Ridin' Out the Storm by Rodney Crowell Guitar Chords

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p If you are looking for Ridin' Out the Storm guitar chords, you've come to the right place. You can play Ridin' Out the Storm by Rodney Crowell using guitar or guitar. This song by Rodney Crowell can also be played by that instruments. =/p p Ridin' Out the Storm guitar chords has rhythm and included in Fate’s Right Hand (2003) album. You can also find another musical genres, including jazz guitar chords, country music guitar chords, pop guitar chords, world music guitar chords, and rock guitar chords here. /p h3Ridin' Out the Storm by Rodney Crowell Guitar Chords/h3 [C]The New York City winter comes in cold grey sheets of steelbr[Am]The numbness in his hands and feet is all that he can feelbr[F]Alcohol and sterno turns a doorway to [C]a bed[Am]br[C]And the ghost of who he might have been lives on inside his head[G][Am]brbrIn a canyon made of brownstone on a sidewalk icy blackbrHe wanders nearly barefoot with his righteousness in tactbrA man of many mansions in a cardboard box repletebrHe lies sleeping with an angel while his heart pretends to beatbrbrRefrain:brbr[F]All the wind blows down on Lonely Street like an ice pick through the airbr[Am]Midst the Sunday times and coffee grinds and wino's in Times Squarebr[F]Five flights up on Easy Street you know she's saf[C]e and warm[Am]br[C]Way down low neath a foot of snow he's riding out the stor[G]m[Am]brbrI offered him my winter coat politely he refusedbrLike an educated man he spoke with words I seldom usebrHe said I don't need pity for these choices are my ownbrHe bowed his head just slightly and quietly moved alongbrbrRefrainbrbrSolobrbrIts not like he's a victim of the homeless life he stalksbrNor helpless to get back across the fine line that he walksbrRiding out the storm means yesterday's already spentbrTomorrow don't mean nothing it won't even make a dentbrbr(Thanks to DeWick@Web.de for tabs) p If you want to learn Rodney Crowell Ridin' Out the Storm guitar chords, The 5 chords we'll look at are the C major, A major, G major, E major, and D major. The reason we use all major chords is that the minor versions of any of these chords just require tiny adjustments. Each one of those minor chords is completely based on its major counterpart /p p The more you practice, the easier guitar will feel to play Ridin' Out the Storm. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it. /p

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