The third and final verse of sad night out he goes right back to what he played the very first time around, I'm gonna go ahead and play that. The only variation that I hear is in the very end of the song The way he ends, the song, the very literally the very last chord last thing he plays is a little different. So let's go ahead and I'm just gonna play through the second and final verse slowly And what I'm hearing at the very end, he plays this right here, which is what we've been playing throughout the song with him for the very last time I hear this very subtle difference. So what I'm doing is really playing a G, F shaped chord. And instead of playing just the second and the fourth strings like I've been doing the whole song, I'm going to slip the second finger and to the fourth fret of the third string to make part of an F shaped t chord.
Not playing the first string. I'm still pitching What I'm doing differently this is what I hear Freddy doing is with my downstroke, which would be his thumb pick which is going to get the pinch on the fourth string. I'm just pinching it a little harder. So that I get that third string, fourth fret ringing out as well. So then it's like this, see if you can hear the difference. Here's the first way we played it.
The second time. Just a very subtle difference, but yet I'm pretty here. That's what Freddie's doing there at the end. So sad night owl is a pretty simple song. The first verse and the second verse are pretty much exactly the same. In the middle of the two verses, you have a solo that's played in the first position blues box, with a little adventure into the second blue, Xbox and beyond.
And we'll we'll get a lot more adventurous before we're through with all these great stuff.