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The Story of Graceland as Told Chords by Paul Simon

  • Key: E
  • BPM: 118
  • Capo: no capo
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THE STORY OF GRACELAND AS TOLD CHORDS

[Start]

[Verse]
E                                           N.C. 
 The Graceland story is a very interesting story
N.C.                                                         
In that it's a very good example of how a collaboration works
N.C.                                      
Even when you're not aware of it occurring
N.C.                                
The track is one of the early tracks
N.C.                                          
Because I only did five tracks in South Africa
N.C.                                  
On the sessions that I did with Forere
N.C.                       
Who is the accordion player
N.C.                      
Plays on Boy in the Bubble
N.C.                     
We did a few other tracks
N.C.                    
One of the tracks I said
                E                             
You know I like  only the drums on this track
               E                 
I don't really want anything else
E                                 
I don't want the accordion or bass
E                    
I just want the drums
    E             
And the drums were
E                                          
Something like a kind of a traveling rhythm
E               
In country music
                      E  
I'm a big Sun Records fan
                                   E      
Early fifty's midminus fifty's Sun Records
                   E         
You hear that drum beat a lot
            A                           
Like a fast  Johnny Cash type of rhythm
    C#m       N.C.                          
And somewhere later in the week of recording
N.C.                                                          
When I had you know put together a rhythm section of Ray Phiri
N.C.                                                      
And Bakithi Kumalo and Isaac Mtshali as the rhythm section
N.C.                                          
I said to Ray one day I like this drum pattern
N.C.                                                   
Take a listen to it and see if it does anything for you
N.C.                                                 
You know it sounds kind of like a country thing to me
N.C.                                                    
So he starts to play his version of American country Ray
                                       C#m             
He was in the key of E and then he was playing you know
               C#m             
Of course he's playing electric
                         C#m          
But he'd be up over here you know like


[Chorus]
             C#m            
And then the drums are going
        C#m    
Oh then he went
           C#m                             
Which is a relative minor chord to that key


[Intro]
A Amaj7 B B7 E A
          


[Verse]
                  C#m7                                     
I said Hey that's interesting that you played a minor chord
                C#m7                              
Because all the music that I'd been recording with
   B                                                 
In South Africa with the exception of the Sotho music
                      N.C.        
It was all threechord major chords
N.C.                             
And there was never a minor chord
N.C.                                                             
There were times when I'd ask Black Mambazo to sing a minor chord
N.C.                            
They couldn't sing a minor chord
N.C.                    
They just didn't hear it
N.C.                                    
So he put in this minor chord and I said
N.C.                                
That's interesting why'd you do that
N.C.                                          
He said I was just imitating the way you write
                                B  E
I said Well play this lick over it 
      A      
In an overdub
    E               C#m7         C#m                 
And  he did and it was a really nice really nice mix
                C#m    
And Bakithi was playing
B E B E A C#m B A
         


[Inst]
E A E
  


[Verse]
                                    N.C. 
The track has a beautiful emptiness to it
N.C.                                                
I think that's part of what makes me think that it's
N.C.                      
Something like Sun Records
N.C.                                           
You know when it was just a few instruments and
N.C.                                               
Nothing really much except slapback echo and a song
N.C.                                                                 
There's also another connection musically that's in there and that is
N.C.                                 
There's a pedal steel guitar in there
N.C.                                                     
Which is a of course a you know like a country instrument
                                        C#m                       B            E             
But it's also a West African instrument and the guy who played it his name was Demola Adepoju
   E                                
He played with King Sunny Ade's band
                                         A           
You know I wanted to hear what that lick sounded like
E                                                    A
Seemed like it would be a very good pedal steel lick 


[Chorus]
E                                              E7                     A           C#m
And it was a great pedal steel lick but it was also a great Ray Phiri performance   


[Verse]
B E                                N.C.                       
 To me what's interesting is that Ray reaches into his memory
N.C.                                                                   
For some kind of approximation of what he thinks of as American country
                                        E       A     
And Bakithi plays straight ahead to the African groove
                   C#m                        C#7        
And so the two you know the two musics find a commonality
        B     B7           E   
And the lyric   expresses that
             E                      
Don and Phil Everly came in and sang
                               D                       A   
I always heard that songs as a perfect Everly Brothers song
E             N.C.                  
Poor boys and pilgrims with families
N.C.                         
And we are going to Graceland


[Chorus]
N.C.                                          
I was down in South Africa in I think February
N.C.                                                                     
Maybe early March and I think I didn't go down to Memphis until maybe May


[Verse]
N.C.                                           
Brought it home and I was trying to write to it
N.C.                                             
I would you know sing these lines about Graceland
N.C.                                                                 
Graceland of course I wanted to get rid of the Graceland part because
N.C.                                                                     
I mean what's Graceland got to do with South Africa or anything like that
N.C.              
So that's gotta go
N.C.                                                     
It's just a question of what I'm going to replace it with
N.C.                                        
But then I couldn't replace it with anything
N.C.                     
I was always singing that
N.C.                                                                      
And finally I said I don't know well maybe I'm supposed to go to Graceland
N.C.                                                                                      
I've never been maybe I'm supposed to go on a trip and see what I'm writing about So I did
N.C.                                     
And and then I began to describe the trip
N.C.                 
The Mississippi Delta
N.C.                                  
'cause I was driving up from Louisiana
            C#m                  B           
Where I cut    the Zydeco track on Graceland
                   B               
I was driving from Highway sixtyone
E                                                                 
 You know I'm just writing about what the countryside looked like


[Chorus]
    E                
The Mississippi Delta
                            A     
Was shining like a national guitar
C#m                     
I am following the river
         C#m    
Down the highway
                          B        
Through the cradle of the Civil War
    G        E                  
I'm going to Graceland Graceland
E                
Memphis Tennessee
          G  E        
I'm going to Graceland


[Verse]
                             D                
And finally got there to you know to Graceland
N.C.                                           
And just you know made a tour through Graceland
N.C.                                            
But what's interesting about all of this is that
N.C.                                        
The part of me that had Graceland in my head
N.C.                                                                  
I think subconsciously was reacting to what I first heard in the drums
N.C.                                                
Which was a kind of Sun Records countryblues amalgam
N.C.                                                           
And what Ray was doing was mixing up his aural recollections of
                                           A     E               
What American country was and what kind of chord changes I played


[Inst]
D E7 E E7 A7 E7 E
          


[Verse]
                                     N.C.                        
And so the whole song really is just one sound evoking a response
N.C.                                                                        
And that eventually became a lyric that evoked instead of being specifically
N.C.                                                     
About a South African subject or even a political subject
N.C.                                                             
It became a traveling song that had to do with the original sound
N.C.                                                     
Which was the drums and and and Sun Records and Graceland
N.C.                                                                              
That's really the secret of world music is people are able to listen to each other
N.C.                                          
And make associations and play their own music
                 E                 E              
That sounds like it fits into into another culture
A7  A                 A7                           C#m           
And that's how that's how it worked and that's how it worked then


[Chorus]
             B        
The story of Graceland
B          
Ooh ooh ooh
   E                         E7        E
In Graceland in Graceland in Graceland 
             E7       
I'm going to Graceland
E D E E7 D A E
       


[End]
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