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A SALTY DOG (simplified, in G) by Procol Harum A worthy exercise in how majors, minors, sustained and sevenths of the same chords, as well as notes next to each other (E, F, F# G) can not only work together but be very melodic. Sort of orchestral? Zackly.
G'All hands on deck, F#suswe've run aF#floe!' F#m7I heard the captain Esuscry E 'ExD6plore the DshipF#m, reBmplace the Bm7cook:F#m let Gmno one leave aBblive!' FAcross the straits, Caround the Horn:F how Fmaj7far can sailors F7fly? Bb Bbm F Csus-C A twisted path, our tortured course, and no one left alive
We sailed for parts unknown to man, where ships come home to die No lofty peak, nor fortress bold, could match our captain's eye Upon the seventh seasick day we made our port of call A sand so white, and sea so blue, no mortal place at all We fired the gun, and burned the mast, and rowed from ship to shore The captain cried, we sailors wept: our tears were tears of joy Now many moons, how many Junes, have passed since we made land A salty dog, this seaman's log: your witness my own hand [Most lyrics show the 7th word "afloat". Just as when you run into the ground, and then you've run aground, should you happen to run into an ice floe -- a big chunk of ice like an iceberg, but mostly flat -- then you've run afloe.]