Call It Stormy Monday Chords | T-Bone Walker Guitar Lesson

In this guitar lesson, you’ll get the chords, lyrics, chord analysis, a full chord chart, and TAB to guide you as you learn Call It Stormy Monday by T-Bone Walker!

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Chords + Lyrics | Call It Stormy Monday


Intro

| Gm7b5 F#m7b5 (D F# A D F#) | Gm7b5 (C#9) F#m7b5 (A# B C C# D) |

Verse 1

| G9 | C9 | G9 | G9 |
They call it stormy Monday, but Tuesday’s just as bad.
| C9 | C9 | G9 | G9 |
They call it stormy Monday, but Tuesday’s just as bad.
| D7/A D7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 D7 |
Wednesday’s worse, and Thursday’s also sad.

Verse 2

| G9 (Db9) | C9 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 G7 |
Yes, the eagle flies on Friday, and Saturday I go out to play.
| C9 | C9 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 G7 |
Eagle flies on Friday, and Saturday I go out to play.
| D7/A D7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 D7 |
Sunday I go to church, then I kneel down and pray.

Solo

| G9 | C9 | G9 | G9 |
| C9 | C9 | G9 | G9 |
| D7
/A D7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 D7 |

Verse 3

| G7 | C9 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 G7 Db9 |
Lord have mercy, Lord have mercy on me.
| C9 | C9 | G7 Ab7 | G7 |
Lord have mercy, my heart’s in misery.
| D7/A D7 Eb7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 Ab9 G9 | G9 |
Crazy about my Baby, yes, send her back to me.


Call It Stormy Monday Chords: Unlocking the 9 Chord Blues Progression


A jazz theorist might argue that T-Bone Walker is using chord substitutions in the intro, playing Gm7b5 and F#m7b5 (in Am shapes) instead of Eb9 and D9.

The same idea applies to the I chord once the verse begins. Rather than playing G9, he uses C#m7b5 sliding down to Bm7b5.

This is a great harmonic device — first heard clearly on T-Bone recordings — and once I started doing this, I have to admit, I began using it everywhere.

Verse

At its core, Call It Stormy Monday follows a standard 12-bar blues progression, built mostly around dominant 9 chords. Interestingly, the V chord is always just a plain dominant 7. Here’s the first verse and solo:

||: G9 | C9 | G9 | G9 |
| C9 | C9 | G9 | G9 |
| D7/A D7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 D7 :||

The second verse introduces a series of chromatic movements:

| G9 (Db9) | C9 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 G7 |
| C9 | C9 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 G7 |
| D7/A D7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 D7 |

  • In the first bar, the Db9 functions as a tritone substitution. Rather than adding altered extensions to G9, the tritone sub creates the same harmonic tension.
  • In bars three and four, we introduce Gm — a classic blues move, swapping major for minor. While this is more common melodically, it’s interesting to see it spelled out so clearly in the harmony here.
  • The Ab7 that follows is another tritone substitution, this time standing in for D7. This particular chord lick is best understood through TAB.

You really need the TAB to get all of this right, as the rhythmic feel of the chords changes as the verse develops. You can find the full TAB lesson here: Call It Stormy Monday — Guitar Lesson with TAB.

The solo follows the same progression as the first verse.



Verse 3 + End

The third verse introduces further variations:

| G7 | C9 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 | G7 Gm7 G7 Ab7 G7 Db9 |
| C9 | C9 | G7 Ab7 | G7 |
| D7/A D7 Eb7 | D7 | G9 C9 | G9 Ab9 G9 | G9 |

The tritone substitution that previously appeared in bar one now shows up in bar four — the same idea, just shifted.

In bar seven, Ab7 remains, but the full chord lick is reduced. Bar nine introduces Eb7, which doesn’t function as a tritone substitution in quite the same way. It feels closer to the colour chord heard in The Thrill Is Gone — sitting just above the dominant.

The final bar confirms the tritone concept once again, resolving Ab9 back to G9.

Here’s a chord chart to guide you.


Call It Stormy Monday chord chart.

Call It Stormy Monday Chord Chart | PDF + iReal Pro Download


You may want to download my chord chart as a quick reference for Call It Stormy Monday’s chords — even though it’s “just” a blues.

Here’s the PDF: Call It Stormy Monday chord chart (PDF)

And here’s the iReal Pro version: Call It Stormy Monday chord chart (iReal Pro)

With the app, you can not only change key but also create a solid backing track to practise soloing over Call It Stormy Monday’s chords in all 12 keys — a great way to internalise the progression.



Call It Stormy Monday TAB | Course Preveiw


In the course, we explore loads of those tasteful licks found on the original recording — after all, T-Bone was the first true electric guitar soloist.

Before we get to that, though, I’ve designed comping parts for all the verses. You could record these using a loop pedal to practise soloing over them, or use them to accompany a solo singer.

As a preview, here’s the iconic intro.

Call It Stormy Monday chords and TAB, intro.

The Lasting Impact of Call It Stormy Monday on Blues Guitar Soloing

Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just as Bad) was first recorded by T-Bone Walker in 1947 and released the following year, becoming one of the defining blues recordings of the post-war era.

While chart data from the late 1940s is limited compared to later decades, the song was a major hit on the Billboard R&B charts and quickly established itself as a modern blues standard. More importantly than its chart position, Stormy Monday became a cornerstone of the electric blues repertoire, regularly performed, re-recorded, and reinterpreted by generations of musicians.

The song’s impact lies largely in Walker’s approach to phrasing and soloing. Unlike earlier country blues guitarists, T-Bone Walker played fluid, horn-like single-note lines on an electric guitar, drawing heavily from jazz vocabulary. His solos on Stormy Monday are lyrical, spacious, and harmonically aware, often outlining chord changes rather than relying on repetitive pentatonic shapes. This marked a crucial shift in how the electric guitar was perceived — not just as a rhythm instrument, but as a lead voice capable of melodic sophistication and emotional nuance.

Numerous artists have recorded influential versions of Stormy Monday, each helping to cement its status as a blues essential. B.B. King’s interpretation leaned into expressive vibrato and vocal-style phrasing, while Allman Brothers Band performances, particularly live, brought the song into a rock-blues context, with extended improvisation and dual-guitar interplay. These versions ensured the song’s relevance well beyond its original era.

For T-Bone Walker himself, Stormy Monday became a signature piece that defined his legacy. It solidified his reputation as a pioneering electric guitarist and a bridge between jazz, blues, and early rhythm and blues. His influence can be heard clearly in the playing of B.B. King, Chuck Berry, Eric Clapton, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and countless others who adopted his smooth phrasing, use of chord tones, and conversational approach to soloing.

Ultimately, Call It Stormy Monday didn’t just succeed as a song — it reshaped the language of electric guitar soloing, setting a blueprint that still underpins blues and blues-influenced guitar playing today.


Call It Stormy Monday Chords: Continue Learning


Call It Stormy Monday TAB lesson.

Want to master this song? Check out the full TAB lesson here: Call It Stormy Monday (T-Bone Walker) Guitar Lesson with TAB.

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