If you are looking for Tiger Tom Dixon’s Blues guitar chords, you’ve come to the right place.
You can play Tiger Tom Dixon’s Blues by Slaid Cleaves using guitar or guitar.
This song by Slaid Cleaves can also be played by that instruments.
=
Tiger Tom Dixon’s Blues guitar chords has rhythm and included in Wishbones (2004) 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.
Tiger Tom Dixon’s Blues by Slaid Cleaves Guitar Chords
rmofle at satx.rr.com
6/11/04
Capo 2
Tiger Tom Dixon had a gift from God
He could hit you quick, he could hit you hard
In a world where a man’s hands are put to the test
Tiger Tom Dixon’s hands were the best
Chorus:
Men came from Boston, from Ohio
Corners of counties that you’ll never know
Except for the fists that they did throw at Tiger Tom Dixon
Tiger Tom Dixon
He’d step into the ring, gloves tied on tight
After humbling a man Tom would tie one on in spite
Kick back into a whiskey like it was an easy chair
Drink to anything that the devil may care
Now Tom held the future in his right fist
But there was no good time Tom Dixon could resist
No neon in New England he hadn’t passed out under
No white lightning that hadn’t felt his thunder
Chorus
Tougher than leather and quick as a cat
Till a young man one day is no longer that
And the dreams of those around him sink to the quick
When he slows just enough for them to figure the trick
Come a day in December the steely winds did blow
Into the ring a man Tom Dixon did know
It was himself without the bottle, and the dream held fast
He took Tom’s dream with him and he never looked back
Tom rolled around that bottle for a couple of years
Till he was put in the ground by his own fears
Now all that is left is the story I have told
And the dream that still waits to unfold for Tiger Tom Dixon
Chorus
If you want to learn Slaid Cleaves Tiger Tom Dixon’s Blues 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 Tiger Tom Dixon’s Blues. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it.