Now we're ready for another verse of blind boy Fuller's leave my woman alone. This time I'm going to play another instrument over so I did some variations in there. So let me play it again slowly for you and then we'll we'll talk about it. There's not much of an N tag in the sun, the big variation here, you know, we started Pretty much the same thing right here. We're going to F sharp diminished chord that we talked about in the first lecture here. So it's 1231231 third fret second string.
And then back into that. So we've got g again, right here, we can go to the a seven. We can do that or we could do this. So let's do that again. Go back to that lick that we played at the start of the instrumental verses. And then that little walk, I don't think blind boy fuller uses this but I use it because it's just fun to play.
I'm going to walk into an East seventh chord open for a string into an E seven like that. So we get to the end of the day there, I'm just got my first finger on the second fret got off four strings from the first to the fourth, picking the second string upstroke getting the first and the second into an a seventh. That's a very simple turn around. So the main variation in that versus that diminished chord. Then instead of playing I'm using the a seven or I can use the left. So you can mix this up and when I play this instrumental, what I try to do is every time around, do something a little different to keep it fresh.
So anyway, let me play that third verse plus the end tag for blind boy Fuller's leave my woman alone. And then we'll, we'll be finished in the key of A. So here we go. So we'll take it from the end of the previous verse. So there you have five songs in the key of A to practice with and if you go through those and learn those licks and get used to the bass and all that stuff you can pretty much Listen, you know anything you want to listen to in the key of A and probably be able to figure figure most of it out at least. Alright so now we We're going to move in to the key of D