![]() ![]() We will need to learn two new versions of some chords we already know, but you’ll be amazed at how easy these new chord forms will be. You don’t have to play Harvest Moon in Drop D, but I think it sounds better that way. Oh, and I guess I should mention we’ll be learning some things about Drop D tuning! The important things that we’re going to learn are using chord shapes and getting our strumming down. And it also sounds great!Īnd speaking of sounding great, I suppose that this is a good place to remind everyone that this lesson is an arrangement for a single guitar, so it’s not going to sound exactly like the recorded version. ![]() Harvest Moon is a big hit at the seminars because it’s one of those songs that is very easy to learn (we’ve only got D, Em, G and A chords) and, once you know a couple of quick things about it, even easier to play. They are intended solely for private study, scholarship or research. These files are the author’s own work and represent his interpretation of this song. So, in part as a thank you to those who attended, and in part as giving some of you a reason to consider attending a Guitar Noise Seminar, I’d like to start the New Year off with a lesson from those sessions, a Neil Young song called Harvest Moon, which first appeared on his 1992 album of the same name. A gentleman from Toledo came to the seminar in Chicago! The Guitar Noise Neil Young Song Seminar was so popular last year that I had to teach it twice – once at my home and once in Chicago! That wouldn’t be as interesting as the fact that almost all the attendees at both seminars drove, on the average, between two and three hours to be there.
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