Come on, Dan. Let's take them one Oh, old country rock. We've gone through the basic first. Now it's time to look at the bridge. So let me play a verse and then I'll go into the bridge. I'll play it all the way through and then we'll we'll break it down.
So what he's doing there is he's going to the five so the song is a D, and the rest of the song is D and G and then he's got that turnaround that EA back to the D but he never goes to the, you know to the a match until he gets to the bridge and what we're doing is sliding in to an A chord. And then we're playing this riff like we did in some of the 10s and a, we're going between the long A and the A seven. And then we're going back to the D. What I'm doing there is taking that D chord and just sliding it, moving it down one fret, and then back to its position. So let's let's do that again. He's gonna go back to that long a again. As you play this, you can mix up how you play this long a, you can do something like this.
Or you can play something like this. Come up with different ways to play that depending on how many times you go around. In the song for the bridge, and then once it gets through that it's just the normal back in back into the verse, so the bridge here, a back to the day. When you do this slide, you can include the first string, you cannot include the first string, you can get all kinds of different sounds out of that, that simple D chord in that part of the tune, listen to their inch. Now, listen to some of the stuff he does and knowing that that's a D chord, you should be able to figure out anything you want to figure out. So basically that is old country rock climbing.
Play the whole thing around one more time for you. I'll play a verse, play the bridge, play a verse, and then we'll, we'll wrap it up. There's not really an end tag on this, and I'll show you how I ended. So here we go country rock. just ended on a on the D chord. That's how I do it.
I can't remember how he does it in the original tune. So there you have a really fun instrumental to work on in the key of D the drop D tuning old country rack by William Moore and if you know you're listening to this stuff, make sure you listen to one way gal as well and that'll give you some ideas that you can work in to old country rock if you're playing it as an instrumental. We've got one more tune in drop D tuning the key of D and it's a doozy and let's let's move on to that one.