If you are looking for The Wheel guitar chords, you’ve come to the right place.
You can play The Wheel by Rosanne Cash using guitar or guitar.
This song by Rosanne Cash can also be played by that instruments.
=
The Wheel guitar chords has rhythm and included in The Wheel (1993) 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.
The Wheel by Rosanne Cash Guitar Chords
Subject: CRD: “The Wheel” (Rosanne Cash)
To: jamesb@animal-farm.nevada.edu
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 1993 17:01:59 -0500 (CDT)
X-Mailer: ELM (version 2.4 PL22)
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charsetUS-ASCII
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Length: 5830
This one I transcribed and typed in myself. Please add it to the
ftp archives.
“The Wheel” (Rosanne Cash)
>From the album _The_Wheel_
Transcribed with no permission whatsoever by Marc Hirsh
----------------------------------------------------------------
Here’s the title song to Rosanne Cash’s brilliant latest album.
I’m not entirely sure what the intro riff is, but I think that
it’s something along the lines of:
E-----------5-----|-----------5---|-----------5---|-----------5---|
B-------5-------5-|-------5-------|-------5-------|-------5-------|
G---7-------------|---7-----------|---6-----------|---6-----------|
D-7---7---7---7---|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|
A-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------5-----|-----------5---|-----------5---|-----------5---|
B-------5-------5-|-------5-------|-------5-------|-------5-------|
G---7-------------|---7-----------|---6-----------|---6-----------|
D-7---7---7---7---|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|
A-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------5-----|-----------5---|-----------5---|-----------5---|
B-------5-------5-|-------5-------|-------5-------|-------5-------|
G---7-------------|---7-----------|---6-----------|---6-----------|
D-7---7---7---7---|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|
A-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------5-----|-----------5---|-----------5---|-----------5---|
B-------5-------5-|-------5-------|-------5-------|-------5-------|
G---4-------------|---4-----------|---4-----------|---4-----------|
D-7---7---7---7---|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|-7---7---7---7-|
A-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
E-----------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|
but I’m not sure. Steuart Smith is very close to being God, and so
I can’t tell with a high level of certainty. Plus, the way I’ve
tabbed it out, the riff is a bitch to play, but then, I’m not very
good. Any corrections are totally welcome. Anyway, this may not
matter that much if, like me, the key of D is just way to high for
you to sing. I’ve transposed it to A, capoed up at the 2nd fret.
I’ll put my chords at the end. I also don’t know the solo, but it
shouldn’t be too hard to either figure it out yourself or just
fake it. That’s what I do.
(I’m not sure – this next chord could be Em, but G is used for
ever other chorus, so I’m putting it here)
And the
And the
And the
And the
And the
And the
(solo which is based on a rising D scale, that much I know)
And the
And the
And the
(alternate between G and A a few times then back to D with riff)
Still with me? Good. If you’d like the handy-dandy Marc Hirsh
transposition into the key of A, follow along. Capo at the 2nd
fret. Then, change the following chords:
Chord in original key Chord FORM capoed at 2
--------------------- ----------------------
That should do it. With a text editor, you should be able to
change the chords in the main body of this file yourself. Not only
does it make it easier on us baritone-types, but it also
eliminates that pesky F#m chord, which can be a pain if your
fingers aren’t in the mood to barre chords. If you get some use
out of this song, let me know, so I can be sure that I’m not just
posting to see my own name on the .net.
[–]Marc Hirsh (marc@owlnet.rice.edu)
/
^ –“I went to the funeral and Lord it made me happy…”
V
(Lyle Lovett)
If you want to learn Rosanne Cash The Wheel 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 The Wheel. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it.