Whaling Stories by Procol Harum Lyric and Guitar Chords

If you are looking for Whaling Stories guitar chords, you’ve come to the right place.
You can play Whaling Stories by Procol Harum using guitar or guitar.
This song by Procol Harum can also be played by that instruments.
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Whaling Stories guitar chords has rhythm and included in Home (1970) 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.

Whaling Stories by Procol Harum Guitar Chords


08 Whaling stories

Intro: Eb Dm G Bbm

Pailing well after sixteen days, a m[Bm/D]ammoth t[F#m/C#]ask was set [A/Bb]
Sack the town, [Em/G]and rob the tower, and [Bm/F#]steal the alp[Em/G]habet [B/D#]
Close the d[Bm/D]oor and [Am/C]bar the [Em/B]gate, but keep the windows clean
God’s al[Bm/D]ive ins[Am/C]ide a [Em/]movie! [Em/B]Watch the silver screen! [E/G#]
Rum was served to all the traitors; pygmies held themselves in check
Bloodhounds nosed[Em/G] around the houses, down dark alley[/D]s sailors crept[/D]
Six bells struck, the pot was boiling – soup spilled out on passers-by
Angels mumbled incantations, closely [Bm/F#]watched by God on high


Bass: Em (E,F#,G, A Bb C, C#,D) D ://:
Em +5-5 ://: F#m +5-5 ://: Bass G,A,Bb,C,C#,D,E,F#
Lightning struck out – fire and brimstone!

Boiling oil and shrieking steam!
[Dm/A]Darkness struck with molten fury, flashbulbs glorified the scene

Bass: C,D,Eb,F,F#,G,A,Bb

Not a man who had a finger, not a man who could be seen
Nothing called (not name nor number) - Echo stormed its final scream

Solo over BAss(E,F#,G, A Bb C, C#,D)x12 Eb G x2

Daybreak [Bb/F]washed with sands of gladness, rotting all it rotted clean
Windows pe[Bb/F]eped out on their neighbors, inside fireside bedsides gleam
SHALIMAR, the trumpets chorused, angels wholly all shall ta-a- ake
Those alive [Ab/C]will meet the prophets, t[G/B]hose at peace shall see G
their wake

If you want to learn Procol Harum Whaling Stories 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

The more you practice, the easier guitar will feel to play Whaling Stories. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it.

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