 Hi guys, Jason here. So let's learn the chord pattern of the song by Cranberries called Zombie, a very popular song and it's been around for a while. It's still popular. Yeah, so the chord progression is a very, very popular chord progression used in a lot of songs. So if you learn this, it can also play other songs. It can also help you to play other songs, probably hundreds, maybe thousands of other songs if you get this right. So I've written down the progression here using Roman numbers that will show you the chord progression as per any scale. However, the original is on E minor, which is derived from G major. They are both relatives of each other. So before we get into the actual chords, the progression is 6, 4, 1, 5. 6, 4, 1, 5. Very, very popular. It's also a cyclic chord progression. So what that means is it could have been 6, 4, 1, 5. It can even be 1, 5, 6, 4, or 4, 1, 5, 6. And all these form, formulate a lot of the pop music and the Bilbo chart music which you may find. So the 6 of the G major scale. So what you need to do if you're not aware of the progression is to first write down the G major scale. You can write it down. It will have 7 notes. It has one sharp. And you will realize that the 6th note, G, A, B, C, D, E is E. And the 2, the 3 and the 6 form minor chords in a major scale. That's A minor, B minor, and E minor. And the 1, the 4, and the 5 form major chords. So what they do is it's the 6 minor, 4 major, 1 major, and 5 major with a 3 bass. So that makes this sound a little bit more dissonant. Since it's a rock song, let's just see how that sounds. E minor, C major, G major, D with F sharp, E minor. That's a 6, C major, all 4 times. G major, 1, and D with F sharp for 1 bar again. So try to play D in the right hand if you're a piano player, and the F sharp in the left hand. And the guitar player, especially the heavier guitarist, could definitely use power chords to make it sound a lot more heavier. So that's which is the root, the 5th, and the octave. That's pretty much it. Right? So when you're playing this song, you can also maintain a nice 8th note bass rhythm in the left hand. Now in the original song, the bass player sometimes just sticks with the roots. However, another pattern which you could try and do is... So at the end of the bar, go up a step. And if you're not comfortable doing it with octaves, you can perhaps do it with a single finger, and so on. That's the pre and the chorus. So have fun playing that, and then you can Google this chord progression, and there'll probably be tons more which follow the same progression but maybe a different rhythm. Cheers, catch you in the next video. Don't forget to like, subscribe, hit that bell icon for notifications, leave us a comment for any other video you'd like us to do next, and don't forget to share the video with all your musician friends. Cheers.