Chords for Byrne, Glass, Ginsberg on Arthur Russell 'Another Thought' EPK

Tempo:
155.7 bpm
Chords used:

D

G

F

C

E

Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
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Byrne, Glass, Ginsberg on Arthur Russell 'Another Thought' EPK chords
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[A] [D]
When your left foot takes your [Gm] first step, [E] a single thought takes up your whole [Bb] time.
I [F] want a thing [Em] that I can't be mad at, it's lacking [G] form.
It [C] takes my whole time.
[D] I'm on another [Bb] thought now, [A] my eyes [Bb] searching the real face [Dm] [Bb] of an angel.
[Gbm] [A] This was a guy who could sit down with a cello and play and [D] sing with it in a way that no one
[Dbm] on this earth has ever [E] done it before and [Bm] will ever do it again.
Talking heads was just getting started.
[Abm] I had just moved [Gbm] here and at one point he did a,
he did some horn arrangements [Gb] for a couple of our songs and they were peculiar horn arrangements.
I had to completely reorient my thinking and I found that that [D] was often the case with [F] Arthur.
The amazing thing is he could [Em] reproduce my [D] monochordal
[Db] variation [Ab] on different Blake tunes that I'd [E] invented, note for note, playing unison with
my voice.
[F]
[D] [F] I [C] think that Arthur was really interested in the song.
See the thing is
that we were always interested [D] in the experimental side of it.
I [Em] think Arthur was [G] interested in the
way he could [C] take the experimental side of it and redirect it into an idiom which he really
thought was a popular idiom.
He [E] was just driven to [G] make this sort of art dance [Ab] hit.
You know,
he figured that there could be a cross-reference [G] between dance music and downtown Soho [Gm] new [D] music.
[E] He kept saying that he wanted to write Buddhist [N] bubblegum music.
It seemed to have such a wide range of musical interests that at one point he would do something
that would seem very avant-garde or whatever you want to, word you want to use and [F] in the
next minute he would say, what I really want to do is sound like Abba.
And [D] I'd go, this seems
somewhat incompatible.
And yet after a while you would realize that he was
bringing strands of [Bm] various things together.
[C]
[D]
[D] [Gb]
Often he would sing cello and vocal versions of his [G] dance songs, which was totally intriguing
because there's [Ab] many of his songs that exist [E] in both kind of formats.
He was also [A] interested in the words.
[D] He consulted me a lot for phrasing and [Eb] I kept [D] saying it should
be more [Am] detailed.
He was saying, no, the top [A] idiom is generalizations, but he was looking
for generalizations which had a slightly erotic or eccentric overtone.
He [G] would encourage me to appreciate stuff that I would just write off as being just commercial.
He was, I know, very enamored of a lot of Italian pop music.
Also really beautiful sounding,
but it's very, sometimes very commercial.
He heard something in there.
It is the mystery of the creative process.
It's the mysterious thing [C] that does not submit to
formula, [Db] [A] but which subverts the formula.
You know, when you take a formula like dance music [C] and then
the personality just comes shining [G] through.
[Ab] And that's what you heard in Arthur's music.
[Db] [Ebm]
[Db]
[Ab]
When cataloged [G] nearly a thousand tapes, cassettes, [Abm] just there's [G] so many reels of tape [Ebm] and dats and
two-inch [Ab] masters that they then not only cataloged all the material, but then followed through and
put a record out.
[F] Unfortunately, his life was cut short really [G] before he could put his [B] music out.
And that's, I think that's of course part of the [Ab] devastation about so many people who are dying of
AIDS is that people just, you know, [Gm] won't hear about all these writers and musicians [Eb] and dancers and
composers that are gonna, [G] or that we're not going to hear from just because they've
gotten this disease and there's no cure for it.
[C]
[E] He always felt [F]
that he could be a pop star.
And that he should be one.
And I have to say that during a lot of those years, I thought it was
just an [C] Arthur idea.
When I [E] listened to the record that we actually have ended [F] up with, I think that
he was probably much more right than I was.
I think it's really somebody who was writing
music in the 70s and 80s that was very, [G] very far ahead of [C] time.
Very far ahead.
[G] [C]
[F] [Am] [D]
[F]
[C]
[A] [F]
[Gm]
[Bb]
[N]
Key:  
D
1321
G
2131
F
134211111
C
3211
E
2311
D
1321
G
2131
F
134211111
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_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
When your left foot takes your [Gm] first step, [E] a single thought takes up your _ _ whole [Bb] time.
I [F] want a thing [Em] that I _ can't be mad at, it's lacking [G] form.
It [C] takes my whole time.
[D] _ I'm on another [Bb] thought now, [A] my eyes [Bb] searching the real face [Dm] _ _ [Bb] of an angel. _
[Gbm] _ _ [A] This was a guy who could sit down with a cello and play and [D] sing with it in a way that no one
[Dbm] on this earth has ever [E] done it before and [Bm] will ever do it again.
Talking heads was just getting started.
[Abm] I had just moved [Gbm] here and at one point he did a,
he did some horn arrangements _ [Gb] for a couple of our songs and they were peculiar horn arrangements.
I had to completely reorient my thinking and I found that that [D] was often the case with [F] Arthur.
The amazing thing is he could [Em] reproduce my _ [D] monochordal
[Db] variation [Ab] on different Blake tunes that I'd [E] invented, _ note for note, playing unison with
my voice.
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [F] I _ _ _ _ _ [C] think _ _ _ _ that Arthur was really interested in the song.
See the thing is
that we were always interested [D] in the experimental side of it.
I [Em] think Arthur was [G] interested _ in the
way he could [C] take the experimental side of it and redirect it into an idiom which he really
thought was a popular idiom.
He [E] was just driven to [G] make this sort of art _ _ _ _ dance [Ab] hit.
You know,
he figured that there could be a cross-reference [G] between dance music and downtown Soho [Gm] new [D] music.
[E] He kept saying that he wanted to write Buddhist [N] bubblegum music.
It seemed to have such a wide range of musical interests _ that at one point he would do something
that would seem _ very avant-garde or whatever you want to, word you want to use and [F] in the
next minute he would say, what I really want to do is sound like Abba.
_ _ And [D] I'd go, this seems
somewhat _ incompatible.
And yet _ _ _ after a while you would realize that he was
bringing _ strands of _ [Bm] various things together.
[C] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [D] _ _ _ [Gb] _ _ _
Often _ he would sing cello and vocal versions of his [G] dance songs, which was totally intriguing
because there's _ [Ab] many of his songs that exist [E] in both kind of formats.
He was also [A] interested in the _ _ words.
[D] He consulted me a lot for phrasing and [Eb] I kept [D] saying it should
be more [Am] detailed.
He was saying, no, the top [A] idiom is generalizations, but he was looking
for generalizations which had a slightly _ _ erotic or _ eccentric overtone.
He [G] would encourage me to appreciate stuff that I would just write off as being just commercial. _ _
_ _ He was, I know, very enamored of a lot of Italian pop music. _
Also really beautiful sounding,
but it's very, sometimes very commercial.
_ He heard something in there.
It is the mystery of the creative process.
It's the mysterious thing [C] _ that _ does not submit to
formula, [Db] [A] but which subverts the formula.
You know, when you take a formula like dance music [C] and then
the personality just comes shining [G] through.
_ [Ab] And that's what you heard in Arthur's music.
[Db] _ _ _ [Ebm] _ _ _ _ _
_ [Db] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Ab] _ _
When cataloged [G] nearly a thousand tapes, cassettes, _ [Abm] _ just there's [G] so many reels of tape [Ebm] and dats and
two-inch [Ab] masters _ that they then not only cataloged all the material, but then followed through and
put a record out.
[F] Unfortunately, his life was cut short really [G] before he could put his [B] music out.
And that's, I think that's of course part of the _ _ [Ab] devastation about so many people who are dying of
AIDS is that _ people just, you know, [Gm] won't hear about all these writers and musicians [Eb] and dancers and _ _ _ _ _
composers that are gonna, [G] _ _ or that we're not going to hear from just because _ they've
_ gotten this disease and there's no cure for it.
_ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _ _
_ [E] He always felt [F] _
that _ he could be a pop star. _ _
And that he should be one.
_ And I have to say that _ during a lot of those years, I thought it was
just an [C] Arthur idea.
When I [E] listened to the record that we actually have ended [F] up with, I think that
he was probably much more right than I was.
I think it's really somebody who was writing
music in the 70s and 80s that was very, [G] very far ahead of [C] time.
Very far ahead. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [C] _
_ [F] _ _ [Am] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Gm] _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [N] _ _ _ _