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Home > Beginner Songs > Time of Your Life
Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) - Green Day Print E-mail
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Written by Danny Poole   
Sunday, 03 May 2009 15:49

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This is a great tune to learn as a beginners song.

  1. It has easy chords
  2. The changes are simple
  3. every body seems to know it
  4. It sounds good when it's played simply or the original way

You can break this song into 3 different chord progressions

|G    |C9 D |

|Em D |C9 G |

|Em G |Em G |Em D |

G C9 D Em

If you know what these chords are, how to strum and how the song sounds then the above information is all you need to know. If you know none of this then read on.


Intro

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This method of picking in the intro & Verse 1 is sometimes called cross picking. It's like a confined (small) rhythm. It is a combination of rhythm and single note picking. Don't rest your fingers on the guitar like shown here (Rest Fingers For Support), for this style of picking you'll either place the back end of your picking hand on the bridge or just float it above the strings.

This is a 16th note rhythm! It is also important that you keep an eye on your picking direction. Don't forget this "" means to pick down and this "" means to pick up. Remember the arrow in in relation to the tab lines.

Take note of the first two notes strummed (3 on 6th string & 0 on 4th). You may ask "how do I pick both those notes without playing the 5th string in the middle" well the answer is to mute the 5th string with your 1st finger (just touch the 5th string but don't press down) or you could lay your 2nd finger down a little so that it touches the 5th string (your 2nd finger should be pressing down on the 6th string anyway). It is not vitally important to mute the note but it does add to the tone of the chord.

x 2

Verse 1

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The beginning of verse 1 is the same a above.

x 2

Hopefully by now you have a bit of a feel for the rhythm as the next part and the 1st chorus are the same. The tabs show on this page are not a strict but more of a guideline on how to play this song. You can try to play it note for not but over a period of time this style of rhythm/picking will come naturally.

x 2

Chorus

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Verse 2

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This next part just looks confusing on paper, when really it is a rhythm pattern shown in tab. Run your mouse over the tab below to see how it will look written as a rhythm chart. the rhythm is the same throughout the song so the is only rhythm chart example written for the first two bars.


Chorus

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This next part is the same rhythm pattern as before played over a different chord progression.


End

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To end, just strum the G chord slowly.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 06 May 2009 11:41
 

Comments  

 
0 #7 verse 2McNoah 2010-07-27 14:45
on verse 2 it will not let me see the rhythym pattern
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+1 #6 G chorddanpoole 2010-05-24 10:06
Yes G can be played both ways. The notes that make up G are G-B-D so you can have any variation of those 3 notes and it will always be a G chord. When you play it with the 2nd string open you are making that note a "B", when you play it with the 2nd string 3rd fret your are adding a "D" note. Both are valid G's, I tend to think the way shown in this song is a little more rock n roll and the other way is a little country sounding.
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0 #5 RE: Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) - Green DayShadowSpill 2010-05-24 02:30
I was taught that the G chord was only 5-2, 6-3 and 1-3...are there really 4 finger placements or is that a mistake?
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0 #4 RE: Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) - Green Dayhabs 2010-01-18 07:00
excellent video and explanation, best one i've seen, and i've seen a bunch...
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+1 #3 VideoDanny Smith 2009-08-03 20:55
Hey Danny,

Would there be any possibilities of getting the video in different speed options? 1/4 and 1/2 maybe?

I used to take guitar lessons but due to work change had to give them up a few years back, really want to get back into the guitar and your site is helping me a lot. This is the first full song I'm trying to get into because it's 'somewhat' simple, but really struggling to get the picking right... I'm struggling with the intro... particularly the line before Verse 1. It's either a lack of practice or a lack of hand-eye co-ordination!
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0 #2 Danny Poole 2009-05-24 17:14
Good spot, thanks for that. I don't even think I'll change the lesson plan as I think that's a useful point for people to know. More musicians should understand how chords are constructed.
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0 #1 Cadd9Lindsay Ward 2009-05-23 08:29
Cool song - good video and notes.
I believe the C9 chord listed should be a Cadd9.
C9 means it has a 7 and a 9 in it, so it would have a Bb as well as a D, but this chord doesn't have a Bb.
(I usually just call it a C2, but it should be a Cadd9, I think.)
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