I'm going to take our last 10 in the key of D is by the great blind Blake arguably the most sophisticated and the best of all the country blues guitar players. And this is a tune of his called chump man blues. And I'll play a little bit of it for you now and then we'll we'll start taking it apart. Like our other tunes in drop D tuning, the chords for Chapman blues are pretty simple. We've got a D, we're gonna be playing some really fun riffs over that D chord shape. We've got our G seven, same way we've played it and all the other tunes and drop D tuning.
And then we've got an A seventh. And then there is a section of the song that I'm going to show you toward the end. It's a variation that blind Blake plays where he's going to use this the seventh chord. Whoops, I got the open six, which I don't want to do because we're in drop D tuning. So I'm starting that chord from the fifth string. And that is an E seventh.
He does throw that in toward the end. A lot of Chapman blues involves riffs played over those chords and also some some other Stuff played a little bit further up on the neck. So let's get into the basic verse for blind Blake's chop me and blues.