Along The Navajo Trail Chords

KeyG CapoNone TuningStandard Difficulty Plays489

Along The Navajo Trail by Bob Wills is a moderately challenging guitar song played in the key of G. It uses the chords G7, C, F, Fm, Em, B7 and D7. Use the transpose and diagram tools on this page to change the key, see each shape, or simplify the chords.

Transpose
G
Text
16
Speed
  			G7    C    G7         C 
Every day along about evening 

G7       C            G7        C 
When the sunlight's begining to fail 

  F 
I r-ide through the slumbering shadows 

 C        F      C 
Along the Navajo Trail 



G7        C            G7           C 
When it's twilight and crickets are calling 

G7    C         G7       C 
And coyotes are making a wail 

   F 
I  dream by a smoldering fire 

 C        F      C 
Along the Navajo Trail 



  F               Fm     C 
I love to lie and to the music 

         Fm                      C 
When the wind is strumming a sagebrush guitar 

     Em          B7               Em 
When over yonder hill the moon is climbing 

          D7                    G7 
It always finds me wishing on a star 



                 C         G7        C 
Well what do you know it's morning already 

G7          C          G7         C 
There's the dawning so silver and pale 

     F 
It's time to climb into my saddle 

    C        F      C 
And ride the Navajo Trail  



G7        C            G7           C 
When it's twilight and crickets are calling 

G7    C         G7       C 
And coyotes are making a wail 

   F 
I  dream by a smoldering fire 

 C        F      C 
Along the Navajo Trail 
    	

Chord diagrams

Guitar tuner

--
Start the tuner and play a string

Reference tones

Standard tuning, lowest to highest. Click a string to play it; the string the mic hears is highlighted.

Click Start tuner and allow microphone access. The needle centers and turns green when a string is in tune (within 5 cents).
No microphone? You can still tap any string above to hear its exact reference pitch.

Metronome

100 BPM Andante