Caedmons Call

Caedmons Call - Table for Two guitar chord

"Table For Two" from Caedmon's Call "40 Acres"

Words and music by Derek Webb

Copyright © 1999 New Spring Publishing / Niphon Music (ASCAP)

http://caedmons-call.com http://awakeningrecords.com

Transcribed by T-rev http://www.t-rev.net

Capo 4. At a moderate, mellow tempo (one bass note per second, I

think they used a digital watch for a metronome) in 6/8 time, pick

and strum primarily using down strokes as follows:

Beat 1 2 3 4 5 6 B = bass note

B x x B x x x = strum

The first (smallest) string is not played throughout most of the

song. I often mute it with my fretting hand, by just wrapping my

fingers a bit too close around the neck (you know, the way we all

do by accident when first learning to play). Or with your picking

hand you can rest a finger or two on the 1st string for muting

plus increased pick control. This "anchoring" technique is

considered a bad habit by many, but I've also seen professionals

do it, and it just seems really "folky" to me.

Sidenote: A more common form of anchoring--in fact, standard

practice for bluegrass banjo players--is resting a finger or two

(pinky and maybe ring finger) on the edge of the sound hole (or

banjo head) when playing fingerstyle. The main reason anchoring--

with or without a pick--is a bad habit for guitarists is that

while it makes easy music easier, it makes difficult music more

difficult by encumbering your picking hand. Because "Table For

Two" is built on its bass line, it's a good song for practicing

accuracy without anchoring. You got that fer free.

Another cool way to "cheat" would be to tune the first string down

a whole step to match the 2nd string 3rd fret, so xxxx30 sounds

like one note. Thus you wouldn't have to mute the 1st string;

most of the time you'd just play it un-fretted. The chord I'm

calling D (which is actually a Dsus9) could be fingered like a

regular D, xx0232, and A7, Asus and A would be x02022, x02232 and

x02222. Or if you played the A chords the regular way with the

open 1st string, you'd have a nice dissonant sound.

And, of course, another variation on the above trick is to partial

capo. First capo 2, then at the 4th fret capo all but the 1st

string. The fun never ends! For more on partial-capoing, go to

http://www.t-rev.net/hint.html

Chord - Name

XX0230 D (adlib hammer 1st and 3rd strings on 2nd fret)

X4023X D/C#

X2023X D/B

X0023X D/A

3X003X G

2X023X D/F#

0X003X Em7

X0203X A7sus

X2443X Bm

2X443X Bm/F#

0X010X E7

X2010X E7/B

3X000X Gh (hammer 3X201X on and off)

X0202X A7

2X003X G/F#

X02230 Asus

X02220 A

[intro] D, /C#, /B, /A, G, D/F#, Em7, A7sus (2x)

[verse 1]

D, /C#, /B, /A, G, D/F#, Em7, A7sus

Bm, /F#, E7, /B, Gh

D, /C#, /B, /A, G, D/F#, Em7, A7sus

Bm, /F#, E7, A7, D

[chorus 1]

G, /F#, Em7, D, Asus, A

G, /F#, Em7, D, Asus, A

G, /F#, Em7, D, Asus, A

Gh (this time short Gh without the hammer on, right into verse 2)

[verse 2]

[chorus 2]

[verse 3]

[chorus 3]

Transcribed 3/19/1998 by T-rev

More tab available at http://www.t-rev.net

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