[ Предположительная тональность: G ] *This is all my own work and I've not gotten it from anyone else* Artist: The Byrds Song: Draft Morning Album: The Notorious Byrd Brothers (1968) Writers: David Crosby/Roger McGuinn/Chris Hillman Tabbed by a little soul A Crosby tune with supposedly unauthorized lyric variations by McGuinn and Hillman, this is one of Crosby's best songs, a stark and delicate evocation of the horrors of Vietnam. Conversely, it's one of the most requested Byrds songs ever that hasn't been tabbed, which I find incessantly curious because it's remarkably simple. What confuses some people, I suspect, is the vocal drone, but I don't see why, because it doesn't really change the character of the chords. Tuning: Standard (EADGBE) Time: 4/4 Chords: D - XX0232 C - X32010 or C/D - X30010* G - 320003 or G/D - XX0003* Dm- XX0231 *One can use these chords instead if one is weary or unable to sustain the vocal drone! Okay, let's start! Intro: Cymbal. Then: D (4 bars) Then the verse begins. The vocal drone kicks in - a Byrd (Hillman, I think) proceeds to hum a low D note. The note is the same as an open D string on your guitar, assuming it's tuned properly. He hums this note, pausing for breath occasionally, all through the verses. It's a lovely effect - it makes the C chord really move - but the chords remain static. D (8 bars) C (4 bars) G (4 bars) D (4 bars) Now if you don't want to do a vocal drone, replace C with C/D and G with G/D That is the verse progression, done twice and the only thing left is the noisy bit in the middle. That is just a rapidly arpeggiated version of this: Dm (4 bars) G (4 bars) and ends with many bars of a D chord (Hillman's little bass solo). Then there's another verse. And that's all, till the ending, which is just a D chord with McGuinn playing taps on top of it: e --------2---2-5--5-2------- B ---3---3---3--------------3 G 2-2---2-------------2--2-2- D --------------------------- A --------------------------- E --------------------------- And that's all there is. I hope y'all enjoyed that :)