Guantanamera

by Pete Seeger • Lesson #211 • Jan 31, 2019

Video lesson

Licensed Song Sheet 3 pages

Follow along with my print-friendly guide for this song! It’s available for purchase at Musicnotes.com, the web’s leading provider of licensed sheet music.

On the fence? Here's a guide I made showing the purchase & print process, including answers to common questions about my song sheets.

Buy at Musicnotes.com

Save 50% on this song sheet by applying the May 2024 code at Musicnotes checkout: C8A65MHA25 (click to copy). Thanks for being a Premium supporter!

Song Notes Premium includes a 50% discount code you can use when buying any of my licensed song sheets. For the current month's code, upgrade to premium or log in.

Editor’s notes

Guantanamera is a song I’ve had on my list for a few years now, and after a couple recent viewer requests it found itself on the top of the list. I first heard it via Pete Seeger, and in spending some time learning it discovered several other fun versions of it (The Sandpipers version is probably my favorite, musically). I’ll teach you the chords (no capo), some easy strumming patterns, and then crank up the difficulty a bit and show you a fancy intro riff as well as a few ways to add flourish while playing. I hope you enjoy!

Capo guide:

  • Capo 4 to play with Pete Seeger’s Carnegie Hall Concert version
  • Capo 5 to play with the Sandpiper’s version
  • Capo 6 to play with Pete Seeger’s Sweden 1968 version

Video timestamps

  • 0:00 Playthrough & overview
  • 1:36 Chords needed
  • 3:45 Verse & Chorus progressions
  • 6:10 Strumming patterns
  • 11:04 Fancy intro riff
  • 15:57 Adding melodic flourish
  • 17:39 Farewell

Lyrics w/ chords

(Capo 4 = Pete Seeger's Carnegie Hall version) (Capo 6 = The Sandpipers 1966 version)

INTRO
    A

CHORUS
    D             E         A             E
    Guantanamera... guajira guantanamera...
    A       D      E            A       D      E
    Guantanamer----a... guajira guantanamer----a...

VERSE
          A         D    E           A          D      E
Yo soy un hombre sincero... de donde crecen las palmas
          A         D    E          D              E
Yo soy un hombre sincero... de donde crec----en las palmas
           A       D    E              A          D    E
Y antes de morirme quiero... echar mis versos del alm--a

    [ chorus ]

         A              D     E          A           D    E
Mi verso es de un verde claro... y de un carmin encendido
         A              D     E          D           E
Mi verso es de un verde claro... y de un carmin encendido
         A       D       E                  A              D   E
Mi verso es un ciervo heri--do... que busca en el monte ampar--o

    [ chorus ]
        A            D      E         A       D          E
Con los pobres de la tierra... quiero yo mi suerte echar
        A            D      E         D               E
Con los pobres de la tierra... quiero yo mi suerte echar
      A          D    E             A         D   E
El arroyo de la sierra... me complace mas que el mar

    [ chorus ]

Editor’s notes

Guantanamera is a song I’ve had on my list for a few years now, and after a couple recent viewer requests it found itself on the top of the list. I first heard it via Pete Seeger, and in spending some time learning it discovered several other fun versions of it (The Sandpipers version is probably my favorite, musically). I’ll teach you the chords (no capo), some easy strumming patterns, and then crank up the difficulty a bit and show you a fancy intro riff as well as a few ways to add flourish while playing. I hope you enjoy!

On capo and chords used

My approach with this lesson is to show you this song with the simplest possible chords, using standard tuning. As such, I’m teaching in the key of A –– and only using the chords of A, D, and E. No doubt, there are more complicated ways to play it (e.g., Pete Seeger looks like he uses drop-D tuning and an E-minor chord) –– but I think the spirit of this song can totally be captured with these 3 chords, so I’m choosing to use them and keep it beginner friendly. Using these chords, here’s where to put the capo if you want to play along with some famous versions of this song:

  • Capo 4 to play with Pete Seeger’s Carnegie Hall Concert version
  • Capo 5 to play with the Sandpiper’s version
  • Capo 6 to play with Pete Seeger’s Sweden 1968 version

Chord shapes needed

The three chords I’m using can be played like this. The strings go from thickest (at the bottom) to thinnest (at the top).

E –––0––––2––––0––––
B –––2––––3––––0––––
G –––2––––2––––1––––
D –––2––––0––––2––––
A –––0–––––––––2––––
E –––––––––––––0––––
     A    D    E

Chord progressions

Here’s a birds-eye-view of the chord changes you’ll need in this song. Read these lines from left to right, and then top to bottom. Each measure has 4 beats.

Chorus:   "Guantanamera, guajira Guantanamera..."
           | D . . . | E . . . | A . . . | E . . . |
           | A . D . | E . . . | A . D . | E . . . |

Verse:    "Yo soy un hombre sincero..."
           | A . D . | E . . . | A . D . | E . . . |
           | A . D . | E . . . | D . . . | E . . . |
           | A . D . | E . . . | A . D . | E . . . |

Strumming patterns

For starters, begin with all down strums… but if you can, put the accent (emphasis) on the 2 and 4 counts.

1 + 2 + 3 + 4 +
D   D   D   D           D = down strum
    >       >           > = accented strum

From there, you can dial it up a little bit by adding an up-strum on the “+” count after the 2 and the 4. Note the accents, which come on the “2 +” and “4 +” parts of the four-count sequence. This is optional, but I find it gives it a nice sound that imitates Pete Seeger.

1 + 2 + 3 + 4 +         U = up strum
D   D U D   D U         D = down strum
    > >     > >         > = accented strum

Finally, you can down steady down-up-down-up strumming to really flesh it out -– but keep the accented strums on the “2 +” and “4 +” counts.

1 + 2 + 3 + 4 +         U = up strum
D U D U D U D U         D = down strum
    > >     > >         > = accented strum

Sandpiper-style intro in open position

As I show in the video lesson, here’s a nice little sequence you can do that imitates the riff you hear at the beginning of The Sandpipers version of this song. It requires a bit of pinky stretching. One bit of advice: this is easier to play if you have a capo on, since the width of each fret is reduced higher up on the fretboard. I usually do capo 5, give or take, if I want to play this.

E ––––0–0––––2–5–2––––4–––––4––2–4––2––
B ––––2––––––3––––––––0––––––––0–––––––
G ––––2––––––2––––––––1––––––––1–––––––
D ––––2––––––0––––––––2––––––––2–––––––
A ––0––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
E –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    A        D        E        E

One tricky part with this riff is making the E-major chord work. Here’s a fingering guide. The trick is to use your left middle and index fingers on the 4th and 3rd strings, which free up your left ring and pinky to play the high-E string notes.

E ––0––                  E ––2–– <= left ring     E ––4–– <= left pinky                              
B ––0––                  B ––0––                  B ––0––                              
G ––1–– <= left index    G ––1–– <= left index    G ––1–– <= left index               
D ––2–– <= left middle   D ––2–– <= left middle   D ––2–– <= left middle               
A –––––                  A –––––                  A –––––                               
E –––––                  E –––––                  E –––––                              
    E                        E                        E                                

Additional information about this song

Financial Times article about this song’s history

Here’s a short article about this song’s history, and the ways it has been adapted over the years. Very cool stuff.

Highest resolution video of Pete Seeger playing this that I’ve found

It looks like he is playing capo 6, in drop-D, using the chords D-G-A. However, to my ear, it sounds like he’s playing A-D-E (with capo 6). Either way, it’s nice we have this video!

The Sandpipers version

I hadn’t heard this version until I started learning this song… it’s definitely my favorite! Check it out:

Unlock My Secret Stash!

Gain instant access to my library of 225 print-friendly cheat sheets! Also includes my extended video lessons, jam tracks, courses, and more.

Join Song Notes Premium

Have questions? Watch video tour »

Browse Related Lessons

Click any tag below to view other lessons I've made in that category:

Enjoy my lessons? Buy me a beer!

If this and my other lessons have proven helpful to you, please consider making a one-time donation to my tip jar. Contributions of any amount help make this project possible (including the many, many hours I put into it).

Fun & Helpful Tools I've Made

Fret Monster

Interactive fretboard map! See the patterns behind every scale in any key.

View

Capo Captain

An easy way to calculate key & chord combinations, for any capo location!

View

Key Master

See and hear the notes, chords, scales used in each of the most common keys.

View

Blank Tabs

Free PDF templates to download, print, and write out your own guitar tabs!

View

Subscribe to my YouTube channel

Be sure to never miss a lesson by subscribing on YouTube. I put out 2-3 new videos every week. These include full song lessons, as well as covers, practice tips, behind-the-scenes updates. Thanks!


Recent Lessons

  • May 10, 2024

    "Wichita Lineman" by Glen Campbell

    Let's dive into Glen Campbell's all-time classic from 1968, originally written by Jimmy Webb. I teach this with capo 5th fret, using easier-to-manage Key of C chords.

  • May 1, 2024

    Tour of My New "KeyMaster" Web Tool

    My new interactive web tool lets you see and hear the notes, chords, and common progressions in all of the most common keys. Super helpful!

  • April 24, 2024

    13 Must-Know Riffs with Droning Strings

    A handy roundup of all the songs I've taught that use droning strings... with a quick breakdown of each riff!

  • April 18, 2024

    "Moonshadow" by Cat Stevens

    Learn how to play Cat Stevens' 1971 classic! I include campfire-friendly chords and strumming, and a step-by-step breakdown of the intro fingerstyle riff.

  • April 12, 2024

    Playing Songs "Correctly" vs. When to Cut Corners

    When learning songs, are we allowed to simplify things? Do we always need to play things exactly as they're recorded? Here's some quick thoughts!

  • April 9, 2024

    Chords & Music Theory... 9 New Lessons!

    A roundup of a batch of new chord-related video lessons & PDF cheat sheets I just added to my library! Lots of good stuff here, be sure not to miss 'em.

  • March 30, 2024

    Gordon Lightfoot's "Carefree Highway"

    Learn how to play Lightfoot's 1975 classic, with plenty of tips to help simplify some of the quicker chord changes.

  • March 22, 2024

    Lead Guitar & the F1 Theme Song

    Let's look at the catchy Formula 1 theme song and learn how to play it on lead guitar...including handy trick for dealing with the key change.

  • March 15, 2023

    Pink Floyd's "Breathe" - with Simpler Chords Included

    Learn to play through Pink Floyd's 1973 classic! I'll teach the chords they use, while also showing a handful of useful simplifications and riffs to make this work on a single acoustic guitar.

  • March 6, 2024

    Q&A: 8 Tips to Avoid Muting Strings

    If you're frustrated by muffled, muted, or buzzing strings when playing chords, you're not alone! Here's 8 tips to avoid this common issue.

  • March 1, 2024

    Blues Shuffle Riffs - Using Just 2 Strings!

    A step-by-step introduction to blues shuffle riffs in open position, which are an amazingly fun-to-play way to get that blues sound with just a few fingers.

Browse All Recent Lessons →

Browse All My Lessons

By lesson type

By technique

By musical genre

By decade

By musical key

By popular artist


← back to homepage