She Loves You (The Beatles) Guitar Lesson with TAB

She Loves You Guitar Lesson + TAB
In this guitar lesson, you get TAB for all sections that will work if you are the only guitarist in the band!


She Loves You | TAB


Let’s take a look at some TAB for the specific licks related to She Loves You. If you can see how the intervals make up the theoretical concepts of scales and chord extensions, you are learning from this.

Here’s the first G Minor Pentatonic lick played in chorus 1 & 2 over a G, but also in bridge 1 over a D7.

She Loves You TAB, minor pentatonic riffs.

The signature chord lick that appear in every bridge over an Em looks like this in TAB.

She Loves You TAB, bridge chord riff Em.

Finally, the outro simply plays that same riff again, but now the chords change and therefore the chord names.

As I mentioned earlier, if you can see the intervals in relation to each bass note, you’ll understand why the chords are named this way.

She Loves You TAB, outro.


She Loves You TAB | Related Pages


She Loves You | Chords + Lyrics

She Loves You chords lesson.

You can learn how to play She Loves You by The Beatles using chords, lyrics, chord analysis, a chord chart, and the original recording.

| Em | Em | A7 | A7 |
She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah. She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah…


Five similar tunes | Chords + Lyrics

When you can play the TAB for She Loves You, try these five tunes from the songbook.


The Beatles tunes

The Beatles wrote She Loves You.

The Beatles are the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed band in the history of popular music.

As the leaders of the so-called British Invasion, their catchy Rock n Roll infused pop songs took America by storm, creating hysteria everywhere they went.


The Beatles on the web

Listen to The Beatles on Spotify.


About me | Dan Lundholm

Dan Lundholm wrote this guitar lesson and TAB for She Loves You.

This guitar lesson by Dan Lundholm features TAB and covers She Loves You. Discover more about him and how you can learn guitar with Spytunes.

Most importantly, find out why you should learn guitar through playing tunes, not practising scales, and studying theory in isolation.


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