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John Doe No. 24   Mary Chapin Carpenter

 
 
 
 
 
 Date: Sat, 16 Dec 1995 00:35:26 -0600
 
 
 
 JOHN DOE NO. 24 (Mary Chapin Carpenter)
 ---------------------------------------
 
 This song is in the key of E, but Mary Chapin plays it in G with a
 capo at the 9th fret, in open D tuning (DADF#AD). But the highest
 string is never used, so you don't have to tune that one down; since
 high E's often break, you may as well tune to DADF#AE.
 
 The guitar part repeats one pattern through the entire song, with some
 slight variations. This tablature is for the first four measures of
 the song, and it shows two ways to play the end of the pattern; through
 most of the song, she uses the second way, especially while she's
 singing. (Note that the "131" in the tab is a hammer-on followed by a
 pull-off, and the "13" is a hammer-on from 1 to 3, not thirteen!)
 
 D ----------------|----------------|----------------|----------------|
 A ------0---------|----------------|------0---------|----------------|
 F# 1-------1-----1-|------1-131---0-|1-------1-----1-|------1-13----0-|
 D ----0-------0---|----0-------0---|----0-------0---|----0-------0---|
 A --2-------3-----|--3-------------|--2-------3-----|--3-------0-----|
 D 0-------2-------|0-------0-------|0-------2-------|0-------0-------|
 ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ . ^ .
 
 I'm not sure exactly which fingers she uses; she might use her thumb
 to fret the low E. (If anyone finds out, let me know!) Notice that
 I didn't put chord names; that's because they don't really matter.
 I guess you could say the chords are: G(9), C(9)/E, C(9)/D, D(4).
 LYRICS (each line is two measures):
 
 I was standing on the sidewalk in 1945
 In Jacksonville, Illinois
 When asked what my name was there came no reply
 They said I was a deaf and sightless half-wit boy
 But Louis was my name, though I could not say it
 I was born and raised in New Orleans
 My spirit was wild, so I let the river take it
 On a barge and a prayer upstream
 
 Well they searched for a mother and they searched for a father
 And they searched till they searched no more
 The doctors put to rest their scientific tests
 And they named me "John Doe No. 24"
 And they all shook their heads in pity
 For a world so silent and dark
 Well there's no doubt that life's a mystery
 But so too is the human heart
 
 And it was my heart's own perfume when the crepe jasmine bloomed
 On St. Charles Avenue
 Though I couldn't hear the bells of the streetcars coming
 By toeing the track I knew
 And if I were an old man returning
 With my satchel and porkpie hat
 I'd hit every jazz joint on Bourbon
 And I'd hit everyone on Basin after that
 
 [sixteen-bar saxophone solo]
 
 The years kept passing as they passed me around
 >From one state ward to another
 Like I was an orphan shoe from the lost and found
 Always missing the other
 And they gave me a harp last Christmas
 And all the nurses took a dance
 But lately I've been growing listless
 I've been dreaming again of the past
 
 I'm wandering down to the banks of the great Big Muddy
 Where the shotgun houses stand
 I am seven years old and I feel my dad
 Reach out for my hand
 While I drew breath no one missed me
 So they won't on the day that I cease
 Put a sprig of crepe jasmine with me
 To remind me of New Orleans
 
 I was standing on the sidewalk in 1945
 In Jacksonville, Illinois
 [pause on A note (open 2nd string]
 
 [repeat and fade with saxophone solo]
 - Adam Schneider, schn0170@maroon.tc.umn.edu
 


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