Hey everybody out there! This song I want to teach you right now is an awesome song and just heard it today by Eric Church called “Love Your Love the Most.” I think it’s just a really sweet song. It’s a great song for any of you who want to learn the song, maybe to sing to your girlfriends or you just want the song to kind of jam—when you’re jamming with your buddies. It’s a pretty good country love song and it’s got a little bit of an intro. As you can see the cape is on the 3rd fret. We are in standard tuning. So tune your guitar with standard tuning and then put your cape on the 3rd fret and you’re be good to go.
The intro sounds little something like this [Demonstration]. There’s electric guitar playing in couple other notes in the background that I didn’t really bother to pick out. But as far as you’re playing, usually play this I’ll play it more time [Demonstration]. Okay, so that’s the intro.
Basically, what I want you to do is start-out, just make a G chord, four finger G where your middle finger, it’s here on the 3rd fret of your low E and pointer fingers and the 2nd fret above the capo over here, A string. And you really don’t need anything else from there. But the first, I’m going to break up in the four parts because there’s four parts. So first, it sounds like this [Demonstration].
So that first part, you start-out playing another one on your 3rd fret and that’s where your ring finger is, okay. You play at once, then you play your A open and you hammer on with your pointer finger 2nd fret. So you’re picking up ones and that second note generate when you point your fingers and slumps down.
After that, you’ll put it your D string open and you come back to your A string to play the 3rd fret which you cover enough with your ring finger. Okay, so it sounds like this [Demonstration], that’s the first one.
The second one, you’re going to start-out the same. You’re going to play, and then you’re A hammer and you play open, hammer two, you can play the D open again. But this time, instead of where you played 3rd fret for the last note of the first section, you’re going to play open A. So that second part is [Demonstration]. So the first two sections, put them together, [Demonstration].
Third section is kind of with shoulder. You’re just going to play these three, hammer two and you’re going to play 2nd fret on your D and you get a little break. And then you’re going to play two, this is for the fourth part. You’re going to play two, open and you’re going to play three, two, zero on your A and then 3rd fret on your E to finish it.
So the first part, [Demonstration], all together [Demonstration], just like that. That’s the intro you can play.
Now, I’m getting the chords. It’s really simple chords. You get your capo on the 3rd fret and the chord you’re playing is a G chord, okay. You can play four-finger G, or if you feel like to play your G like this, you can. This song if you’re going to play the G this way, then if you play your C chords, you can play it like this, just standard C chord. If you play your G chord like this with the four fingers, then when you play your C in this, it’s easier to play C. You can play G, C if you want but for beginner that maybe a lot more movement when you want. So if you’ll play your G like this [Demonstration] or if you play your G four fingered [Demonstration].
Okay so the basic verse progression goes G to C, G to D, G to C and at the end, you have a G, D, C. So the first one is G, C [Demonstration], just strum it down [Demonstration] switch to your second chord which is the C [Demonstration], switch back to the third chord, which is G like the first one [Demonstration]. Fourth chord is a D, switch to a D, [Demonstration] and then you’re in the third line, now acting my G, [Demonstration]. And the last one of the verse and a good barbecue, I will play [Demonstration], switch to a D, [Demonstration] until you finish the first verse.
So I play it through it slow. So you’re starting on Sleeping on Saturdays [Demonstration] and a good barbecue. So that’s the first verse. Second verse is just the same. So the chords, it’s the same strum pattern the whole time, you just switching chord. So, let’s start D [Demonstration]. It’s like that. It’s pretty simple.
There’s really has no bridge. It just the last chorus over different. So, there’s really has no bridge [Demonstration].
[Singing]
So, that’s the first two verses, the chorus, third verse and the chorus. So the rest of the thing is just no more choruses and that’s it.
But I hope that help guys, a lot of cool stuff coming freeandeasyguitar.com, check it out. You’ve got some professional, when I professional I mean leaving Nashville travel on with country, not only on Nashville and play for big artist. So, I’m going to have some of those people teaching their own songs and some of the songs that have written for big artists. Keep in lot of that, pretty excited and we’ll be seeing you guys soon, so every week.
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