Bon Iver is a Grammy Award winning folk band from Eau Claire, Wisconsin, United States, and one of Justin Vernon's current and most notable music projects to date. The band also consists of Mike Noyce, Sean Carey and Matt MacCaughan.
The name 'Bon Iver' (pronounced "bon ee-VAIR") is a play on the French phrase 'bon hiver' meaning 'good winter'. Vernon independently released Bon Iver's debut album For Emma, Forever Ago in 2007, most of which was recorded during a four-month stay in a remote cabin in Wisconsin.
Four years of hard work!This month of May we celebrated four years on the air. We continue working on the dissemination of this wonderful instrument, thank you for participating in our story!
------------------------------------------------------- The Wolves (Act 1 and II) - Bon Iver ------------------------------------------------------- Tabbed by: Greg Lisi Email: [email protected]
I searched and I searched, listened, then listened again, and I wasn't entirely convinced of the tunings previously posted for this beautiful song. The chords were no doubt correct, but after finding some relatively close-up shots of Justin playing this in concert on YouTube and listening further, I can say with a fair degree of confidence that this is the way he plays it live (with the exception of the La Blogotheque's Un Concert A Emporter clip where he is playing it on an acoustic and in standard tuning it would seem).
Also, I shouldn't neglect to mention that the tab posted by [email protected] was helpful and it would be an injustice not to give him/her credit for the top three strings (FAc). My ear (and the rest of me) thanks you for giving me a basis with which to start.
Plus, I do want give some due to the "Ver 2" tab posted with the Open F9 tuning (sorry, but I couldn't find your name on the tab to address you directly). It too was close and has similar chord shapes to the tab I am posting, but in the end the Open F9 tuning just didn't sound right to me.
The full lyrics and chord changes have already been provided in other tabs so I'm gonna skip that here as well as all the little add-ons and harmonics that Justin puts into the song, all of which I don't have the time to tab out properly here.
Tuning: DFCFAc Song Key: F
[Intro, Verse] ("Someday my pain, someday my pain will mark you")
Pick the 5th, 4th, 2nd, and 1st strings on Dm and C chords arpeggio-style (as in a broken chord) making sure to let the high c on the 1st string ring out as you move back down the neck to the F. Listen to him play it live to figure out the exact timing. It's fairly simple.
[Bridge/Chorus] ("With the wild wolves around you" and "What might have been lost")
All the chords here are strummed fully and I leave it up to you whether or not you want to play the open D (6th string) on the C chord (I do). It creates a nice pedal tone through the progression, which ever so subtly helps that dissonant quality as it crescendoes to that frenetic discordant climax (personally one of my favorite aspects of his music).
Please feel free to e-mail me with any corrections, additional info, or just to let me know how it worked out for you.
INVERTED PEDAL TONE (FAc)
P.S. If you're interested, here are the notes, a little theory, and more on those cool pedal tones.
F (F,A,C) Dm (D,F,A) C (C,G) Bb (Bb,D,F) c|----c-------------c--------------c------------c-------| A|----A-------------A--------------A------------A-------| F|----F-------------F--------------F------------F-------| C|----C-------------A--------------G------------F-------| F|----F-------------D--------------C------------Bb------| D|----F-------------D--------------X------------D-------|
When played in both the verse and chorus the 1st (high c), 2nd (A), and 3rd (F) strings create an inverted pedal tone, thus a dissonance occurs in the C and Bb major chords which resolves to a consonance in the F major chord (in the verse) and therefore doesn't change the root or tonal centers of those chords.
Because of this, I hesitate to name the Dm a 7th chord, even though its flatted 7th (c) is there, nor do I think it's appropriate to name the C chord, C6sus4, even though it's missing its 3rd (E) and is replaced by a suspended 4th (F) along with its 6th (A). The same holds true for the Bb chord which although it has its 7th (A) and its 9th (c) and is technically a Bbmaj9, I think it's safe to call it a Bb.