What A Wonderful World

by Louis Armstrong
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Lyrics

(C7)I see (F)trees of green,

red ros es (Am)too;

I see them bloom

for me and you.

And I (Db)think to my self,

what a (C7)won der ful world.

I see (F)skies of blue

and clouds of (Am)white;

the bright bless ed (F)day,

the dark sa cred (Dm)night.

And I (Db)think to my self,

what a (C7)won der ful world.

The (Bb6)col ours of the rain bow,

so (F)pret ty in the sky,

are (Bb6)al so on the fac (C)es

of (F)peo ple go ing by.

I see (Dm)friends shak ing (C)hands,

say ing (F)“How do you do?”

They’re real ly (F#dim)say ing

(Gm7)“I love you.”

I hear (F)ba bies cry (Am)ing,

I watch them (Am)grow.

They’ll learn much (F)more

than I’ll ev er (Dm)know.

And I (Db)think to my self,

what a (C7)won der ful world.

Yes,

I (Gm7)think to my self,

what a won der ful (F)world.

Oh, yes.

What A Wonderful World — Falling Notes Piano Tutorial

72 people have learned this song

Watch "What A Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong in falling notes style — like Synthesia. Color-coded notes fall onto the keyboard in real time. Practice left hand, right hand, or both. Key of Bb, 108 BPM.

Teacher’s notes

This arrangement is a great way to get comfortable with jazzy chord movement in the key of B♭, where your hands need to feel at home on those two flats from the start.

Your left hand plays block bass, so the challenge isn't pattern complexity — it's the sheer number of chord changes.

Eighteen chords means new shapes arrive quickly, and the chromatic ones like F♯dim, Faug, and A7 will catch you off guard if you haven't isolated them.

Start hands-separate at around 70 BPM, and loop any two-bar phrase where the chord root moves by a half step — that's where most stumbles happen.

Pay attention to the smooth walk from B♭ down through D7 to Gm; get that transition feeling automatic.

Once your left hand knows where it's going, the right hand melody sits beautifully on top.

This is the piece that'll make chromatic chord changes feel normal to you — real foundation-building for jazz piano.

About “What A Wonderful World

Can I learn "What A Wonderful World" with falling notes like Synthesia?
Yes — Falling Notes mode shows colored note shapes dropping onto a virtual keyboard, the same visual style as Synthesia or piano-tile games. Each note's column matches the piano key you press. Works for "What A Wonderful World" with hands-separate practice in Bb at 108 BPM.
What key is "What A Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong played in?
What A Wonderful World is arranged in the key of Bb on Super Simple Piano. You can transpose to any other key live in the player.
What's the tempo (BPM) of "What A Wonderful World"?
The arrangement plays at 108 BPM. Use the speed control (10-200%) to practice slower or play faster.
Is "What A Wonderful World" easy to play on piano?
This is an advanced arrangement. We recommend breaking it into sections and using the speed control to drill harder passages.
Can I download sheet music for "What A Wonderful World"?
Yes — registered users can download PDF sheet music, plus MIDI and MusicXML files for use in other notation software.
Who composed "What A Wonderful World"?
"What A Wonderful World" was originally performed by Louis Armstrong. The Super Simple Piano arrangement is simplified for beginner-to-intermediate players.
What chords are used in "What A Wonderful World"?
This arrangement uses 18 chords: A7, Am, Bb, Bb6, Bbmaj7, C, C7, D, +10 more.
What other songs by Louis Armstrong can I play here?
Try "BABY, IT'S COLD OUTSIDE", "JUST A GIGOLO", "DREAM A LITTLE DREAM OF ME". All are in our player with color-coded notes; pick the one matching your level.
Can I practice left and right hand separately for "What A Wonderful World"?
Yes! Our Top Down mode lets you isolate the left hand (bass clef), right hand (treble clef), or play both together. This makes it easy to master "What A Wonderful World" one hand at a time before combining them.
What is falling notes style for "What A Wonderful World"?
Falling notes (also known as Synthesia or piano waterfall) shows color-coded rectangles falling from the top of the screen onto a virtual keyboard. Each note's position matches the piano key you need to press. "What A Wonderful World" is in the key of Bb at 108 BPM.

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