Mary Chapin Carpenter - When shes gone
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WHEN SHE'S GONE (Mary-Chapin Carpenter)
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[Actually in F; capo 5.]
[The lines that are just F and C actually have some F(9)'s and C(9)'s in
them; that's all spelled out at the end.]
F She threw her purse upCon the bed
F She looked around and shCook her head
F There's really nothing lCeft, she said
G There's nothing I ain't dCone
F She wore your favorite drCess tonight
F She hoped her hair would cCatch the light
F And you just sat thereC gettin' tight
G On double shots of rCum
Am You don't care what Fpeople say
G They're gonna say it Canyway
Am You don't hear what Fyou can't use
G It's always been the sCame old news
Am You don't beg and yFou don't plead
G Or miss a thing that Cyou don't need
F She knew by the Cway you kissed her
G When she's gone, Cyou won't miss her
F[instCrumentFal] C F C G C
Morning comes on an old cat's paws
And when the sun hits the walls
The light's as bright as it ever was
After or before
And you wince as waking pounds your head
And you drag your arm across the bed
And the tangled sheets and the twisted spread
Fall onto the floor
And the kitchen table finds you silent
If you had a thought, now you can't find it
You take a long drag on your smoke
And taste your coffee growing cold
She didn't beg and you didn't plead
She knew exactly how to leave
The way she knew when you kissed her
When she's gone, you won't miss her
She didn't beg and you didn't plead
She knew exactly when to leave
The way she knew as you kissed her
When she's gone, you won't miss her
F[InstCrumentFal; rCepeat Fand fCade] G C
Here's the strumming pattern for most of the song. The funny-looking
lines are musical notes. The numbers above the notes are just the relative
durations, for the benefit of the notationally impaired.
The first chord of each line is actually just a single note, or perhaps
just the two or three lowest strings. The last C(9) in the first two lines
is only played sometimes; other times, it's just an eighth note at the end
of the measure, and other times there's _no_ chord after the C*.
F: x33211 or 133211 (fret the E string with your thumb)
F(9): x33011 or 133011 (fret the E string with your thumb)
C: 330010
C*: hammer-on (quickly) from 330010 to 332010
C: 332010
G: 320003
Am: x02210
2 1 1 1 1 2 3 3 2
| +--+--+--+ | | | |
| | | | | | | | |
/ / / / / / / . / . /
F F F F F(9) F(9) C C* C
2 1 1 1 1 2 3 3 2
| +--+--+--+ | | | |
| | | | | | | | |
/ / / / / / / . / . /
F F F F F(9) F(9) C C* C
2 1 1 1 1 2 3 3 2
| +--+--+--+ | | | |
| | | | | | | | |
/ / / / / / / . / . /
F F F F F(9) F(9) C C* C
2 1 1 2 2 3 2 1 1 1
| +--+ | | | | +--+--+
| | | | | | | | | |
/ / / / / / . / / / /
G G G G G C C C C C
For the other parts (e.g., the Am F G C part), it's never very complex;
mostly just like this:
2 1 1 2 1 1
| +--+ | +--+
| | | | | |
/ / / / / /
- Adam Schneider, schneider@pobox.com