Almost Always Never by What Made Milwaukee Famous Lyric and Guitar Chords

If you are looking for Almost Always Never guitar chords, you’ve come to the right place.
You can play Almost Always Never by What Made Milwaukee Famous using guitar or guitar.
This song by What Made Milwaukee Famous can also be played by that instruments.
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Almost Always Never guitar chords has rhythm and included in Trying to Never Catch Up (2006) 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.

Almost Always Never by What Made Milwaukee Famous Guitar Chords


What Made Milwuakee Famous
Almost Always Never Chords

This is the tuning that is used on the album.

Verse:
It?s something occasionally it
subsides to nothing right there in front of
your eyes. I?d show you but it never happens when
you want it to

Chorus: (only the first time)
C E7 A#(bar 1st fret) Am
Almost always never makes the grade
Stupid lesson learned and statement made
What were you expecting?

(back to the C Am Dm G)

( Tab from: https://www.guitartabs.cc/tabs/w/what_made_milwaukee_famous/almost_always_never_crd_ver_2.html )
Chorus part 2:
A selfish act of trickery betrayed
Only meant to turn your eyes away
From everything you?ve been so absorbed in these days
I was only hoping maybe we could get away

Bridge: Am C Dm E7
I thought I made it easy on you
The answer?s just befell you
If you?re feeling bad
If you want it bad
If you?re feeling bad
If you want it bad

Back to the verse…

They have the lyrics on the web site. The chords I figured out. The A# bar chord (1st
gave me hell for a long time, but after listening to the CD over and over and then
carefully to the Austin City Limits show (the camera cuts his hands out of the frame at
the right time to miss the chord) several times, I got the chord progression down.

If you want to learn What Made Milwaukee Famous Almost Always Never 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 Almost Always Never. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it.

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