 So here's an instruction video of how to play Havana. You can do it on the piano, which is primarily what I do. However, I'll also tell you the chords and then you can apply it on any other instrument like the guitar or banjo or whatever it is you like playing. So the basic chord structure of the song is just three chords, Gm, Eb major and D7th, right? So Gm, Gbbd, Eb major, Eb, Gbb and then D7th is a very interesting chord. It adds some build up or some tension to the music. It makes the sound very interesting. So D7th is D major plus a C, which is a flat 7. To calculate a flat 7, you just take the octave and go down two steps. That's one step, two steps. This is D7th. This is also what we call as a dominant 7th chord, D dominant 7th. So that's Gm, Eb, D7th. And we can play it using inversions. That means we jumble up the notes to make them more convenient to play. And I'm going to be linking a series on chord inversions, which I'd suggest that you all follow if you're not very familiar with chord inversions. What it does in a nutshell is makes your chords a lot more crisper, a lot more tighter and obviously a lot more easier to play, I feel, right? So anyway, so you have Gm, Eb major and D dominant 7th or D7th. However, the D7th we try to play for an additional bar, G, Eb, D7th, Gm, Eb, D7th. So if you're a beginner and if you're just starting off, I think this rhythm would work quite well for you. Just left chord, right, left chord, left, or in other words left with the root of the chord or the name of the chord, right with the chord, G, Gm, Eb, Eb major, D, D7th, D7th. However, I'm sure you would want to play the original song because that's a lot cooler and that rhythm, I think the rhythm, the piano rhythm is what is the backbone of the song. It's there almost as a loop, right, in the whole thing. So you can then modify the same shape of chords which you already learned to play that catchy, you know, Spanish, Latin kind of rhythm. So let's see how it goes. Now I've written it down in the note sheet where you basically go, I've written down the root notes in the bottom, that's G, D, Eb, Eb, D, and I've written down the chords at the top, that's Gbb, D, Eb, Gbb, Df sharp, Ac, and Ac, Eb, where he adds an interesting diminished chord as well. So let me just play you that G, so let's take it two chords at a time, shall we? G, D, Eb, D, I won't go to the D, so G, I think you can figure it out without me talking much. This is Gm, this is how they play Eb in the song from what I can hear, and this is your really cool sounding D7. So let's try and do the first two chords, G, Eb, major. Try getting that a little slower, G, just know that I'm hitting this Eb double, G, Eb, Eb, so on, A, which is the fifth of the chord, and then let's do the first three chords, that's like an A dominant, sorry, A diminished, Ac, Eb, and then you just drop that Eb down to D to get the last chord. I repeat. Okay, let's try again. The bass actually does a tune which is D, Eb, Eb, D, so the bass is slightly different than the piano bass, so don't get confused too much by that, they both complement each other really well because the piano is low in pitch and we all know that a bass instrument is also low in pitch. So again to sign off, let's just play the whole riff and it pretty much goes on for the entire song, the verse, the pre, I don't even know which is the section of, which are the sections of this song because every part has pretty much the same piano riff. So if you're new to piano, this is the song for you, I bet you're going to get this song right now. So G, Eb, D, let me try and do it without talking much, so that those are the chords of Havana and also how to play it on the piano, it is very much a piano driven song, so you have a lot to do if you're a pianist and if you're a guitar player, yeah, you can play the same chords and try to match up with the same groove and yeah, it's G minor, Eb major and D7, so I hope you can also find some other versions of this song on YouTube or on the internet and try and learn more things because I'm sure a lot of people would have covered this song on YouTube, it's such a popular song, so all the best with this, cheers. 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.