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TOPIC: Blow it out tabs
Posted  Wednesday, June 1, 2005 at 11:51 AM
Post 1 of 8
Hey i rly want the tabs 4 blow it out cos its a generally awsome song and i want my band 2 learn it! can ne1 help me??
Posted  Thursday, June 9, 2005 at 7:36 AM
Post 2 of 8
Blow it Out Guitar Tab

Tabbed By: Steven Gladman
E-mail: stevie.gladman@ntlworld.com
INTRO
D A F# B G D G A X 2

Verse

D A F# B G D G A (fingerpicking) then 2nd Time

D A F# B G D G D (I think, not too sure!)

pre-chorus follows above same tempo

G D F# B A G D A
"Let it Down..

CHORUS

D A F# B G D G A X 2

D A F# B G D G A X 2

Verse

The rest is pretty much the same kind of idea.

(Edited by hard to ignore at 6:36 am on Jun. 9, 2005)
Posted  Saturday, June 11, 2005 at 1:08 PM
Post 3 of 8
YEY!! Finall y sum tabs 4 blow it out! Dude you've made my day!!!
Posted  Saturday, June 11, 2005 at 5:14 PM
Post 4 of 8
good to know!
This topic was dormant for almost 7 months...
Posted  Wednesday, January 11, 2006 at 11:55 AM
Post 5 of 8
I was listening to Blow it Out the other day and realized the chord structure is very similar to Pachelbels Canon. I haven't checked to see if the tabs listed here are correct, but they are in the key of D...

I think though, the 3rd and 4th chords should be swapped for Pachelbels Canon.

Pachelbels

D A Bm F#m G D G A

Blow it Out

D A F# B G D G A

Just something that interests me. In music theory they taught us that there is no such thing as New Music, just new arrangements of a finite sequence of tones.

(Edited by GrungeSlobTearPants at 12:12 pm on Jan. 11, 2006)
Posted  Thursday, January 12, 2006 at 12:24 PM
Post 6 of 8
haha! that's quite a thing to notice but in fact there was a programme on not too long ago and it showed that one of U2's songs have the exact same chord progression as 3 blind mice!
Posted  Thursday, January 12, 2006 at 1:57 PM
Post 7 of 8
I wouldn't doubt that at all. And maybe I didn't say it well enough, but basically all music that you hear can be traced back and compared to songs written hundreds of years ago. (I say hundreds because we can only really compare to music that was created and documented) There's only so many tones that the human ear can distinguish between, and there's only so many intervals and progressions that even remotely sound pleasing to the human ear. So really all song progressions that you hear have probably been done before, over and over again throughout the ages. But it's the instrumentation, timbres, tempos, dynamic contrasts, etc. that make a song unique.
This topic was dormant for 8 months...
Posted  Saturday, September 23, 2006 at 10:58 AM
Post 8 of 8
All the tabs I've ever seen for Blow It Out claim that the 4th chord is a b when I truly believe it to be a b minor. Play it along to the recording and see what I mean. Any thoughts? rolleyes.gif