(G)Black bird (Am7)sing ing in the (Bm)dead of night.
(C)Take these (A)bro ken wings and (D#dim7)learn to fly;
(Bm)All (A9)your life
(G)you were on ly (A7)wait ing for this (Am)mo ment (D7)to a (G)rise.
(G)Black bird (Am7)sing ing in the (Bm)dead of night.
(C)Take these (A)sunk en eyes and (D#dim7)learn to see;
(Bm)All (A9)your life
(G)you were on ly (A7)wait ing for this (Am)mo ment (D7)to be (G)rise.
(G)free.
(F)Black (C)bird,
(C)fly,
(F)Black (C)bird,
(C)fly,
in to the (D7)light of a dark, black night.
(D7)light of a dark, black night.
(G)Black bird (Am7)sing ing in the (G)dead of night
(C)Take these (A)bro ken wings and learn to fly;
(Bm7)All (A9)your life
(G)you were on ly (A7)wait ing for this (Am7)mo ment (D7)to a (G)rise.
(C)You were (G)on ly (A7)wait ing for this (Am7)mo ment (D7)to a (G)rise.
(C)You were (G)on ly (A7)wait ing for this (Am7)mo ment (D7)to a (G)rise.
Blackbird by The Beatles
14 people have learned this song
Easy piano arrangement in the key of G at 100 BPM. Difficulty: easy. Color-coded notes — no sheet-reading skill required.
This arrangement is a great way to build your confidence with chromatic bass movement — your left hand walks steadily upward through several passages, and keeping that line smooth and even at 100 BPM is the real core skill here.
You'll cycle through sixteen different chords, including some colorful ones like D♯dim7 and A9, so don't panic when an unfamiliar shape appears; most transitions share at least one common tone you can anchor to.
I'd suggest learning hands separately first, especially the left-hand bass walk, then combining at half tempo before bringing it up to speed.
Watch the shift from C to Cm and the move into that diminished chord — those are the spots where most students hesitate and break the flow.
Loop those two-bar transitions until they feel automatic.
The peaceful mood here depends on steady rhythm more than volume, so stay relaxed in your wrists and let the notes ring rather than pressing hard.
Once this clicks, you'll have a real feel for how chromatic voice leading connects simple chords in surprising ways — a skill that transfers to dozens of other songs.
About “Blackbird”
- What key is "Blackbird" in?
- "Blackbird" by The Beatles is in the key of G with a tempo of 100 BPM. Difficulty: easy.
- Is "Blackbird" easy to play on piano?
- Yes — this arrangement is rated easy, meaning it uses simple chord patterns and a manageable tempo. Most beginners can play through it in 1-3 practice sessions using our color-coded notes.
- Can I play "Blackbird" without reading sheet music?
- Yes. Our player offers a falling-notes mode (Synthesia-style) and a beginner mode with color-coded keys — both let you play along without reading traditional notation.
- What chords are used in "Blackbird"?
- This arrangement of "Blackbird" uses 16 chords: A, A7, A9, Am, Am7, Bb, Bm, Bm7, +8 more.
- How long does it take to learn "Blackbird" on piano?
- 1–3 short practice sessions for the basics; 2–3 weeks to perform confidently with both hands.
- What other songs by The Beatles can I play here?
- Try "DAY TRIPPER", "PLEASE MR. POSTMAN", "SHE'S LEAVING HOME". All are available in our player with color-coded notes; pick the one matching your level.
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