The second verse that I played for you, I started out here, so let me take it from the turnaround. I'll play it all the way through and then we'll break it down. So all we're doing is when we're playing over the one we're just going, we're sliding. And I'm not sure exactly where he starts that slide from. You can start it from far away like the second. You could start a closer mess around with it but he does something like this.
And that little pattern there, you know how often you play. You can mix that up varied if you listen to the Robert Johnson songs in a that I have listed in the recommended listening section. You'll hear some variations on that. So just playing this like that. He's gonna go to the D. You may have noticed me hammering on my first finger there and all I'm doing is holding that D seven position, hammering my first finger on the first fret of the second string. Back to my a.
Right here. What I'm doing is taking a long a, and I'm walking down from the fifth fourth third frets on the first string into a seventh chord. So we've got that and then we're going to our D. And that's really it for The second verse so the big variation there is the way we started out and then when we got to the A doing that little run between the long A and the A seventh, which is something you hear Robert Johnson do a lot. Let me play that whole verse for you slowly we'll start from the from the five There you have the second verse of Robert Johnson blues in the key of A