Good Captain Clack by Procol Harum Guitar Chords

p If you are looking for Good Captain Clack guitar chords, you've come to the right place. You can play Good Captain Clack by Procol Harum using guitar or guitar. This song by Procol Harum can also be played by that instruments. =/p p Good Captain Clack guitar chords has rhythm and included in Procol Harum (1967) album. You can also find another musical genres, including jazz guitar chords, country music guitar chords, pop guitar chords, world music guitar chords, and rock guitar chords here. /p h3Good Captain Clack by Procol Harum Guitar Chords/h3 #br# brbr#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE--------------------------------#brbr##This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the#br##song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research.#br# brbr#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------#brbr# Good Captain Clackbr# (Gary Brooker - Keith Reid)br#br#Intro:br#br# (solo piano):br#brG Bm/F# Em [A B C C# D C B A piano l.h, single notes]brVerse 1:brS[G]till [Bm/F#]scowling b[Em]lack Good C[Am]aptain Cl[D]ackbrG Bm/F# Em Am [verses: D organ solo: D7-9]brMust eat his humble piebrG Bm/F# G7/F C/E Cm/Eb [to coda on repeat]brHis bed is made the colors fadebrG Em Am [verses: D7 organ solo: D+]brHis eyes once wet are drybrVerse 2:brThe naked muse who sits and chewsbrTobacco off a treebrRemoves his shoes, gives way to boozebrG Em Am D G [N.C.]brAnd searches endlesslybrBridge:br[Eb]See the naked j[Bb]umberlackbr[Ab]Sip his aphro[Eb]disiacbrC[F7]otton picking f[Bb]armers threebrTh[Eb]ough I lost my w[Bb]eathervanebr[Ab]And of sense I h[Eb]ave one grainbrF7 Bb [N.C.]brI'm content sipping lemon teabrInstrumental break:br[organ solo over Verse 1 chords, altered as indicated]br[repeat verse 1]brCoda:brHis e[G]yes o[Em]nce [Am]wet a[D]re [Gm]br-- another ace 60's tab from Andrew Rogers p If you want to learn Procol Harum Good Captain Clack guitar chords, The 5 chords we'll look at are the C major, A major, G major, E major, and D major. The reason we use all major chords is that the minor versions of any of these chords just require tiny adjustments. Each one of those minor chords is completely based on its major counterpart /p p The more you practice, the easier guitar will feel to play Good Captain Clack. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it. /p
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