HARDING JOHN WESLEY - "the red rose and the briar" Tablature
Official HARDING JOHN WESLEY Tablature & Sheet Music »
The Red Rose And The Briar
==========================
by John Wesley Harding
written by David Lewis & John Wesley Harding
from the album "Here Comes The Groom"
INTRODUCTION
============
In the tablature for the introduction, the symbols "^" and "v" denote
down-strums and up-strums. The C-chords are played using the {310230}
fingering by Wes, but the {010230} fingering isn't very different. It
sounds pretty good if you change the pattern slightly, too - either by
doing only single downstrums (no upstrums) in most of the intro, or by
playing with fingers, using the thumb to play the bass run and the
index, middle and ring fingers to play the treble chords. Wes plays
with a pick, and I've found my usual favourite (a 0.60 mm John Dunlop
nylon type) too stiff to comfortably do the double strums at the right
speed. My only thinner pick was a 0.38 mm Jim Dunlop nylon pick which
makes the double strums easy but is a bit too pliable to let me
emphasise the bass runs, so I got a 0.46 mm JD which is the best for
my acoustic guitar but the optimum depends on you and your guitar.
CHD: G C G Em
^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ ^ v ^
|------3-------3-------3-------3--|------3---------------0----------|
|------0-------0-------1-------1--|------0---------------0----------|
|------0-------0-------0-------0--|------0---------------0----------|
|---------------------------------|---------------------------------|
|----------0h2-----3-------2p0----|---------------------------------|
|--3------------------------------|--3-----------2-p-0-----------2--|
1 . 2 . 3 . 4 . 1 . 2 . 3 . 4 .
CHD: G C G
^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^
|------3-------3-------3-------3--|------3---3---3---3--------------|
|------0-------0-------1-------1--|------0---0---0---0--------------|
|------0-------0-------0-------0--|------0---0---0---0--------------|
|---------------------------------|------0---0---0h2----------------|
|----------0h2-----3-------2p0----|---------------------------------|
|--3------------------------------|--3------------------------------|
1 . 2 . 3 . 4 . 1 . 2 . 3 . 4 .
CHORDS AND LYRICS (Bass runs are shown in square brackets [C B A] and
================= instructions in curly backets {PLAY INTRODUCTION}.)
{PLAY INTRODUCTION}
G C G
Midweek and we ...
G C C/B Am
I was almost dying ..
G C G
We parked the car ...
G C D [C B A]
The windscreen ...
D D/C D/C
There was no water in ...
D/B Am Am/B C D
Left no tread ..
G C G G/F# Em
The electrics were broke..
Em/F# G C G
You ripped out all ...
G C G
G C G ,
Across the road, ...
G C C/B Am
In the state of ...
G C G
You went for papers ...
G C D [C B A]
So I saved you...
D D/C D/B Em
I knew it wasn't ...
Am Am/B C D
And that your ...
G C G G/F# Em
But I just could not ...
G C G
I was dead ...
G C D [C B A]
I was dead ....
.
D D/C D/C D/B
There's nothing there ...
Am Am/B C D
But the ghost of the..
G C G G/F# Em
I was dead ....
Am C D
I sing the red ...
Am Am/B C D (G in intro)
I sing the red rose ...
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION TWICE}
G C G
The waitress told ...
G C C/B Am
She'd always meant ..
G C G
She wiped her cup on ...
G C D [C B A]
As we waited for yo..
D D/C D/C D/B
And I told her ...
Am Am/B C D
But left the ...
G C G G/F# Em
You still weren't there ...
Em/F# G C G
So I skipped ou...
G C G
I skipped out on the ...
G C G
The newsagent grinned, he ...
G C Am
You bought a local paper ...
G C G
And the washroom attendant ...
G C D [C B A]
That you'd left but ...
D D/C D/C D/B
And I couldn't figure ...
Am Am/B C D
So I went back to look ..
G C G G/F# Em
There's nothing there where ...
Em/F# G C G
Just oil on ...
G G/B C D [C B A]
Just oil on dirt a....
D D/C D/C D/B
There's nothing there in ..
Am Am/B C D
But the ghost of the ...
G C G G/F# Em
And there's nothing there ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ...
Am C D [E F#] (G in intro)
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION}
G C G
I saw it parked ...
G G/B C C/B Am
In a garage off ...
G C G
And a man said, "...
G C D [C B A]
I just traded that wreck ...
D D/C D/C D/B
There was nothing left ...
Am Am/B C D
Not even the ...
G C G G/F# Em
And I couldn't figure ...
G C G
So I went back to ...
G , C G
The Cafe Rouge was ...
G C C/B Am
Of regulars ..
G C G
And the service in there left ...
G G/B C C/B D [C B A]
All the regulars were ...
D D/C D/C D/B
I saw an apron ...
Am Am/B C D
A note said, "Hey John, ...
G C G G/F# Em
And I just smiled ...
G C G
So I put the ...
G C D [C B A]
I put the ..
D D/C D/C D/B
Still nothing there in ...
Am Am/B C D
But the ghost of the ..
G C G G/F# Em
Well I just put the ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ..
Am C D
I sing the red rose and..
Am C D [E F#] (G in intro)
I sing the red .....
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION TWICE}
G
In Scarlet town ...
C G
There was a ...
G G/F# Em Em7
Oh, the colour of her ....
Am
And her name......
C Am
And her name was......
C Am
And her name was...... <Barbara Allan, apparently - Note 0>
C D [E F#] (G in intro)
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION} G
=============== THE END ================
NOTES
=====
0. According to Stephen M. Webb <stevew@teleride.on.ca>, "her name was..."
Barbara Allan as in the song "Barbara Allan" which takes place in
`Scarlet Town where I was born,' ends up with a rose and briar.
I don't have this song, so I didn't know this. I though it might have
been Helen from "I went to visit Helen by St. Helen's Park" (which is
in Hastings, where Wes used to live) from the song "Pound, Pound, Pound"
on the live & unaccompanied album "It Happened One Night".
1. Many thanks to Patrick Barnett <PMBARNETT@miavx1.acs.muohio.edu> for his
generosity and help in compiling this posting and Chris Inglesi
<cinglesi@acs.bu.edu> for pointing out the fact that it's "fair maid
dwellin'" rather than "family dwellin'" which I had at first.
2. All the chords are pretty much the basic fingerings but Wes uses a
modified Em [0 2 2 0 0 3] and Em7 is [0 2 0 0 0 0]. For those of you
unfamiliar with CRD notation, the chords with a slash such as C/B denote
chords played with a different bass-note to usual. The part before the
slash is the chord and the note after it is the bass note. So C/B is a
basic C chord [0 3 2 0 1 0] but with the bass-note changed to B becoming
[x 2 2 0 1 0]. In fact you needn't worry too much about the 2nd fretted
D string. What is important to note is that the bass-note is played on
the most convenient string, not always on the bass-E string. In this
song, the bass-note doesn't actually have to be the lowest note played -
I've used this notation to denote the bass notes in the bass-strum
style.
3. Feel free to email me with any comments (see header for email address)
or to request tabs for songs. If you have a favourite JWH song you'd
like me to have a go at, let me know. I now have the four full albums,
"The Name Above The Title", "It Happened One Night", "Why We Fight" and
"Here Comes The Groom". If I haven't got the songs, I could only do
them if you send me an audio tape with them on. If you could work out
the lyrics, that would be a great help. The songs I've tabbed/chorded
so far are:
From "The Name Above The Title":
I Can Tell (When You're Telling Lies)
Save A Little Room For Me
The People's Drug
The Person You Are
Long Dead Gone } lyrics supplied by
Backing Out } Alan Pulliam - thanks
from "It Happened One Night":
Roy Orbison Knows (The Best Man's Song)
- thanks to Will Vaughan & "Sen"
Kiss/Lovers' Society {coming shortly}
and from "Here Comes The Groom"
The Red Rose And The Briar } thanks to Patrick Barnett
and coming soon, the version not from "Here Comes The Groom" of
When The Sun Comes Out } thanks to Patrick again
These are archived on the guitar tab archives, ftp.nevada.edu and its
mirror sites such as ftp.uwp.edu - you can find local mirror sites by
using a program such as "archie". Cal Woods & Jim Carson, the new
maintainers of the Nevada archive have kindly placed in it a file to aid
archie searches. It is called "Nevada.Guitar.Archive". You can find
the guitar directory of any nearby mirror sites using:
unix% archie -m5 -N Nevada.Guitar.Archive
Host unix.hensa.ac.uk
Location: /pub/uunet/doc/music/guitar
FILE -r--r--r-- 80 Jun 16 09:21 Nevada.Guitar.Archive
Wes's tabs are archived under ???/guitar/h/john_wesley_harding
4. The FTP archive at Trinity College Dublin (ftp.maths.tcd.ie) has also
uploaded a lot of Wes songs in the directory:
/pub/music/guitar/h/john_wesley_harding
In addition to the songs I've worked out, there is a copy of Crystal
Blue Persuasion, originally by Tommy James and the Chandelles (sp?)
which appears on "The Name Above The Title". There doesn't appear to be
a mirror site to Trinity College Dublin.
5. Enjoy!
Regards,
Ryan Kingsley Harding (no relation at all to Wes, aka. Wesley Harding Stace)
^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ryan Harding Applied Optics Group, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Now no-one's sitting on the fence, whose garden will we end up sitting in?"
- John Wesley Harding, "The Person You Are" from "The Name Above The Title"
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
==========================
by John Wesley Harding
written by David Lewis & John Wesley Harding
from the album "Here Comes The Groom"
INTRODUCTION
============
In the tablature for the introduction, the symbols "^" and "v" denote
down-strums and up-strums. The C-chords are played using the {310230}
fingering by Wes, but the {010230} fingering isn't very different. It
sounds pretty good if you change the pattern slightly, too - either by
doing only single downstrums (no upstrums) in most of the intro, or by
playing with fingers, using the thumb to play the bass run and the
index, middle and ring fingers to play the treble chords. Wes plays
with a pick, and I've found my usual favourite (a 0.60 mm John Dunlop
nylon type) too stiff to comfortably do the double strums at the right
speed. My only thinner pick was a 0.38 mm Jim Dunlop nylon pick which
makes the double strums easy but is a bit too pliable to let me
emphasise the bass runs, so I got a 0.46 mm JD which is the best for
my acoustic guitar but the optimum depends on you and your guitar.
CHD: G C G Em
^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ ^ v ^
|------3-------3-------3-------3--|------3---------------0----------|
|------0-------0-------1-------1--|------0---------------0----------|
|------0-------0-------0-------0--|------0---------------0----------|
|---------------------------------|---------------------------------|
|----------0h2-----3-------2p0----|---------------------------------|
|--3------------------------------|--3-----------2-p-0-----------2--|
1 . 2 . 3 . 4 . 1 . 2 . 3 . 4 .
CHD: G C G
^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^ v ^
|------3-------3-------3-------3--|------3---3---3---3--------------|
|------0-------0-------1-------1--|------0---0---0---0--------------|
|------0-------0-------0-------0--|------0---0---0---0--------------|
|---------------------------------|------0---0---0h2----------------|
|----------0h2-----3-------2p0----|---------------------------------|
|--3------------------------------|--3------------------------------|
1 . 2 . 3 . 4 . 1 . 2 . 3 . 4 .
CHORDS AND LYRICS (Bass runs are shown in square brackets [C B A] and
================= instructions in curly backets {PLAY INTRODUCTION}.)
{PLAY INTRODUCTION}
G C G
Midweek and we ...
G C C/B Am
I was almost dying ..
G C G
We parked the car ...
G C D [C B A]
The windscreen ...
D D/C D/C
There was no water in ...
D/B Am Am/B C D
Left no tread ..
G C G G/F# Em
The electrics were broke..
Em/F# G C G
You ripped out all ...
G C G
G C G ,
Across the road, ...
G C C/B Am
In the state of ...
G C G
You went for papers ...
G C D [C B A]
So I saved you...
D D/C D/B Em
I knew it wasn't ...
Am Am/B C D
And that your ...
G C G G/F# Em
But I just could not ...
G C G
I was dead ...
G C D [C B A]
I was dead ....
.
D D/C D/C D/B
There's nothing there ...
Am Am/B C D
But the ghost of the..
G C G G/F# Em
I was dead ....
Am C D
I sing the red ...
Am Am/B C D (G in intro)
I sing the red rose ...
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION TWICE}
G C G
The waitress told ...
G C C/B Am
She'd always meant ..
G C G
She wiped her cup on ...
G C D [C B A]
As we waited for yo..
D D/C D/C D/B
And I told her ...
Am Am/B C D
But left the ...
G C G G/F# Em
You still weren't there ...
Em/F# G C G
So I skipped ou...
G C G
I skipped out on the ...
G C G
The newsagent grinned, he ...
G C Am
You bought a local paper ...
G C G
And the washroom attendant ...
G C D [C B A]
That you'd left but ...
D D/C D/C D/B
And I couldn't figure ...
Am Am/B C D
So I went back to look ..
G C G G/F# Em
There's nothing there where ...
Em/F# G C G
Just oil on ...
G G/B C D [C B A]
Just oil on dirt a....
D D/C D/C D/B
There's nothing there in ..
Am Am/B C D
But the ghost of the ...
G C G G/F# Em
And there's nothing there ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ...
Am C D [E F#] (G in intro)
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION}
G C G
I saw it parked ...
G G/B C C/B Am
In a garage off ...
G C G
And a man said, "...
G C D [C B A]
I just traded that wreck ...
D D/C D/C D/B
There was nothing left ...
Am Am/B C D
Not even the ...
G C G G/F# Em
And I couldn't figure ...
G C G
So I went back to ...
G , C G
The Cafe Rouge was ...
G C C/B Am
Of regulars ..
G C G
And the service in there left ...
G G/B C C/B D [C B A]
All the regulars were ...
D D/C D/C D/B
I saw an apron ...
Am Am/B C D
A note said, "Hey John, ...
G C G G/F# Em
And I just smiled ...
G C G
So I put the ...
G C D [C B A]
I put the ..
D D/C D/C D/B
Still nothing there in ...
Am Am/B C D
But the ghost of the ..
G C G G/F# Em
Well I just put the ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ...
Am C D
I sing the red rose ..
Am C D
I sing the red rose and..
Am C D [E F#] (G in intro)
I sing the red .....
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION TWICE}
G
In Scarlet town ...
C G
There was a ...
G G/F# Em Em7
Oh, the colour of her ....
Am
And her name......
C Am
And her name was......
C Am
And her name was...... <Barbara Allan, apparently - Note 0>
C D [E F#] (G in intro)
{REPEAT INTRODUCTION} G
=============== THE END ================
NOTES
=====
0. According to Stephen M. Webb <stevew@teleride.on.ca>, "her name was..."
Barbara Allan as in the song "Barbara Allan" which takes place in
`Scarlet Town where I was born,' ends up with a rose and briar.
I don't have this song, so I didn't know this. I though it might have
been Helen from "I went to visit Helen by St. Helen's Park" (which is
in Hastings, where Wes used to live) from the song "Pound, Pound, Pound"
on the live & unaccompanied album "It Happened One Night".
1. Many thanks to Patrick Barnett <PMBARNETT@miavx1.acs.muohio.edu> for his
generosity and help in compiling this posting and Chris Inglesi
<cinglesi@acs.bu.edu> for pointing out the fact that it's "fair maid
dwellin'" rather than "family dwellin'" which I had at first.
2. All the chords are pretty much the basic fingerings but Wes uses a
modified Em [0 2 2 0 0 3] and Em7 is [0 2 0 0 0 0]. For those of you
unfamiliar with CRD notation, the chords with a slash such as C/B denote
chords played with a different bass-note to usual. The part before the
slash is the chord and the note after it is the bass note. So C/B is a
basic C chord [0 3 2 0 1 0] but with the bass-note changed to B becoming
[x 2 2 0 1 0]. In fact you needn't worry too much about the 2nd fretted
D string. What is important to note is that the bass-note is played on
the most convenient string, not always on the bass-E string. In this
song, the bass-note doesn't actually have to be the lowest note played -
I've used this notation to denote the bass notes in the bass-strum
style.
3. Feel free to email me with any comments (see header for email address)
or to request tabs for songs. If you have a favourite JWH song you'd
like me to have a go at, let me know. I now have the four full albums,
"The Name Above The Title", "It Happened One Night", "Why We Fight" and
"Here Comes The Groom". If I haven't got the songs, I could only do
them if you send me an audio tape with them on. If you could work out
the lyrics, that would be a great help. The songs I've tabbed/chorded
so far are:
From "The Name Above The Title":
I Can Tell (When You're Telling Lies)
Save A Little Room For Me
The People's Drug
The Person You Are
Long Dead Gone } lyrics supplied by
Backing Out } Alan Pulliam - thanks
from "It Happened One Night":
Roy Orbison Knows (The Best Man's Song)
- thanks to Will Vaughan & "Sen"
Kiss/Lovers' Society {coming shortly}
and from "Here Comes The Groom"
The Red Rose And The Briar } thanks to Patrick Barnett
and coming soon, the version not from "Here Comes The Groom" of
When The Sun Comes Out } thanks to Patrick again
These are archived on the guitar tab archives, ftp.nevada.edu and its
mirror sites such as ftp.uwp.edu - you can find local mirror sites by
using a program such as "archie". Cal Woods & Jim Carson, the new
maintainers of the Nevada archive have kindly placed in it a file to aid
archie searches. It is called "Nevada.Guitar.Archive". You can find
the guitar directory of any nearby mirror sites using:
unix% archie -m5 -N Nevada.Guitar.Archive
Host unix.hensa.ac.uk
Location: /pub/uunet/doc/music/guitar
FILE -r--r--r-- 80 Jun 16 09:21 Nevada.Guitar.Archive
Wes's tabs are archived under ???/guitar/h/john_wesley_harding
4. The FTP archive at Trinity College Dublin (ftp.maths.tcd.ie) has also
uploaded a lot of Wes songs in the directory:
/pub/music/guitar/h/john_wesley_harding
In addition to the songs I've worked out, there is a copy of Crystal
Blue Persuasion, originally by Tommy James and the Chandelles (sp?)
which appears on "The Name Above The Title". There doesn't appear to be
a mirror site to Trinity College Dublin.
5. Enjoy!
Regards,
Ryan Kingsley Harding (no relation at all to Wes, aka. Wesley Harding Stace)
^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ryan Harding Applied Optics Group, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Now no-one's sitting on the fence, whose garden will we end up sitting in?"
- John Wesley Harding, "The Person You Are" from "The Name Above The Title"
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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