Bauhaus

Bauhaus - Stigmata Martyr guitar tab

Your rating:

#
From: Chad Crawford 
Date: Thu, 18 Jan 1996 12:36:00 -0700 (MST)

This is "Stigmata Martyr."  Fret numbers enclosed
in pipes (i.e. |4|) mean to play the natural
harmonics above that fret (or in the case of
|2 3/4| that fraction past the indicated fret.
If you can't figure it out, e-mail me and I'll
try to explain to you.

(distorted electric guitar)
e------------------------------------------------
B------------------------------------------------
G------------------------------------------------
D------------------------------------------------
A------------------------------------------------
E-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-

e------------------------------------------------
B------------------------------------------------
G------------------------------------------------
D------------------------------------------------
A------------------------------------------------
E-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-

e---------------------------------...
B---------------------------------...
G---------------------------------...
D---------------------------------...
A---------------------------------...
E-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-...

play a simile of this for a few measures.  the
bass is doing something like this:

G--------------------------------------------...
D--------------------------------------------...
A--------------------------------------------...
E-0-3-2-1-0--0-3-2-1-0--0-3-2-1-0--0-3-2-1-0-...

the fretted notes are bent enough to sound
slightly ominous and sickening.  Use your own
delicately-honed sensibilities to figure this out.

after the intro, the guitar does something
really simple, but cool:

e-X-0-...
B-X-0-...
G-X-0-...
D-X-0-...
A-X-0-...
E-X-0-...

make sure that the open strings are not allowed
to ring for very long at all.  Not quite
staccato, but just a short fuzzy bark.

After you do that a couple times, the guitar
plays the chords that the bass roots imply:

E G F# F E

If you don't understand this, find someone to
explain, because it takes far too long to write
out chord diagrams.

Do we have any questions about that?

chad.

(chad@lsmsa.edu)

From chad@lsmsa.edu Fri Jan 19 04:18:29 1996
Received: from post-office.nevada.edu (root@post-office.nevada.edu [131.216.1.11]) by mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu (8.6.12/8.5) with ESMTP id WAA07367; Thu, 18 Jan 1996 22:18:27 -0600
Received: from fermat.lsmsa.edu (FERMAT.LSMSA.EDU [204.130.214.76]) by post-office.nevada.edu (8.6.12/8.6.4) with ESMTP id UAA11582 for ; Thu, 18 Jan 1996 20:17:16 -0800
Received: (from chad@localhost) by fermat.lsmsa.edu (8.6.12/8.6.12) id WAA24614; Thu, 18 Jan 1996 22:15:56 -0600
Date: Thu, 18 Jan 1996 22:15:56 -0600 (CST)
From: Chad Crawford 
To: guitar@nevada.edu
cc: Chad Crawford 
Subject: Bauhaus' "stigmata martyr"
Message-ID: 
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
Status: RO


I'm sorry.  It's by Bauhaus

This is "Stigmata Martyr."  Fret numbers enclosed
in pipes (i.e. |4|) mean to play the natural
harmonics above that fret (or in the case of
|2 3/4| that fraction past the indicated fret.
If you can't figure it out, e-mail me and I'll
try to explain to you.

(distorted electric guitar)
e------------------------------------------------
B------------------------------------------------
G------------------------------------------------
D------------------------------------------------
A------------------------------------------------
E-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-

e------------------------------------------------
B------------------------------------------------
G------------------------------------------------
D------------------------------------------------
A------------------------------------------------
E-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-|2 3/4|-

e---------------------------------...
B---------------------------------...
G---------------------------------...
D---------------------------------...
A---------------------------------...
E-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-|4|-...

play a simile of this for a few measures.  the
bass is doing something like this:

G--------------------------------------------...
D--------------------------------------------...
A--------------------------------------------...
E-0-3-2-1-0--0-3-2-1-0--0-3-2-1-0--0-3-2-1-0-...

the fretted notes are bent enough to sound
slightly ominous and sickening.  Use your own
delicately-honed sensibilities to figure this out.

after the intro, the guitar does something
really simple, but cool:

e-X-0-...
B-X-0-...
G-X-0-...
D-X-0-...
A-X-0-...
E-X-0-...

make sure that the open strings are not allowed
to ring for very long at all.  Not quite
staccato, but just a short fuzzy bark.

After you do that a couple times, the guitar
plays the chords that the bass roots imply:

E G F# F E

If you don't understand this, find someone to
explain, because it takes far too long to write
out chord diagrams.

Do we have any questions about that?

chad.

(chad@lsmsa.edu)
Get this song at:
bol.com
amazon.com

Copyrights:

Author: Bauhaus

Composer: Daniel Ash, David J, Kevin Haskins, Peter Murphy

Publisher: Beggars Banquet

Details:

Released in: 2009

Language: English

Share your thoughts

This form is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

0 Comments found