"hurt" by The Hippie Conservative
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Uploader Comments (bentdrive)
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All Comments (7)
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Hi H.C., No help needed. I got it after
I figured it out. Sooooooo Sweet!
You need to put up more vids. ;)
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MotherFucker! I did it again! I meant, last time here, "TRANSPOSE" not "transform".
It's been a long time my friend.
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Hey PTC,
Thanks for the compliment. The problem I'm having right now is finding the time to do anything. I think doing the regular show at your place would be a great idea but hauling all my equipment around for the music vids is too hard. I recorded this in the 1 hour I had free between raking out my lawn and babysitting my grandkids. I'll call you sometime this week.
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I was never a fan of Johnny Cash, but I love this song. It was a little dark, but alson very cathartic. I think he knew this was one of the last songs he had left and wanted to make it count. That he did.
Nice tribute HipCon.
giantkiller56 2 years ago
Hey GK56,
I have to admit, I was never that big a fan of Johnny Cash either. For some reason this song really speaks to me. Thanks for the compliment!
bentdrive 2 years ago
Sorry, can only give ya 5*****'s.
Loved this too.
I heard the advantage of playing the keyboard in a brighter key.
Kewl, thank's for the tip!
badfinger111 2 years ago
Hey Badfinger, Only 5*****'s WTF! (jk) I love when someone writes something and when I go to transcribe it I find myself thinking, "How in the hell did he fit that in so well?" I'm always trying the second or third note of a chord progression (first inversion, not the root) as a take-off for a counter melody. In this example, it was the added G note placed into the Am, F, C and G (already there) guitar chords of the chorus that made the G D counter melody justified. Brilliant!
bentdrive 2 years ago
Hi Bentdrive, LOL!
I saw my mistake in re "transcribe". I was thinking "transform", that's funny.
Anyway, I did a little research and remember a little now:
Guitar: Am and F chords do not afford the piano's G and D chords, only guitar's C chord and piano's G chord.
Guitar G chord however, works with the piano's D chord.
Sound about right?
badfinger111 2 years ago
Hi badfinger, Sorry it took so long to respond. The Am and F had the G note added on the guitar's E string third fret and as you correctly stated it was already there in the C and G (although on the C it was added on the E string also) that causes the high G note to ring throughout the chorus. I hope that helps.
bentdrive 2 years ago