| Brother
Rabbit Speaks |
the tree
rain dog
black rabbit
train bound for evermore
moon of the geese...
midwife
the weremoose
juda
rain song
imamu
september dawn
|
DADGAE, CAPO III, 2-6
DGCFAD (twelve string)
DADGAD, CAPO VI
EADGBE
BbFCFBbC (twelve string)
BbFCFGC (twelve string)
CGCFAD (twelve string)
BbFCFBbC (twelve string)
DADGAE
EADGBE
CGDGCD
|

Rain
(general
note here: these tunings may be a half step further down,
which is to say three half steps sub standard. i was depressed.) |
smell the future
november
little foot
birgit
no wonder
all in good fun
the prince
no one else
the dreams
the way that i love you
september dawn
|
DGCFAD
DGCFAD
DGCFAD
DGCFAD
DGCFAD
DGCFAD, CAPO IV
DGCFAD
DGCFAD
CFCFAC
BbFCFBbC
BbFCFBbC
|

Rapture
(this is
when i started using extremely low notes. from this point
on, whenever you see a tuning that begins, "GG" or "AA"
or such, the fifth string is lowered a few steps to that
value, and the sixth is lowered until it is an octave
below the fifth. my answer to the often asked "how do
you get the guitar to hold a note value that low?" is:
i don't. there's a general wash of highly oscillating
noise somewhere down there coming from the sixth string,
and then a definitive value on the fifth that gives the
illusion of value to the wash. the two strings are always
fretted together. it's all smoke and mirrors.)
|
rapture
on the way up
question mark
smell the future
so much more
if love is not enough
the whole of the moon
half the time
black rabbit
black snow
dog talk/the dreams
the whole of the moon
aurora borealis
|
GGCFBbC
DGCFAD, CAPO II
CGCFBbD
DGCFAD
DGCFAD, CAPO II all, CAPO IV 3-5
F#GCFAD, CAPO IV 1-5
BbFCFBbC
CFCFAC
DADGAD, CAPO IV *
DGCFAD (twelve string)
CFCFAC (twelve string)
BbFCFBbC
DGCFAD (twelve string) |
* black rabbit
is capoed IV on this record because the capo i had didn't
fit across the wide neck
of the julius borges 1930's martin OM-18 replica at
the sixth fret. now i have a wide capo,
and it's back where it oughta be.
|

Goodbye
Bob |
sign
'o' the times
if love is not enough
deep blue
on the way up
the dreams
|
CGCFBbC
F#GCFAD, CAPO IV 1-5
EbEbCFFC
DGCFAD, CAPO II
CFCFAC
|

Deep Blue
|
grace
smoke
midwife
take this
no sense of humor
deep blue
every mother's son
birgit
out here
clap hands
forever nightshade mary
|
CFCFAC (twelve string)
CGCFGC, CAPO IV
BbFCFGC, nashville strung
(twelve string tuning without the bass strings)
CGDGCD
BGCFBbD, CAPO IV 1-5
EbEbCFFF
(first 3 strings all same value, different from bob version)
AADGBE
DGCFAD
DGCFAD, CAPO VII
GGCFAD, CAPO II
DADGAE
|

Glencree |
trouble with poets
tender blindspot
a better way to go
ithaca
hard times...
'64 dodge
stephen's green
smoke
if i were
stretched on your grave
|
CGCFBbD
BbFCFAD, CAPO IV
BbFCFAD, CAPO IV
DGCFAD, CAPO IV
CGCFGC, CAPO IV
BbFCFAD, CAPO VI
BbGBbFGD
CGCFGC, CAPO IV
FFCFGC, CAPO II
CGCFBbC
|

The Trouble With Poets
|
the trouble with poets
words too small...(studio)
words too small... (live)
check me out
every word...
wings of the...
you meet the...
eyes front
all the way home
bright idea
tender blindspot
home
|
CGCFBbD
BGDGBE capo IV
G#FCFAD capo VI strings 1-5
BbFBbFBbC capo IV
CGCGCD
BbGBbFGD capo II
DGCFAD capo II
DADGAD capo II
EADGCE
CGCFBbC capo II
CGDGBE capo II
EADGBE
|

Ten
Thousand Mornings
note
on tunings: i know, i know: DGCFAD capo II is (sort of)
standard... but it's also (sort of) not.
the note values are standard, but the tensions are loose
and the frets are smaller, and it's just... different.
|
stranded in a limousine
inner city blues
comes love
two janes
running up the stairs
mama, you been on my mind
caleb meyer
in germany before the war
oliver's army
for no one
rain and snow
the ocean
|
GGCFAD, capo V strings 1-5
BbFBbFBbC, capo III
DGCFAD, capo II
FFCFFC
CGDGBE
DGCFAD, capo II
BbFBbFBbC, capo VI
DGCFAD, capo IV
DGCFAD
DGCFAD, capo II
GGCFAD, capo V strings 1-5
CFCFBbC, capo VI
|

Kitchen
Radio
just a note: i used goody's 1930's Martin OO-17 on the
whole record,
except on 29¢ head and bloomington (where i used
my Martin OM-15). |
road to mallow
shirt
29¢ head
falling
charlie
denver, 6a.m.
rise
bloomington
me & albert
you
thirty
toad
sad, sad, sad, sad
|
standard, capo IV
CGCGCD, capo II
AbFCFAbC, capo III 1-5
standard
standard
EACGAE
DGCFAD
standard
EADGCE capo V
standard
CGDGBE
DADGBE
standard, capo IV
|

The
Knuckleball Suite |
| Old Simon
Stimson
Abilene
The Fly
Girl in the Hi-Tops
You and Me and the Ten Thousand Things
Horse
Thorn
Lila Blue- Standard
Marty and Lou
Brady Street Stroll
The Knuckleball Suite
The Fix is On
Ballymore |
Standard
Standard, Capo II
Standard, down a whole step
Standard, Capo IV
Standard
Standard
Standard, Capo III
Standard
Standard, Capo V
Standard
Standard
CGCFAD
Standard
|

Notes
from Elsewhere |
Shirt
Better Way to Go
The Dreams
Old Simon Stimson
Rapture
The Trouble with Poets
Grace
Black Rabbit
If Love is Not Enough
The Knuckleball Suite
Every Word Except Goodbye
Charlie
Tender Blindspot
On the Way Up
Wings of the Ragman
Words Too Small to Say
Little Foot
|
BbFBbFBbC, capo IV
BbFCFAD, capo IV
CFCFAC, capo II
DGCFAD, capo II
GGCFBbC
CGCFBbD
CFCFAC
CGCFGC, capo VI
F#GCFAD, capo IV strings 1-5
AFCFAC, capo IV strings 1-5
BbFBbFBbC, capo II
FFCFFC, capo II
BbFCFAD, capo IV
DGCFAD, capo II
BbGBbFGD, capo II
G#FCFAD, capo VI strings 1-5
DGCFAD, Capo II
|
These days on the road I am using a Martin
OM-15. It's an all-mahogany guitar (entry level
model in the first half of last century, revived recently)
with a 000 body size but the wide fingerboard makes
it an OM (Orchestra Model). On The Knuckleball Suite,
I only used my Martin on "The Fly " and "The Fix is
On ". On the rest of the record I played Goody's 1937
Martin OO-17, similar to my guitar but a little smaller,
a lot older, and much better sounding.
I wrote many of the tunes for the KBS on the Buckeye,
a cheap plywood Sears knockoff that I bought at a junkshop
in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania for thirty bucks.
I had Yukon at the Music Emporium pimp it out with good
tuners and a classical bridge. It sounds awesomely
awful. Sounds like a duck. It's like writing
with a carpenter's pencil.
I also have a Julius
Borges guitar, built like an OM-18. Mahogany back
and sides, spruce top, bar frets, pyramid bridges...
the whole shootin' match. A great guitar, and if I felt
like dragging a flight case around, I'd bring it on
the road. Buddy Miller plays one, and is probably as
chuffed as I am to do so.
For electronics these days I'm using
a Boss
stomp-box tuner (they're great, and ubiquitous)
and a Boss bass eq, so I can push 50hz and dump 125
hz. And sometimes a Boss tremolo pedal.
I bought a cheap Mexican Telecaster last
summer, and I've had a Fender Pro Junior amp for a while,
which is great 'cause it fits in an overhead bin and
is loud as hell. And I got a Tacoma
Papoose, too, and used it on the Redbird record
and the UK/Ireland Redbird tour. It's like a guitar
cut off at the 5th fret. Great for sounding vaguely
mandolinish without haveing to learn to play in 5ths.
Until it was stolen, I used to play a
Lowden,
an Irish guitar designed by George Lowden. Mine was
made during a brief stay of his business in Japan. It
has a cedar top and rosewood back and sides. The pickup
is a Sunrise, and there's a Crown microphone inside
the guitar. They are wired each to a mono jack. This
is a picture
of it - if you ever happen to come across it, let
us know.
And for strings, I use (and endorse,
both professionally and in the casual sense) Elixir
Strings, made by Gore industries. Excellent, excellent
strings, as they have a "nanoweb coating" which basically
means they are perfect for guitar players with cheesy,
corrosive hands like mine.
I should tell you, none of these things
really matter, though. There is no definitive guitar,
there is no definitive system of amplifying the signal.
These things are interesting, as far as they go, but
in the end they don't amount to a hill of beans. I just
like them 'cause I'm a geek.
You can buy all of the above mentioned
equipment at The
Music Emporium in Lexington, Mass. 781-860-0049.
Their repairman, Yukon, is one of the most talented
around; the sales staff is the most knowledgeable, helpful,
and not-slimy staff of any shop, and the owners are
true characters with a wealth of esoteric knowledge.
Plus they were the best bosses i ever had.
|
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