The Freddy King, San Jose, let's take it from the end of the last verse. I'll play it and then we'll figure out what's going on. What I hear is he gets to that note the eighth fret of the sixth string and then 789 10 on the fifth string, which is pretty simple. Then right here, I'm not sure what he does, he does something when he's in a, I can hear him hit the open fifth string before he does. The court Slide it kind of buys him a second to get his chord, shape and business and in, in position. So what I think he might do here is either play an open string and mute it, or even just a quick, strong and muted so it does something like this.
But he does it so fast, it's hard to even hear what he could be doing in the court slide is real simple. From a C flat, nine to a C ninth and the shape we've done it before. At the end of sensation, we're just playing it at the eighth fret with the second finger, eighth fret of the sixth string, second finger, first finger seventh fret of the fifth string, then my ring finger, eighth fret of the third string, fourth, fourth string, and my pinky on the eighth fret of the second string with the third string open. So we got this. So the chord we move it from one step above. Like that, so the whole plate slowly.
Pretty sure he's doing I don't know what he's playing for that little open. That he does that quick straw deleted the lead into that you can listen to it see what you think. I'm guessing since he did this and a maybe it's an open fifth strength so we got something like this real quick or it could be as strong of some strengths maybe third and fourth string real quick with an upstroke of his first finger. Again, I'm not sure I've never seen Freddie King play this. I don't know. Let me play it again.
One more time from the end of the last verse San Jose