New Chord Charts

I’ve transcribed 22 new songs for my students in the past few months, and just uploaded them to my website a few days ago. Have at ’em!

To see all 285 songs I have available, click here.

Girl – Beck – This song is currently the most popular song in my collection, averaging about twelve downloads a day. Seems I’m the first person to write out the chords to this sweet song off Beck’s new album, Guero.

Blue Eyes – Cary Brothers – Soon I’ll have taught every song on the Garden State Soundtrack–I’ve already taught the Shins’ “New Slang” and “Caring is Creepy,” “Don’t Panic” by Coldplay, “Such Great Heights” performed by Iron and Wine, and “The Only Living Boy in New York” by Simon and Garfunkle. Ohmygod, Zach Braff and I have, like, so much in common.

405 – Death Cab for Cutie – The 405 is a highway to the east of Seattle.

Marching Bands of Manhattan – Death Cab for Cutie – Another transportation song—this one uses water-as-metaphor-for-isolation-and-bridge-as-metaphor-for-love imagery, like the title track off the Transatlanticism album. When you live in Seattle (Death Cab is from Bellingham, just north of here a bit), and you travel our ferries and bridges enough, I guess you’re bound to start looking at life this way.

16 Military Wives – The Decemberists – My favorite song off their new album. There’s a great music video here, with cameos of Death Cab’s guitarist and producer Chris Walla and The Long Winters’ frontman John Roderick.

The Sporting Life – The Decemberists – Deceptively difficult strumming on this one (16 Military Wives is hard too). Remember to swing!

Heartache Tonight – The Eagles – When I got my wisdom teeth removed after graduating from high school, I spent three days in bed high on Percocet listening to Bob Marley’s Legend and The Eagles’ Greatest Hits over and over. I was in heaven.

Grateful Dead – Friend of the Devil – Finally, I get to teach some Dead songs and prove to my parents that my Grateful Dead cover band in college was a valuable educational experience. See mom and dad, all those late nights playing for drunk hippies at the Cypress Lounge were just stepping stones along my career path!

Grateful Dead – Ripple – This song was performed at the memorial service for several college friends of mine who died in a car accident returning from a Grateful Dead concert. I think it was a great choice–I love the mystical chorus.

Such Great Heights (real version) – Iron and Wine – The first few times I taught this Postal Service cover it was to introduce fingerpicking to students, so I used a very simple Travis picking pattern. The fact that I could hardly pick my own nose at the time I started teaching it also may have had some influence on the simplified arrangement. Now I can pick my nose very skillfully, thank you, so here’s the real McCoy.

Just a Ride – Jem – It’s just two chords, but what a ride.

Gamble Everything For Love – Ben Lee – Another cool fingerstyle song. Ben sounds a bit like Elliot Smith.

Redemption Song – Bob Marley – A Jesuit novitiate taught me this song when I was a sophomore at St. Ignatius College Preparatory. Years after I graduated, he sued the Jesuits for sexual harassment. Wonder what redemption meant to him….

Bird on a Wire – Willie Nelson – Leonard Cohen wrote this song. What incredible lyrics. “Like a bird on a wire, like a drunk in a midnight choir, I have tried in my way to be free.”

How You Remind Me – Nickelback – I don’t care for Nickelback that much, but when I teach songs I otherwise wouldn’t give a listen, I find things to appreciate. One of the roses among thorns here is that this is a great voice workout. “I’ve BEEN wrong, I’ve BEEN down…” My poor neighbors.

Wave over Wave – Jim Payne – I learned this song from Andy Hillhouse, my Celtic Guitar teacher at this summer’s Puget Sound Guitar Workshop. I learned it using the DADGAD tuning, but it’s written here in standard tuning.

Some Postman – The Presidents of the United States of America – Chris Ballew’s wife grew up down the street from a couple of my young students, so they got him to sign their guitars the last time they saw him at the community pool. I love it that my students get to hang out with rock stars. It can’t help but inspire them to practice more.

Donald and Lydia – John Prine – A wonderfully odd love song by a songwriter born with an old voice.

That’s the Way the World Goes ‘Round – John Prine – A playful tune with some dark lines. I think Prine’s a genius.

One – U2 – Perhaps the best song by one of the humongoust rock bands ever. The electric guitar part has given me fits for years, but I think I’m close to finally figuring it out. Someday I’ll tab it out….

Island in the Sun – Weezer – My old band Tilted Blue covered this song at a corporate barbecue for Fox Sports Northwest. I’m glad I’m finally learning how to play it right–I remember completely slaughtering the solo during our gig. It says a lot about our other material that, despite my performance, the crowd requested that we repeat this song for our “encore” (three drunk newscasting interns yelling for more cowbell).

I’m Always in Love – Wilco – Jeff Tweedy has a great gift for musical lyrics: “When I let go of your throat-sweet throttle….” A great song by one of my favorite bands.

Have fun, and let me know if you see any errors. Thanks!

Third Toad from the Sun

At 2am on the last night of the Puget Sound Guitar Workshop, Andy Hillhouse barged into the camp office where Morgan (a fellow camper) and I were jamming the blues on an acoustic bass and a resonator guitar. “There you are!” he said. “We’re going swimming. Do you want to come?”

Andy had been my Celtic guitar teacher for the past week. He’s from Vancouver, but his swarthy looks and evocative songs of lonely sailors made it easy to imagine him living on some limestone bluff overlooking the Irish Sea.

“Sure!” I said. I was glad to have an excuse to prolong my last night of camp with an adventure.

Toad Warriors Andy, Katy, Morgan, Rachael, and MeAndy, Morgan, I were joined by two other campers, Rachael and Katy. We grabbed some towels from the lodge kitchen and picked our way down the trail to the lake. The starshine and lights from the hall barely illuminated the swimming platform fifty feet from shore.

The water wasn’t terribly cold, but the night air had already chilled us. Gasping and howling, one by one we swam to the platform, lingered there for as long as we could, and then raced back to our towels.

As we huddled in our towels on shore, our teeth chattering, a sputtering fireball streaked across the sky, big enough to leave a smoke trail behind. “Wow!” everyone said in unison.

“Hey, I think the Perseid meteor shower is going on tonight,” I said. Another meteor scored the dark heavens. Several others followed a minute later.

“They all seem to be in that part of the sky,” someone said.

“I think I remember from my Astronomy class that the earth is plowing through a cloud of meteors, and that part of the sky over there is the Atmospheric Bumper.”

“Maybe it’s the cosmic fairy shooting meteors at the earth with her galactic pistol,” offered Morgan.

“That’d be a great band name,” I said. Another mote of dust exploded over our heads. “When I first started the class I kept calling it Astrology. My parents weren’t too happy about paying for their son’s Astrology education.”

Then we heard it: Guttural didgeridoo blasts echoing across the water, one 8th note per beat, keeping a perfect slow tempo. It lasted for a few measures, and then went silent. “What the hell was that?” I said.

“It’s a toad,” someone said. “You hear them all the time down here. It’s its mating call.”

“Let’s try harmonizing with it,” I suggested. We all burst out laughing. “I’ll take the 3rd. Someone else take the 5th, someone else the minor 7th….”

“That’s a great idea for a class,” said Andy. “To graduate, you all have to sing an E7#9 chord with the bullfrog.” We wait for the bullfrog to sing again, stifling giggles.

“Hunnnnnnh!” said the bullfrog.

“HUNNNNNNH!” we bellowed over the amphibian’s root note. It actually kind of worked. We cackled.

Andy said, “OK, next time, let’s alternate with the bullfrog. After it sings “Hunnnh,” we sang “HUNNNH” a minor seventh higher.

“It’s the intro to Purple Haze!” I said.

Later, we floated to the middle of the lake on canoes, lying back on the seats to stargaze. Across the water from the lodge came the barely discernable sound of singing. “Is that the Beach Boys?” asked Andy?

God Only Knows?” I said.

“God only knows what I’d be without you…” sang Andy.

“God only knows what I’d be without you…” someone else sang in a round.

“God only knows…”

Puget Sound Guitar Workshop: An Overview

On Friday I returned from my first week at the Puget Sound Guitar Workshop. I expected a relaxing week of casual fingerpicking, swimming, and strumming Kumbaya around the campfire. Instead, it turned out to be a profound educational and spiritual experience. I returned home electrified.

I’ve got a bunch of photos of the week posted here.

Here’s an overview of how the Puget Sound Guitar Workshop’s three weeklong summer sessions work:

Lake with bald eagle and swimming platformThe camp is located at a retreat center about two hours from Seattle. It has a main hall where all 150 of us could eat together, a side hall we used as a performance space, and about 12 other cabins of varying sizes where we slept, took classes, and jammed. There are some mile-long hiking trails through the woods surrounding the camp, and an absolutely lovely lake, where I spent most of my hour-long afternoon breaks swimming and sunbathing.

Each camper selects two or three classes to attend over the course of the week. These classes meet once a day for about an hour and a half. Most of the classes had about eight students in them, which gave us all the opportunity to get to know our teachers and receive one-on-one help. I took an intermediate-level blues fingerstyle class, a Celtic guitar class which taught the DADGAD guitar tuning, and an advanced songwriting class.

Here’s a little story about my last night at camp. If you don’t see it above, you can click here.

Music Under the Stars

Evening Light on Green River near Tent BottomHey Everyone,

Long time no blog! I’ve been traveling a lot this past month. My first adventure was a weeklong canoe trip down fifty miles of the Green River in Utah’s Canyonlands National Park. Six friends, my sweetheart Christine, and I braved 100+ degree heat, quicksand, swarms of kamikaze mosquitoes, and severe cold beer depravation to explore this incredibly quiet, mysterious, and majestic place. I brought my beach guitar with me (a 1978 Alvarez), protected by its flight case, my sleeping bag, and a homemade dry bag. It was bulky, but singing Tom Waits’ “San Diego Serenade” under desert starlight for my friends made it more than worth the effort.

I just got back last night from my second trip, which was a four-day stay in a campground near Lake Tahoe, California. Days were spent climbing the granite cliffs at Lover’s Leap, one of my all-time favorite climbing crags, and during the mornings and evenings I visited with family members who live in California and drove to Tahoe to meet me. Mom brought the guitar I have stashed at my parent’s place, so I got to play around the campfire again. One of the highlights was singing “Yellow Submarine” and Rob and Scott on Surrealistic Pillar“I Wanna Hold Your Hand” for my four-year-old nephew Zachery, who has become a huge Beatles fan in the past year.

I love singing around the campfire, but I often feel like I’m not that good at it. It’s partly because I’m used to playing in a warm, well-lit room, while sitting in a proper chair. You’re bound to be sloppy when you’re sitting on the ground or in a camp chair, it’s too dark to see your fretboard clearly, and your fingers are stiff from the cold and from climbing all day. Another challenge is that I usually sing with music in front of me, so I’m rarely forced to memorize lyrics. I swear I’ve sung “American Pie” over a dozen times at campfires, and have succeeded in mixing up my marching bands and candlesticks and singing jesters and devil’s friends every time. Yet for all my dissatisfaction, people always tell me how much they love the music–they don’t care that much that we’re doing “American Pie Abridged”.

And there are moments of pure beauty, like singing “Country Roads” my first night at Lake Tahoe. It was after 10pm (quiet hours), so instead of strumming it like I usually do, I fingerpicked the song and we all half-sung, half-whispered the words we all knew so well. I sung a quiet, falsetto harmony over the chorus. The fire, the stars, the guitar, and the singing all came together, and I went to bed filled with peace and joy.

New Chord Charts Available

Hey Y’all,

I just posted about twenty new chord charts. You can check out all 270 songs by clicking here, or browse individual songs by clicking song titles below. Enjoy!

Beautiful by Christina Aguilera – I love it that I make a significant chunk of my living teaching Christina Aguilera songs to 5th graders.

Makin’ Whoopie by Louis Armstrong – I simplified a lot of the chords from quadrads to triads to make them more finger-friendly for the student who requested this hilarious jazz standard.

Hallelujah by Jeff Buckley – Leonard Cohen was had a great gift for songwriting, but his singing and recording skills didn’t do his songs justice. Buckley, on the other hand, nails this cover. A raw, wrenching performance.

Whippin’ Piccadilly by Gomez – This British rock band blew me away when I saw them play at Seattle’s Showbox a couple years ago. I love their blend of electronica and acoustica.

Killing Me by Graham Colton Band – Another G-Whiz song.

Babylon by David Gray – A simplified version.

Such Great Heights by Iron and Wine – Mr. Iron N. Wine turns this up-tempo Postal Service song into a whispery serenade. Simplified picking for beginning fingerstylists.

I Think It’s Going to Rain Today by Kaie Melua – A Randy Newman cover, recorded with a string orchestra.

Memories of East Texas by Michelle Shocked – A lovely Travis-style fingerpicking song. Played this around the campfire this past weekend. It sounded good, but I don’t think anyone present really for a minute believed that I learned to drive on those East Texas red clay backroads. I gotta get me a cowboy hat…

Alright by Pilate – This is one of the best songs Coldplay ever wrote. It’s a great song, with a super-catchy lead guitar part (which I haven’t tabbed out yet), but mysteriously familiar…

Shine a Light by the Rolling Stones – Rev’d Jagger speaks the truth.

Caring is Creepy by The Shins – One of my favorite bands, and by the look of all the traffic I get downloading other Shins songs, I’m in good company.

Bridge over Troubled Water by Simon and Garfunkle – It’s amazing how many bad chord charts there are out there of this classic song. Originally recorded on piano in Eb, way too many people transcribe the song for an standard-tuned guitar with no capo. Why torture yourself? This is Capo 3, in the finger-friendly key of G. We’ll call it “Bridge over Troubled Fingers”.

Windfall by Son Volt – I heard “Drown,” another song off Son Volt’s Trace album, on the radio shortly after I got out of college. I’ve still got that darn tape, and about 200 others, but, of course, no tape deck to play it. It was fun revisiting those songs (on iTunes) when my student recently requested Son Volt.

Maggie May by Rod Stewart – God I love that mandolin part at the end.

San Diego Serenade by Tom Waits – God I wish I could write love songs like Tom Waits. Do you have to be crazy and tortured to write songs like that, or does it just help?

Blue by Lucinda Williams – Williams is a master of the concise, poetic image. “Raven feathers shiny and black / A touch of blue glistening down her back.”

Look Mom, No Hands!

The 3rd Hand by T.I.PKnob twirlers, put your fidgety hands together. Someone’s finally come up with a way for you to tweak the parameters of your stompboxes while you’re playing.

It’s called the 3rd Hand, made by a company called Tone in Progress. It’s a completely mechanical expression pedal that you attach to a knob post on one of your guitar effects pedals via a cable. Rocking your foot on the pedal twirls the knob.

Imagine what you could do with a tremolo pedal–check out this excerpt from the song “Bones” by Radiohead. Hear the tremolo effect on the guitar slow down? That’s Mr. Expensive Effects Dude in the studio’s control room, twirling the tremolo knob while Jonny Greenwood’s busy strumming his guitar. Can’t afford Mr. Expensive Effects Dude? For $110 (a little steep, in my opinion), you can slow that tremolo all by yourself.

Reviews on Harmony Central–all two of them–are mixed. Both reviewers are worried that the rubber band that drives the 3rd Hand’s pulley is wimpy. I’ll let you know how mine turns out.

RSS Bug Stung

Here’s a quick note for all you feedsters: I believe I’ve fixed the RSS problem on the site. Subscribe away!

I guess since this internet thing is supposed to be a web, it’s no surprise the bugs always have the upper hand….

Bilbo Debugging Mirkwood Forest

For All You Guitarists/Gymnasts Out There

Picture this: You’re playing for a sold-out crowd of shrieking fans, and as your band pounds its way toward oblivion, you near the climax of your guitar solo. You go into a crouch, ready to launch yourself into a well-rehearsed backscratcher punctuated by a window-shattering power chord. Unfortunately, you’re stepping on your guitar cable. You leap, the plug rips out of your guitar jack, and when you land to strum that final chord, you might as well be playing air guitar.

Even if the only person in the audience is your husband’s pet schnauzer, self-inflicted unplugging is humiliating. Here’s a simple way to prevent it:

Before plugging in, thread your guitar cable between your guitar strap and the body of the guitar, right above the rear strap peg, from back to front. Now, instead of ripping out your cable, you’ll rip a back muscle. Problem solved.

Oh, and update your stage antics. Backscratchers are so 80’s.

Barre Chord Basics | How to Play Barre Chords

I’ve decided to start sprinkling tips among my longer tutorials and articles. Here’s the first…

Barre chords are the scourge of the beginning guitarist. Like a bum knee, a prison record, the inability of matter to exceed the speed of light; barre chords hold us back. The next time an F minor chord messes with you, mess back with this:

  • Check your thumb placement. Your thumb should be pressing against the back of the neck, on the fattest part, behind the area where the 2nd finger’s hanging out.
  • Check your first finger placement. It should be parallel with the fret wire, so close it’s just barely touching the side. Roll your finger a bit toward the nut, so that the bony side of the finger is digging into the strings instead of the strings digging into what my student Casey calls the “chub.”
  • Stop pressing so hard. That first finger’s only responsible for fretting some of the strings, so don’t try to press down on each string with equal force. For example, when playing a standard barred F chord, press hard with the tip of your finger on the 6th string, and dig your knuckle into the 1st and 2nd strings, but let the finger rest lightly over the other strings.
  • Take heart. Often you can transpose a song to avoid barre chords. Also, some great guitarists never play barre chords–BB King, for example, played his way to greatness pretty much one note at a time. As he said in the U2 documentary “Rattle and Hum,” “I don’t do chords.”

Please comment if you’d like to add your own tips for playing barre chords. And if you’d like to submit a tip about some other aspect of guitar playing, email me.