Scotland's greatest living Australian. Or the other way around, depending on how you look at it.
Born in Peebles, Scotland, and emigrating to Australia in 1969, he currently resides near Adelaide, South Australia. Written in 1972, And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda is perhaps his best-known song, being a haunting evocation of the ANZAC experience fighting in the Battle of Gallipoli. It has also been interpreted as a reaction to the Vietnam War.
Quatro anos de trabalho duro!Neste mês de maio fizemos quatro anos no ar. Continuamos trabalhando na divulgação deste maravilhoso instrumento, obrigado por participar da nossa história!
#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE---------------------------------# #This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the # #song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research. # #------------------------------------------------------------------------------## Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
Revised from numeric notation to Key of C
NOW I'M EASY Time: 2/2 (syncopated) Tenor: D Bass: C - Eric Bogle, 1985?, Record: Now I'm Easy - Record: Wild Colonial Boys, Best Album (as: The Cockie Farmer) - Source: Eric Bogle Songbook, page 15 (D)
DD7G * For nearly sixty years, I've been a cocky D * A7 * Of droughts and fires and floods, I've lived through plenty DD7GD Yes, this country's dust and mud, has seen my tears and blood * A7GD But it's nearly over now, and now I'm easy___
DD7G * I married a fine girl when I was twenty D * A7 * But she died in giving birth when she was thirty DD7GD No Flying Doctor then, just a gentle old black gin * A7GD But it's nearly over now, and now I'm easy___
DD7G * She left me with two sons and a daughter D * A7 * And a bone-dry farm whose soil cried out for water DD7GD So my care was rough and ready, but they grew up fine and steady * A7GD But it's nearly over now, and now I'm easy___
DD7G * My daughter married young, and went her own way D * A7 * My sons lie buried by the Burma Railway DD7GD So on this land I've made my own, I've carried on a-lone * A7GD But it's nearly over now, and now I'm easy___
City folks, these days, despise the cocky Say with subsidies and all, we've had it easy But there's no drought or starving stock, on your sewered suburban block But it's nearly over now, and now I'm easy
ENDING: REPEAT FIRST VERSE
NOTES: - "*" in chord line represents a new bar, play same chord - "." in the lyric line represents a 1/8 note rest - Gin ("Jen"): an Australian aboriginal woman - The term is now considered as derogatory as "squaw"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Barrie McCombs, MD, CCFP(EM) | Family Physician by Day | | [email protected] | Folk Musician by Night | | Voice: (403) 220-8551 | | | Fax: (403) 270-2330 | "Semper Ubi, Sub Ubi" | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------