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Kyjygyfyf

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Posts posted by Kyjygyfyf

  1. Looking like my early fave off the new album. A quietly beautiful tune, with simple yet gorgeous vocals from Tweedy and Feist. More shades of George Harrison with the backwards guitar at the end. Didn't tab that part out, sorry.

     

    Capo 3rd fret

     

    All chords relative to capo.

     

    Cmaj7: x32000

    A': x02400

     

    C Cmaj7 A'

    You and I

     

    C Cmaj7 A'

    We might be strangers

     

    C F Em

    However close we get sometimes

     

    A'

    It's like we never met

     

     

    F C Cmaj7

    But you and I

     

    F C Cmaj7

    I think we can take it

     

    F Em

    All the good with the bad

     

    A' F

    Make something that no one else has but

     

    C Cmaj7 F

    You and I

     

    C Cmaj7 F

    You and I

     

     

    C Cmaj7 A'

    Me and you

     

    C Cmaj7 A'

    What can we do

     

    C F Em

    When the words we use sometimes

     

    A'

    Are misconstrued

     

     

    F C Cmaj7

    Well I won't guess

     

    F C Cmaj7

    What's coming next

     

    F Em

    I can't ever tell you

     

    A' F

    The deepest well I've ever fallen into

     

     

    C Cmaj7 A'

     

    C Cmaj7 A'

     

     

    F

    Oh I don't wanna know

     

    Em

    Oh I don't wanna know

     

    C

    Oh I don't need to know

     

    A'

    Everything about you

     

     

    F

    Oh I don't wanna know and

     

    C Bb Am Dm G

    You don't need to know that much about me

     

     

    [Repeat First Verse.]

     

    [Repeat Chorus.]

     

    End with: C Cmaj7 F

  2. Set List:

     

    Via Chicago

    Impossible Germany

    You Are My Face

    Spiders

    Hummingbird

    Jesus, etc.

    Forget the Flowers

    Walken

    I'm the Man who Loves You

     

    Pretty straightforward set. Wilco came out around 8:45 and played for 45-50 minutes. Seemed to have a decent amount of crowd support, too. They were just starting to get into a groove once I'm the Man was played, so it was a shame to see them leave. But got to see Neil instead! Jesus H. Christ that man can still play.

  3. yeah no One Wing????? I was super pumped to hear that one...

     

    very pleased to hear jeff say "we'll see you when we finish our record." my mouth is watering already.

     

    also, the crowd full of lame, dime-a-dozen greenpoint hipsters was certainly forgettable.

  4. I would have to agree with justin... the definitive version in my mind is the one from milwaukee's summerfest in jul. '06. the song was a little more forceful and rocking at first, kotche hammering it home, and nels completely kills it. I also think the one from the EP, I believe from one of the denver fillmore nights, is also real kick ass, and should come in at second.

  5. man why do the presales sell out in like thirty seconds? is there some kind of program that people are using???? i have a job interview in twenty minutes and literally stopped at a cafe to buy the tickets before i went in, and sure enough, before my computer's clock even read 10:01, all the tix were taken. I think it must've happened in the ten seconds it took me to log into Music Today. WTF people???? Are we gonna have to deal with this crap anytime we want to see wilco?

  6. Usually when I play this song, I complement the bluesy E riff with this for A (relative to capo):

     

    e--0--5--3--2--0--

    B--2--2--2--2--2--

    G--2--2--2--2--2--

    D--2--2--2--2--2--

    A--0--0--0--0--0--

    E-------------------

     

    Also, no one's mentioned the thing Tweedy does at the end of the third verse when he sings "writing this letter to you" again (though I think he doesn't sing it live anymore and just plays his little riff). I've never really figured it out, but this sounds decent (relative to capo):

     

    e-------------------------0h0--

    B--/9--7--5--3/5--3---0h0--

    G--/9--7--6--4/6--4---0h1--

    D--/9--7--7--4/6--4---0h2--

    A------------------------0h2--

    E------------------------0h0--

     

    thoughts?

  7. well, first off, i'm not a newb, haven't been for a couple years now, and I am very aware of the tracklist that is circulating, I'm saying it's wrong, though...

     

    well, maybe not wrong, but not as informed as it should be. "Jam" is not a jam but a few different songs, that's what I'm trying to find out cause they're not wilco tunes, and the 'Boogie Jam' is actually a "was I in your dreams?" jam

  8. So I'm sure you all know what I'm talking about, the handful of songs circulating (available on Owl & Bear), supposedly from around the time of Yankee Hotel b/c of the presence of Ashes and an early version of Wishful Thinking...but I was also wondering if anyone knew some of the other tracks? The second one, for example, starts out with this kind of heavy metal jam before segueing into a song where Tweedy is pleading, "Come on, baby, sleep with me" followed by another one where he starts out, "I wanna see a show of hands tonight..." Anyways, just wondering if anyone out there in wilcoworld knew more about the tracks on this bootleg...

  9. there was a link posted to 'one true vine' a while ago somewhere on this message board, maybe you can search for it...i for one downloaded it straight from the site...

     

    as for the others, yes, they are available on itunes. and i'm pretty sure you can get is that the thanks i get for free by inserting your sbs cd into your comp...altho this was first started a few months ago, i don't know if it's still available

  10. I read this book a few months ago for the first time and, of course being a huge wilco fan, enjoyed it very much, devouring every page as quickly as possible. I know Kot because I used to live in chicago and read his columns in the arts section quite frequently. His writing style is not the most adorned -- pretty straightforward, as you've probably figured from reading the book. However, I thought the most interesting aspect of the book was the way he painted the relationship between tweedy and farrar. The dichotomy he draws is quite fascinating and a great theme that courses through the whole book and even into the present. Might give you a good discussion point.

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