Moving Pictures - Born To Run (Acoustic) ## NOTE: Lyrics & Chords based on the 2015 'Picture This' album recording ## CAPO: 4th Fret [INTRO:] C F G C F G [VERSE 1:] C In the day we sweat it out on the streets F
And the end How can we run from ourselves?Pete: "A is a nice place to go. What were those chords again?"http://music.baidu.com/song/14179755
So, the future Boss, doing some odd jobs for relatives and neighbours, put away enough money to buy a guitar (obviously a used one, nothing more than a crock) and started to learn the first chords. Then he bought an electric guitar with its amplifier, even in this case it was shoddy...
“Born to Run” is the motto that speaks for the album’s tales, just as the guitar figure that runs through the title song — the finest compression of the rock & roll thrill since the opening riffs of “Layla” — speaks for its music. But “Born to Run” is uncomfortably close to...
Piano, Vocal & Guitar Chords (Right-Hand Melody) by Bruce SpringsteenEasy Guitar Tab by Bruce SpringsteenAlto Sax Solo by Bruce SpringsteenTenor Sax Solo by Bruce SpringsteenConcert Band(arr. Paul Murtha) by Bruce SpringsteenEasy Piano by Bruce SpringsteenGuitar Tab by Bruce Springsteen...
understand it instantly, because this music — or Springsteen crying, singing wordlessly, moaning over the last guitar lines of “Born to Run,” or the astonishing chords that follow each verse of “Jungleland,” or the opening of “Thunder Road” — is what rock & roll is supposed to ...
“They basically – they cut your throat, they take your vocal chords, they tie ‘em off to one side. The guy gets in there with some titanium and some little tools and they build you some new discs, they seal you back up again,” Springsteen said. “It takes about three months befo...
quite late indeed. In my final year of university – in 2008 or 2009 – I started writing songs, because I picked up the guitar and realized I could play those Bob Dylan songs with just three chords. Those early folk songs really spoke to me and grabbed me. ‘This is something I coul...
The Kinks (1968): Ray Davies turned back the clock to an earlier time with this concept album about Victorian mores and ideology after a few years of cranking out two- and three-minute British garage-rock songs with two and three chords. It's the Kinks' most cohesive work and one of ...
Welcome!If you don’t know what a “Jetthead” is, I know what you might be thinking. I scared the crap out of you with that “It’s not an obsession, it’s a calling” stuff in my tagline, didn’t I? Well, I assure you there’s nothing to worry about. A