WOODSTOCK GUITAR SONGBOOK EDITION TABLATURE LIBRO-I’M GOING HOME-alvin lee-NEIL YOUNG
WOODSTOCK: THE GUITAR SONGBOOK. TABLATURE
LIBRO DI MUSICA, SPARTITI PER CHITARRA E VOCE. PENTAGRAMMA, ACCORDI E TABLATURE.
AUTHENTIC GUITAR TAB EDITION
3 giorni di pace e musica.
Era il 15 - 16 - 17 Agosto 1969, il biglietto costava $6.00 al giorno. Il 18 agosto suonerà Hendrix che chiuse il concerto di "Pace e musica" con una canzone sulla gelosia criminale, Hey Joe:
Hey Joe, dove stai andando con quella pistola in mano
Hey Joe, ho detto dove stai andando con quella pistola in mano
Sto andando a uccidere la mia vecchia signora
Sai, l'ho trovata in giro con un altro tizio
Sto andando a uccidere la mia vecchia signora
Sai, l'ho trovata in giro con un altro tizio
e questo non va bene
Hey Joe, ho sentito che hai sparato alla tua vecchia signora,
le hai sparato, adesso
ho detto, ho sentito che hai sparato alla tua vecchia signora,
le hai sparato, l'hai stesa
sì è vero, le ho sparato
sai, l'ho trovata in giro, in giro per la città
sì è vero, le ho sparato
sai, ho trovato la mia signora che faceva casino in giro per la città
e l'ho ripagata con la pistola
LE HO SPARATO!
Hey Joe, va bene
sparale ancora, baby
Hey Joe, ho detto
e adesso dove te ne andrai?
adesso dove te ne andrai?
Hey Joe, ho detto adesso dove te ne andrai?
Dove, dove andrai?
Be', scava
Andrò a sud,
verso il Messico
va bene!
Andrò a sud,
a sud dove posso essere libero
nessuno mi troverà
Non ci sarà nessun boia,
non mi metterà una corda intorno al collo
farai meglio a crederci
adesso devo andare
Hey Joe, è meglio che ti muova
arrivederci a tutti
Hey Joe, uhh
vattene via
Hey Joe, where you goin' with that gun in your hand
Hey Joe, I said where you goin' with that gun in your hand
I'm going down to shoot my old lady
You know, I've caught her messin' around with another man
I'm going down to shoot my old lady
You know, I've caught her messin' around with another man
And that ain't too cool
Hey Joe, I've heard you shot your woman down,
shot her down, now
I said I've heard you shot your old lady down,
You shot her down to the ground
Yes I did, I shot her
You know, I caught her messin' round, messin' round town
Yes I did, I shot her
You know, I caught my old lady messin' around town
And I gave her the gun
I SHOT HER!
Hey Joe, alright
Shoot her one more time, baby
Hey Joe, said now
Where you gonna run to now?
Where you gonna run to?
Hey Joe, I said where you gonna run to now?
Where you, where you gonna go?
Well, dig it
I'm goin' way down south,
Way down to Mexico way
Alright!
I'm goin' way down south,
Way down where I can be free
Ain't no one gonna find me
Ain't no hangman gonna,
He ain't gonna put a rope around me
You better believe it right now
I gotta go now
Hey Joe, you better run on down
Good by everybody
Hey Joe, uhh
Run on down
FOR MUCH OF THE WORLD, THE SUMMER OF '69 IS MARKED BY THE MILESTONE OF THE MANKIND'S FIRST STEP ON THE MOON, SYNONYMOUS WITH THE SENTENCE, "THIS IS ONE SMALL STEP FOR MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND."
The year 1969 was characterized by a fracturing American society. In the aftermath of tumultuous events from the previous year; which included poIitical assassinations, race riots, the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, student uprisings, and the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, the world seemed divided between whites and blacks, capitalists and communists, haves and have-nots, straights and stoners, the silent majority and the counterculture. Two days after the Apollo I I astronauts emerged from quarantine, 500,000 concert goers-more than two and a half times the anticipated number of attendees-assembled in the alfalfa fields outside of Bethel, New York, to hear 32 musical acts, some already the biggest artists in the world, and some whose careers would explode following their exposure at the festival. From the point of view of their elders, the young people had been "infected" by a threat to the mores of society that was more insidious than the unknown space germs possibly brought back to earth from Apollo I I's trans-lunar journey. These "hippies" largely opposed the Vietnam War; materialism, and racism, while practicing free love and illicit drug use, and their values were implicitly and explicitly stated in much of the music performed at Woodstock.
Friday, August 15
Richie Havens
Swami Satchidananda - gave the invocation for the festival
Sweetwater
Bert Sommer
Ravi Shankar
Tim Hardin
Melanie
Arlo Guthrie
Joan Baez
Saturday, August 16
Quill, forty-minute set of four songs
Country Joe McDonald
John Sebastian
Santana
Keef Hartley Band
The Incredible String Band
Canned Heat
Mountain
Grateful Dead
Creedence Clearwater Revival
Janis Joplin with The Kozmic Blues Band
Sly & the Family Stone
The Who began at 4 a.m., kicking off a 25-song set including Tommy
Jefferson Airplane
Sunday, August 17
The Grease Band
Joe Cocker
Country Joe and the Fish
Ten Years After
The Band
Blood, Sweat & Tears
Johnny Winter featuring his brother, Edgar Winter
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
Paul Butterfield Blues Band
Sha-Na-Na
Monday, August 18
Jimi Hendrix
For the particular generation, it calls to mind a '80s pop song about the dashed hopes of youthful idealism. But for the baby boomer generation and free spirits everywhere, the summer of 69 is defined by a mid-August music Festival, where a half-million young people wallowed in the mud of the Max Yasgur's 600-acre dairy farm.
A r t i s t T i t l e
JOAN BAEZ - JOE HILL - Parole: Alfred Haynes. Musica: Earl Robinson - 1938
THE BAND - CHEST FEVER - parole e musica: Robbie Robertson - 1968
THE BAND - THE WEIGHT - parole e musica: Robbie Robertson - 1968
CANNED HEAT - GOING UP THE COUNTRY - parole e musica: Alan Wilson - 1968
JOE COCKER - DELTA LADY - parole e musica: Leon Russell - 1969
JOE COCKER - LET’S GO GET STONED - parole e musica: Valerie Simpson, Nicholas Ashford, Josephine Armstead - 1965
COUNTRY JOE MCDONALD - I-FEEL-LIKE-I’M-FIXIN’-TO-DIE RAG - parole e musica: Joe McDonald - 1965
CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG - BLUEBIRD - parole e musica: Stephen Stills - 1967
CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG - WOODSTOCK - parole e musica: Joni Mitchell - 1969
GRATEFUL DEAD - DARK STAR - parole: Robert Hunter. musica: Jerry Garcia, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh, Ron McKernan, Bob Weir - 1971
GRATEFUL DEAD - ST. STEPHEN - parole: Robert Hunter. Musica: Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh - 1969
ARLO GUTHRIE - COMING INTO LOS ANGELES - parole e musica: Arlo Guthrie - 1969
RICHIE HAVENS - HANDSOME JOHNNY - parole e musica: Richie Havens, Luis Goussett - 1967
JANIS JOPLIN WITH THE KOZMIC BLUES BAND - PIECE OF MY HEART - parole e musica: Jerry Ragovoy, Bert Russell - 1967
JANIS JOPLIN WITH THE KOZMIC BLUES BAND - TRY (JUST A LITTLE BIT HARDER) - parole e musica: Jerry Ragovoy, Chip Taylor - 1968
THE JEFFERSON AIRPLANE - VOLUNTEERS - parole e musica: Marty Balin, Paul Kantner - 1969
JIMI HENDRIX WITH GYPSY SUN AND RAINBOWS - HEY JOE - parole e musica: Billy Roberts - 1962
MOUNTAIN - THEME FOR AN I MAGINARY WESTERN - parole e musica: Jack Bruce, Pete Brown - 1971
SANTANA - EVIL WAYS - parole e musica: Sonny Henry - 1967
SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE - EVERYDAY PEOPLE - parole e musica: Sylvester Stewart - 1969
SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE - I WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHER - parole e musica: Sylvester Stewart - 1968
THE WHO - MY GENERATION - parole e musica: Peter Townshend - 1965
THE WHO - SUMMERTIME BLUES - parole e musica: Eddie Cochran, Jerry Capehart - 1958
TEN YEARS AFTER - I’M GOING HOME - parole e musica: Alvin Lee - 1969






