Clint Patrick Black (born February 4, 1962 in Long Branch, New Jersey, USA) is a neotraditional country music singer, songwriter, producer and occasional actor. He grew up in Katy, TX (west of Houston) and spent a good portion of his high school years touring Houston's club circuit.
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. # #------------------------------------------------------------------------------# # Put Yourself in My Shoes ------------------------ recorded by Clint Black notated by Greg Vaughn ([email protected])
Intro: D D#dim7/ AF#F#7(#9)/F9E9/A6/ (slashes separate measures in 4/4)
A6B13 Your mind is made up you won't even try DA You didn't even cry this time A6B13 You say that we can never see eye to eye DA And one of us just must be blind DC#7 We have our differences, we're still the same F#mB7 See what we all want to see AB7 But you take a second look and maybe things wouldn't seem the same F9E9A If you could see what you mean to me
Chorus: D7A Put yourself in my shoes D7A Walk a mile for me D7A I'll put myself in your shoes B7E7 Maybe then we'd see Eb7D7A That if you'd put yourself in my shoes D7A You'd have some sympathy D D#dim7 AF#F#7(#9) And if I could only put myself in your shoes F9E9A I would walk right back to me
You're gonna keep walkin' and you're gonna pass me by You say you don't even care But I could always recognize a real goodbye And I know your heart's not there We've had our differences, we're still the same Hear what we all want to hear Now I'm head over heels in the lost and found it's a cryin' shame I thought we made a perfect pair
Now, I'm still in the process of learning this, but here are the chords that work best so far. You can leave off the chord alterations and just play the basic triad for a simpler version.