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Tune Req: Blackwaterside (Bert Jansch) DigiTrad: BLACKWATERSIDE Related threads: Discussion: Blackwaterside (32) (origins) Origins: Blackwaterside (82) Lyr/Chords Req: Blackwaterside (Bert Jansch) (8) Lyr/Chords Req: Blackwaterside (from Oysterband) (3) Lyr Req: Black Water Side (4) |
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Subject: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: GUEST,Tony Date: 13 Dec 01 - 04:45 AM |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: GUEST,Tony Date: 13 Dec 01 - 04:48 AM Sorry, accidently posted it without anthing in :) Anyway, i was wondering if anynone had a tab of Jansch's Blackwater side. I've been looking for one for some time, and the only lead ive got on how to play it, was about 5 secnds of video of him playing it. Any help would be much appreciated. |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 13 Dec 01 - 05:34 AM You want Fingerstyle Guitar. It's in the Bert Jansch section. |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: nutty Date: 13 Dec 01 - 09:28 AM If you want chords - these are what I have from a song book ........ BLACKWATERSIDE One (C) morning fair as I took the (Dm) air
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Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: GUEST,Tony Date: 13 Dec 01 - 01:29 PM Aha thanks very much. |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: Mrrzy Date: 13 Dec 01 - 02:04 PM Brought on with your want and will... I thought it was Wanton will? Are these lyrics at the blicky by the original writer, or someone who posted the lyrics and guitar instructions, with apologies for being an ignoramus? |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: Arbuthnot Date: 13 Dec 01 - 06:08 PM Bert played the tune originally in DGDGBE , ie dropped D tuning. I learned it twenty years ago, then found I couldn't sing it without using a capo on the on the seventh fret. I think Bert may have tuned all the strings down a tone to sing it easily. A tab was published in Guitar magazine in the 70s. It's not very hard or I couldn't have done it! |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Bert Jansch's Blackwater side? From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 13 Dec 01 - 07:17 PM The lyrics given at that site are indeed gibberish, and, not being a guitar player, I have no idea whether the (quite separate) tab file is accurate or not. I simply answer the question asked, in this case, and leave it to Tony to decide whether or not it suits his needs. |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Blackwaterside (Bert Jansch) From: GUEST,gecko Date: 24 Sep 18 - 01:27 AM Bit of thread creep here....Polly Bolton, an English folk singer, does a brilliant version of Blackwaterside on Bert Jansch's Compendium. Not to everyone's taste as it's a bit of a walk on the wild side, but I love her voice and arrangement. YIU gecko |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Blackwaterside (Bert Jansch) From: Taconicus Date: 02 Jan 22 - 09:03 PM Whoops! I think I just posted this in the wrong "Blackwaterside" thread. (Editors, please delete the other one—or whichever one is in the wrong place—if you like.) Well, here it is: ============== Here's how I sing this song. It's a beautiful song but I found it unsatisfying not only because it exhibited a cruel misogyny with no repercussions, but also because it lacked a satisfying ending (or any ending, really). So I finished the song on my own. It's rather maudlin, but then so many of that era are. I've read that it's thought the song originated in Northern Ireland, but after considerable research I've decided to place it at the River Blackwater in Mallow, County Cork. There was a famous "Ten Arch Bridge" there, but I believe it was bombed and destroyed during the Irish Rebellion. =================== Blackwater Side Traditional; arrangement and additional lyrics © 2019 by Eric M. Bram G C D One morning fair as I chanced the air Em F G Down by Blackwater side. C G C G It was gazing all around me C Em G That an Irish girl I spied. All in the fore part of the night We rolled in sport and play Till this young man arose and he put on his clothes Saying, "Fare thee well today." That's not the promise that you made to me As you lay upon my breast. You could've made me believe with your lying tongue That the sun rose in the west. Go home, go home to your father's garden. Go home and cry your fill. And think of the sad misfortune You brought on with your wanton will. There's not a flower in this whole wide world More easily plucked than thee. And when fishes can fly and seas do run dry That's when you'll marry me. She turned, she turned, and she slow walked away Along Blackwater side. And I called out "good day" and I went on my way. And I could hear how she softly cried. I went to the tavern, and I there drank my fill Till I heard the news from the town. That a young woman had jumped from the Ten Arch Bridge And in the cold Blackwater had drowned. Now there's not a man in this whole green land More deservedly damned than I. For she loved me the best and I drove her to her death. And I'll know it until I die. Coda/Outro: Em C G |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Blackwaterside (Bert Jansch) From: Helen Date: 03 Jan 22 - 01:43 PM Thanks Eric. In real life though, I wonder whether the young man in your version would really have thought much about the effects of his actions given his callous disregard for the woman. One of my favourite tunes on The Pogues' albums is The Limerick Rake. I really love the tune but I don't like the lyrics of the song, for similar reasons to your explanation for adding the extra lyrics to Blackwater Side. |
Subject: RE: Tune Req: Blackwaterside (Bert Jansch) From: GUEST,James Phillips Date: 04 Jan 22 - 10:50 AM Re: a tab for Blackwaterside. I tabbed this around 2003 or so and uploaded it to Usenet from where I guess it ended up on most of the tab sites. The tab was fairly decent (and you'll probably find it everywhere if you Google), but as part of the team who worked on the official book of Bert Jansch transcriptions a few years ago, we revisited the piece and a much better tab resulted - rare videos of Bert playing it had become available since I first tabbed it, enabling us to see that he fingered a few things differently. The book is called "The Bert Jansch Songbook," is very well tabulated and notated and is available on Amazon. |
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