Little River Band is an Australian rock band formed in Melbourne in 1975 and named after a road sign for the Victorian township of Little River, near Geelong. They were the first Australian rock group to enjoy sustained commercial success in the United States. During their career the band have sold more than 25 million records and scored 13 American Top 40 hits.
While fronted by singer John Farnham from 1982–1986, the band's original members were Glenn Shorrock (vocals)
Four years of hard work!This month of May we celebrated four years on the air. We continue working on the dissemination of this wonderful instrument, thank you for participating in our story!
#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE--------------------------------# #This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the# #song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research.# #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
This took me some while to work out, because I think they use shortened chords which give a very different sound to their equivalent full ones. This is the closest I could get, though I’m happy to have input from anyone who suggests better fits!
If playing an acoustic guitar, which I’d recommend plucking just the 3 notes mentioned by playing the bottom string with thumb and the two above it with 1st and 2nd finger, except in the chorus where the straight E,A,B should be strummed.
If playing on electric guitar, you can do a type of power chord ‘boogie-woogie’ going from A5 to A7n3 to Am using just the G and D strings – which I think is what the lead guitarist does in live version.
If you just want to strum as a full chord, you could try substituting A for A5, A7 or Am7 for A7n3 and D or better still DSus2 (open top e string) for D5, but you’ll hear it really doesn’t sound quite the same.
*A7(no3rd) is not a text-book chord, it’s one I’ve made up. For those interested in the technicality it has no name as it only features a Root, 5 and 7th, assuming the bass note is the root). It could equally be an Am7th (no 3rd), since it’s impossible to tell whether it’s minor or major without knowing if the 3rd is flatted (minor) or not. End of music theory lesson ;-). On with the music....
Intro Plucked on acoustic, arpeggios (with slightly different bass etc) on electric A5/A7n3/A5/Am/Am/A5
A5/A7n3/A5/Am/Am/A5
A5 A7n3 A5 I just got back from the border Am7A5D5A5 And what I saw made me know for sure A7n3 A5 We're out of order
A5 A7n3 A5 I had a dream about New Orleans Am7A5D5A5 At Jackson Square I heard their prayer A7n3 A5 Down in New Orleans
E On the run, there's a life for livin' AB But the people there, they just don't care A5 A7n3 A5 Livin' their life like a millionaire A7n3 A5 Down on the border
A5 A7n3 A5 You never see me in old Iran Am7A5D5A5 The women there don't know who I am A7n3 A5 In old Iran
A5 A7n3 A5 And I never will go to Singapore Am7A5D5A5 The people there will cut your hair A7n3 A5 In Singapore
E On their streets there's a life of plenty AB Oh but they'll never know about the freedom show A5 A7n3 A5 They’re livin' in darkness years ago A7n3 A5 Down on the border
Solo
A5 A7n3 A5 They built a wall at the border Am7A5D5A5 Not to keep us out, but to leave no doubt A7n3 A5 They're out of order, hey
E And all the people who are trapped within AB Serve to show just how far we'll go A7n3 A5 And how dumb we've been
A5 A7n3 A5 At the top life looks so easy Am7A5D5A5 But they'll never know what they'll never know Am7A5D5A5 They're much too busy countin' all their dough Am7n3 A5 From the border