Bunessan (Gaelic traditional air · instrumental fingerstyle)
Strumming: 3/4 fingerstyle: melody on top + bass, flowing like a lullaby
Focus: 3/4 lullaby-style fingerstyle, melody + bass as separate voices, position work and expression
Transpose · Capo
The original key is inferred from the first chord in the chart. Transposing changes the chords you have to play; to keep easy shapes, switch to “Capo” instead.
💡 Too high to sing? Move down. Too low? Move up. Guys often go a few keys below the original, women a bit above — that's just a starting point. You've got it right when you can sing the highest line of the chorus comfortably.
Chords in this song
✦ = harder to play (mostly barre); try a capoChord progression
Play-along
Chords change automatically to the beat (following the current key D). Get it smooth slowly, then speed up.
One bar of count-in first, then the chord changes automatically each bar. Get it smooth slowly, then speed up bit by bit.
Practice ladder · from playing it to playing it well
Not sure how to practice? Follow these four steps — each has a clear goal and a concrete method.
- 1
Get the chords ringing
Goal: every chord clear, no buzzingGet this song's 5 chords ringing one by one and switchable (D · G · A · Em · D/F#). Press each alone first, then switch in pairs; for any that won't ring, scroll to “Don't know these chords?” below, or use the chord-change timer for a one-minute challenge.
- 2
Play it through in time
Goal: no stalls with the metronome, start to finishUsing the “3/4 fingerstyle: melody on top + bass, flowing like a lullaby” strum, open the metronome and connect the whole song from a slow tempo, no pausing on the changes; while you're at it, spot which chord progression it follows.
- 3
Play it with feel
Goal: dynamics and a sense of breath3/4 lullaby-style fingerstyle, melody + bass as separate voices, position work and expression。
- 4
Own it & make it yours
Goal: explain why it works and change up your own versionTry analyzing its chord progression, then use the Transpose / Capo control above to change keys, and try reworking the rhythm, adding color chords or improvising — turn “I can play this one” into “I can play many.”
The progression behind this song
Recognize this go-to progression and you can play loads of songs by analogy:
Don't know these chords? Learn them in the courses
The Gaelic / Scottish traditional air "Bunessan"; the melody is public domain (in circulation by the 19th century, first notated in 1888). The later lyrics "Morning Has Broken" set by Eleanor Farjeon in 1931 are separately copyrighted, so this is treated as instrumental fingerstyle only, without those words. Only the harmonic skeleton is given here.