Roy Harper
Roy Harper - Twelve Hours Of Sunset gitaar tab
Je score:
Roy Harper "Twelve Hours of Sunset" Transcribed by Gordon Walker --------------------- Twelve Hours of Sunset ---------------------- Sweeping skies and breezey greens, can maybe show us what it means, C Em To feel the worlds, imagination. D Em(7) I'll come and see you yesterday, we'll close our eyes and drift away, C Em Can we be real, without escaping? D Em(7) Twelve hours of sunset, six thousand miles. A6 Em7 A6 Em7 Illusions and movies, far away smiles. A6 Em7 C* D Em(7) Twelve hours of sunset, half a day in the skies, A6 Em7 A6 Em7 (I'll) be with you tomrrow, as the steel crow flies........ A6 C* D Em(7) .....oh...........how time flies...... C* D Em C* D Em I used to think I wasn't mad, but now I know its all I had, Can hope be lost, or only seeming. Now that time's turned into space, there's no time to check the pace, And no-one cares, except for dreaming, (dream.......) Twelve hours of sunset, twilight sublime, A6 Em7 A6 Em7 Be with you tomorrow, backwards in time. A6 Em7 C* D Em .....oh...........how time flies...... C* D Em (o)====o===o o=====o=o=o x(o)o====== (o)o======== o=o===o=o=o |_|_|_|_1_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_2_|_|_| |_1_2_|_|_| |_|_|_1_|_2 |_|_1-1-1-1 |_|_1_|_|_| |_3_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_3_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| |_|_|_|_|_| C Em D A6 Em7 (C*= first finger taken off and put on again during strumming) ( x=don't play; o=open string; (o)=open string which it doesn't matter if played by accident but should try not to). Some of the Em chords may be Em7, and various other fingers can come and go in the middle of chords (like taking the first finger out of the D occasionally, like the C* chord above). I think this is all basically correct. The key to playing this song is to get the strumming right, especially in the chorus - you need to listen carefully to the record. The A6 is essentially one strum from bottom (ie lowest) string to top (best to miss out the bottom E really), and then the strings plucked appropriately back down to the middle E (D-string), and then strummed lightly again (if that makes sense - is anyone following this??!). It also helps if you have at least one echo-box, and chorus and flange pedals if you want to do it properly! (Although, I reckon it still holds it's own as a 'straight' song - s'pose it depends what state of mind you're in whilst playing it :-)