Amri Story



p If you are looking for Rollin' Stone guitar chords, you've come to the right place. You can play Rollin' Stone by The Kingston Trio using guitar or guitar. This song by The Kingston Trio can also be played by that instruments. =/p p Rollin' Stone guitar chords has rhythm and included in Here We Go Again! (1959) 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 h3Rollin' Stone by The Kingston Trio Guitar Chords/h3 [Intro]br[D] [A7] [D] [A7] br[Verse]brA [D]rollin' [A7]stone gathers no [D]moss[A7]brA [D]rollin' stone gathers no [A7]mossbrSo, as [D]far as I can [D7]seebrI [G]guess I was meant to bebr[D]Just a [A7]rollin' [D]stone[A7]brbr[Verse]brA [D]rollin' [A7]stone gathers no [D]moss[A7]brA [D]rollin' stone hasn't a [A7]bossbrJust like a [D]Spring or a Summer's [D7]breezebrI can [G]roll just where I pleasebrI'm [D]just a [A7]rollin' [D]stone[D7]brbr[Chorus]brCan't lose my [G]waybrAll directions are the same when I'm a-travelin'[D]br[D]I've got no home, sweet homebrJust keep [Dm7]boppin', never stopping'br[Dm7]Couldn't even if I wanted to[A7]br[A7]I've got to roam and rollbrbr[Verse]brA [D]rollin' [A7]stone gathers no [D]moss[A7]brA [D]rollin' stone's like that coin that you [A7]tossbrBut I [D]don't need level [D7]groundbrI can [G]roll up hill or downbrI'm [D]just a [A7]rollin' [D]stone[D7][G]brbr[Bridge]br[G]When I'm travelin', all directions are the same[E]brA string unravelin',[A7] I don't think that I'm to blame[D]brbr[Verse]brSome might [A7]think my life's a [D]loss[A7]brA [D]rollin' stone never gets [A7]lostbrSo, I'll [D]just keep playin' it [D7]straightbr'Til I [G]roll right through that gatebrI'm [D]just a [A7]rollin' [D]stone[A7]brA rollin' [D]stone[A7]brA rollin' [D]stone[A7]brA rollin' [D]stone[A7]brA rollin' [D]stone [A7] p If you want to learn The Kingston Trio Rollin' Stone 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 Rollin' Stone. Guitar is hard to learn in the beginning, but gets easier the longer you stick with it. /p