The Death Of Queen Jane Acordes
por Oscar Isaac99.562 vistas, añadido a favoritos 718 veces
Dificultad: | principiante absoluto |
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Cejilla: | sin cejilla |
Tenemos una tablatura oficial de The Death Of Queen Jane hecha por guitarristas profesionales de UG.
Consulta la tablaturaAcordes
Rasgueo
Aún no existe un patrón de rasgueo para esta canción. Crear y obtén +5 IQ
Easy and beautiful song for those who watched the great Inside Llewyn Davis
Made by ears, sounds right to me, feel the rythm with the song!
[Intro]
G C G C
[Verse]
G D
Queen Jane lay in labor full nine days or more
C G C D C
'Til her women grew so tired, they could no longer there
G D G
They could no longer there
G D
"Good women, good women, good women as you be
C G C D C
Will you open my right side and find my baby
G D G
And find my baby"
G D
"Oh no," cried the women, "That's a thing that can never be
C G C D C
We will call on King Henry and hear what he may say
G D G
And hear what he may say"
G D
King Henry was sent for, King Henry did come
C G
Saying, "What does ail you, my lady?
C D C
Your eyes, they look so dim
G D G
Your eyes, they look so dim"
G D
"King Henry, King Henry, will you do one thing for me?
C G C D C
Will you open my right side and find my baby
G D G
And find my baby"
G D
"Oh no," cried King Henry, "That's a thing that I can never do
C G C D C
If I lose the flower of England, I shall lose the branch too
G D G
I shall lose the branch too"
G D
There was fiddling and dancing on the day the babe was born
C G C D C
But poor Queen Jane beloved, she lay cold as a stone
G D G
Lay cold as a stone
X
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7 comentarios
Obviously the wrong chords. The tab is right in some places, but far more frequently incorrect. When played along with the track, it does not fit at all.
+1
I think I've found some corrections. Please see below:
G D
Queen Jane lay in labor full nine days or more
C G D G walk up to C
'Til her women grew so tired, they could no longer there
G D G
They could no longer there
G D
"Good women, good women, good women as you be
C G D G walk up to C
Will you open my right side and find my baby
G D G
And find my baby"
G D
"Oh no," cried the women, "That's a thing that can never be
C G D G walk up to C
We will call on King Henry and hear what he may say
G D G
And hear what he may say"
G D
King Henry was sent for, King Henry did come
C G D
Saying, "What does ail you, my lady?
G walk up to C
Your eyes, they look so dim
G D G
Your eyes, they look so dim"
G D
"King Henry, King Henry, will you do one thing for me?
C G D G walk up to C
Will you open my right side and find my baby
G D G
And find my baby"
G D
"Oh no," cried King Henry, "That's a thing that I can never do
C G D G walk up to C
If I lose the flower of England, I shall lose the branch too
G D G
I shall lose the branch too"
G D
There was fiddling and dancing on the day the babe was born
C G D G walk up to C
But poor Queen Jane beloved, she lay cold as a stone
G D G
Lay cold as a stone
+1
Seems to me the verses are not just Gmaj, rather the chord transition back and forth from G to Dmaj. This Dmaj would be played as a Cmaj chord up one whole step, making it technically a Dsus4
+1