Home » P » Paul Kelly »

Paul Kelly - The Droving Woman Chords

Artists:  A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z # 

The Droving Woman Chords

(ver. 1)
Paul Kelly
(Live)
Artists: Paul Kelly, Dan Kelly & Missy Higgins
Written: Kev Carmody
Tempo:   4|4
Style:   Moderato

Capo 6

Chords:  EADGBe
C:       332010
Am:      X02210
G:       320003
F:       133211


Intro:
|C  Am  G|C  Am  G|C  Am  G|C  G  F|


Verse 1:
      C              Am          G
Well, she buried him down on the edge of the town,
      C            Am              G
Where the brigalow suckers, on the cemetery creep.
    C          Am                 G
She stood with them children in a heavy brown gown,
         C             G            F
What you want you just can't always keep.


Verse 2:
      C           Am       G
"Well I'm sorry", I said, "I knew him so well",
       C                        G
Though your body is young, well you never can tell.
     Em          C           Am           G
When the hand of fate brings it's fateful death knell",
         C               G            F
She just turned with the slightest of smiles.


Verse 3:
    C              Am            G
She said "From the start well we knewed it so hard,
   C           Am         G
We were always handed the severest of cards.
C           Am            G
A honeymoon spent droving Jamieson's stock,
C                   G             F
Through the wildest winter you've seen.


Verse 4:
       C        Am         G
And my Romantic notions of horses and land,
          C        Am          G
They were soon dis-pelled as a fantasised dream.
         C         Am           G
Watching cattle at night in the mid-winter cold,
        C            G        F
Turns a person, both wiry and old.


Verse 5:
     C                Am             G
Well the flame of the breakfast fire'd be dead,
   C            Am           G
As the sun rose up, well you move up ahead.
       C            Am          G
I'd be breaking the camp up and rolling the beds,
       C          G               F
As you fanned the stock wider for feed.


Verse 6:
         C              Am            G
When the weather turned sour with the onset of rain,
        C              Am          G
An' the truck'd bogged down to the axle main.
     C       Am              G
We'd move up ahead then with pack saddles and chains,
    C               G          F
And I'd wait in the mud by the road.


Verse 7:
         C            Am             G
With the blankets and the canvas all hung out to dry,
        C           Am                 G
There's nothing for heating 'cause you couldn't light a fire.
    C        Am             G
And no stock permit for the forthcoming shire.
    C               G           F
(No lyric line)


Verse 8:
    C                Am                 G
For the cattle don't camp where they're sloshing in rain,
     C            Am                       G
They keep walking forward all night like a dog on a chain.
    C                    Am           G
And he'd be red eyed and weary with a pack horse turned lame,
        C          G             F
And I'd wait miles behind in the mud.


Instrumental Solo 1: (Violin over)
|C  Am  G |C  Am  G|C  Am  G|C  G  F|


Verse 9:
       C            Am                G
It was down through Charleville up to Julia Creek,
          C         Am         G
Living on syrup and damper and salted corn meat.
       C                Am           G
We had nothing but the 'roos and the mailman to meet,
     C           G             F
We'd move up and down with the rains.


Verse 10:
    C           Am             G
But them inland skies have the starriest of nights,
         C            Am            G
With the dance of the fire throwing flickering lights.
    C              Am             G
The beauty of it's sunsets were a constant delight,
       C           G          F
I felt that nature had let me intrude.


Verse 11:
    C        Am               G
The enormous vastness of them inland plains,
       C            Am                       G
Brings you a lonely contentment to which you can't put a name.
     C                Am         G
It's a satisfied glow city folks seldom attain,
     C                     G           F
They spend their life on a right rigid rail.


Verse 12:
    C              Am                 G
The kids got their schooling from the government mail,
   C            Am               G
We posted their work off at each cattle sale.
C               Am                G
They considered their learning, a self imposed jail,
       C           G                F
They'd rather help their father and fail.


Instrumental Solo 2: (Violin over)
|C  Am  G|C Am  G|C  Am  G|C  G  F|


Verse 13:
      C                 Am         G
Early last month at the end of the dry,
       C       Am       G
He was given a horse no-body could ride.
C              Am          G
Alert were his ears with a fire in his stride,
       C             G          F
He was young and his spirit was wild.


Verse 14:
   C              Am             G
To catch him each morning was an hour long battle,
          C               Am           G
We had to collar rope his near side to throw on the saddle.
        C        Am              G
Or he'd bite and he'd strike, he made my nerves rattle,
      C      G                 F
Pande-monium reigned with each ride.


Verse 15:
         C            Am             G
It was a hot summers' mornin' at the government bore,
            C                Am              G
There was a stillness around like I've never felt before.
             C       Am              G
How could he know it was fate at his door,
         C          G            F
That was stealthily watchin' his moves.


Verse 16:
   C          Am           G
He mounted up quick taking slack from the reins,
        C              Am            G
Grabbed a full hand of hair from the horse's long mane.
     C                   Am             G
He'd just hit the saddle when the horse went insane,
         C         G         F
Churning dust in a frenzy of fear.


Verse 17:
    C                   Am            G
The girth on the saddle let go at the ring,
    C                 Am                G
The surcingle slipped it was impossible to cling.
               C            Am        G
The horse felt it go made a desperate fling,
       C             G             F
He was thrown to the length of the reins.


Verse 18:
    C                 Am               G
And I heard his spine snap like a 'roo shooters' shot,
     C          Am          G
He'd busted his back on the concreted trough.
C                 Am                G
Sickness and fear were the feelings I got,
        C            G        F
For the doctor was a six hour drive.


Verse 19:
    C               Am                  G
And I looked at his face and his colour turned white,
          C                Am              G
He turned slowly and said "I can't make it till night.
C                  Am           G
My body is broken, I'm bleedin' inside",
        C           G            F
And the life slowly drained from his eyes.


Instrumental Solo 3: (Violin over)
|C  Am  G |C  Am  G|C  Am  G|C  G  F|
|C  Am  G |C  Am  G|C  Am  G|C  G  F|


Verse 20:
            C                     Am            G
'Guess I'll sell up the plant now and move back to town,
           C              Am           G
Before the winter returns with a chill on the ground.
C                  Am                 G
'Cause what I have lost can seldom be found,
      C            G               F
I was blessed with the gentlest of men.


Verse 21:
           C                 Am          G
Eventually the children will move to the east,
               C                Am                   G
But I couldn't stand the bustle of even a quiet city street.
C                Am                        G
I'll stay in the scrub here where my heart really beats,
    C             G          F
For some dogs are too old to change.

[End]


Notes:
1. As performed on SBS's 'RockWiz", The Duets - 
2. Writing for The Courier-Mail, Noel Mengel praised the album and said that it was
"more than just another tribute album [...] a powerful album in its own right as well as an
introduction to a diverse body of work". He noted the diversity of styles of the cover 
versions and called Paul Kelly, Augie March and Missy Higgins' version of "Droving Woman"
            
Submit corrections

↑ Back to top | Tablatures and chords for acoustic guitar and electric guitar, ukulele, drums are parodies/interpretations of the original songs. You may use it for private study, scholarship, research or language learning purposes only