I'll meet you ... 3:02 (bridge - 2x) D further on ... Em further on ... 3:18 C D one sunny mornin' G D we'll rise I know C D Em G and I'll meet you ... C D Em and I'll meet you ... \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \
guitar videos: Learn To Play Guitar: Blues in Any Key Part 2In this tutorial, instructor Danny Grady explains how basic blues patterns can be transposed to various keys by shifting fretboard positions. Using more advanced left and right hand technique. See all guitar videos here and bass videos here |
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