Chords for Josephine Phoenix - Like a Rolling Stone - WLRN Folk Music Radio
Tempo:
101.95 bpm
Chords used:
F
Bb
Am
C
Gm
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Okay, one last question about this reality show.
When's it going to, well, two questions.
When is it going to start?
When is it going to air?
Well, we have no set date, but the rumor has it, it should be the fall.
It's called My Life is a Telenovela, airing this fall.
So nothing's guaranteed.
You're still walking on
I'm still, hello?
I'm still a barista at Theodore's Coffeehouse.
I'm here living my life incognito, just like simmering on the possibilities of being known.
When I think of these reality TV shows, I think of drama, not made up drama, real drama.
Is there a lot of drama between you and the other actresses?
I guess that's a yes.
No, I am the benevolent piece of bohemian love.
I am a piece that visits every single character on the show, and just, I love every one of
them for their characteristics.
Oh, Josephine, everyone who watches the show is going to fall in love with you.
Oh, thank you, Michael.
You know, and since you were coming on the show and I was doing a tribute to Bob Dylan,
I asked you to see if you knew a Bob Dylan song, and you said yes, you'd be happy to perform one.
Bob Dylan really was a huge foundation to me as a musician.
I started off with the clarinet, and then I shifted-
In high school?
In middle school.
I mean, that was my dream, the New York Philharmonic and the New World Symphony Orchestra.
The clarinet!
I still play it!
I still play it, I jam out with my dad and do Brazilian songs with it.
But the first song I ever tried to learn as a singer and a guitar player was Bob Dylan,
Tambourine Man.
Okay.
And it was New York City, senior year of high school, and I was with my dad, and my dad's
like, you should try Bob Dylan and emulate that.
I was like, I can't emulate that.
But Bob Dylan was really a huge part of my foundation as a singer-songwriter.
Well, that's encouraging to know because Bob Dylan was an impact on all of American culture.
Yeah.
So before you leave, you said you do a little of something.
Yes.
You know that Bob Dylan songs felt like Bible pages, right?
With the amount of information and lyrical poetry.
So I'm going to take two verses of like a Rolling Stone.
Do you remember the first time you heard this?
I think I do.
And it was probably on a road trip in a very old white station wagon.
And my dad's a big music buff, especially the 60s and 70s.
And I think he's more of a Rolling Stones kind of guy than a Bob Dylan guy.
But since I've always loved writing and I fancy myself to be a writer, he knew that
I was going to gravitate towards his subject, right?
And what he stood for and the movement he was making.
So, yeah, I remember just being like, and I think that's why I like writers because of Bob Dylan.
I'm like, do you write?
That's sexy.
So, yeah.
Great.
So let's hear it.
Let's [F] hear what you got.
We're going to do a little [C] bit of like a Rolling Stone.
So we're going to mix up the verses, all of you Bob Dylan.
This is a challenging song.
Is [F] it?
[Bb] [C]
[F] [Am] [Bb]
All right.
[F] [Gm] [Am]
[Bb] [F] [Gm] [Am]
[Bb] [F] Once upon a [Gm] time you dressed so [Am] fine.
You threw the bombs [Bb] a dime in your [C] prime.
Didn't you?
[F] People called and said, [Gm] beware, [Am] doll, you about to fall.
You thought [Bb] that they were [C] all kidding you.
[Bb] You [C] used to laugh [Bb] about everybody that [C] was hanging [Bb] out.
Now [Am] you [Gm] don't talk so [Am] loud.
[Bb] And [Am] now you [Gm] don't feel [Am] so [Bb] proud about having [F] to be scrounging [C] your next meal.
How does [F] it feel?
[Dm]
[C] How does [F] it [Am] feel?
[Bb] To [C] be on [F] your [Gm] own [Am] with no direction [F] [Gm] home?
[A] Like a Rolling [F] Stone.
[Bb]
[Gm] [Am] [Bb] You [F] [Gm]
[Bb] [C]
[F] never turned [Gm] around to see the [Am] frowns on the jugglers and the clouds.
[Bb] Well, they're [C] all playing tricks for you.
[F] You never understood [Gm] that it ain't [Am] no good.
Shouldn't let [Bb] other people get [C] your kicks for you.
[Bb] You used to ride on a [A] chrome horse [C] with your [Bb] diplomat.
Sitting on his [C] shoulders was a Siamese [Bb] cat.
[Am] And ain't it sad when [Gm] you discover [A] [F] that [Bb] he [Am] wasn't [Gm] all [A] where it's at.
[Bb]
After he [F] took from you everything he [C] could steal.
How does [F] it [Am] feel?
[C] How does [F] it feel?
[Am]
[Bb] To be on [F] your [Dm] own [Bb] with no direction [F] home?
[Am]
[C] Like a Rolling [F] [Am] Stone.
[C] How [F] does it [Gm]
feel?
[Am] [C] How does it [Am] feel?
[C]
How does [B] it feel?
To be on your own with no direction home?
It's really out of sight here.
Denny and Rain.
No buttons to push.
[E] [Gb] [E] I'd like [B] to dedicate this song to everybody here with hearts, any kind of hearts and ears.
[G] [E] [Gb]
[Em] [Gb] [B] [N]
When's it going to, well, two questions.
When is it going to start?
When is it going to air?
Well, we have no set date, but the rumor has it, it should be the fall.
It's called My Life is a Telenovela, airing this fall.
So nothing's guaranteed.
You're still walking on
I'm still, hello?
I'm still a barista at Theodore's Coffeehouse.
I'm here living my life incognito, just like simmering on the possibilities of being known.
When I think of these reality TV shows, I think of drama, not made up drama, real drama.
Is there a lot of drama between you and the other actresses?
I guess that's a yes.
No, I am the benevolent piece of bohemian love.
I am a piece that visits every single character on the show, and just, I love every one of
them for their characteristics.
Oh, Josephine, everyone who watches the show is going to fall in love with you.
Oh, thank you, Michael.
You know, and since you were coming on the show and I was doing a tribute to Bob Dylan,
I asked you to see if you knew a Bob Dylan song, and you said yes, you'd be happy to perform one.
Bob Dylan really was a huge foundation to me as a musician.
I started off with the clarinet, and then I shifted-
In high school?
In middle school.
I mean, that was my dream, the New York Philharmonic and the New World Symphony Orchestra.
The clarinet!
I still play it!
I still play it, I jam out with my dad and do Brazilian songs with it.
But the first song I ever tried to learn as a singer and a guitar player was Bob Dylan,
Tambourine Man.
Okay.
And it was New York City, senior year of high school, and I was with my dad, and my dad's
like, you should try Bob Dylan and emulate that.
I was like, I can't emulate that.
But Bob Dylan was really a huge part of my foundation as a singer-songwriter.
Well, that's encouraging to know because Bob Dylan was an impact on all of American culture.
Yeah.
So before you leave, you said you do a little of something.
Yes.
You know that Bob Dylan songs felt like Bible pages, right?
With the amount of information and lyrical poetry.
So I'm going to take two verses of like a Rolling Stone.
Do you remember the first time you heard this?
I think I do.
And it was probably on a road trip in a very old white station wagon.
And my dad's a big music buff, especially the 60s and 70s.
And I think he's more of a Rolling Stones kind of guy than a Bob Dylan guy.
But since I've always loved writing and I fancy myself to be a writer, he knew that
I was going to gravitate towards his subject, right?
And what he stood for and the movement he was making.
So, yeah, I remember just being like, and I think that's why I like writers because of Bob Dylan.
I'm like, do you write?
That's sexy.
So, yeah.
Great.
So let's hear it.
Let's [F] hear what you got.
We're going to do a little [C] bit of like a Rolling Stone.
So we're going to mix up the verses, all of you Bob Dylan.
This is a challenging song.
Is [F] it?
[Bb] [C]
[F] [Am] [Bb]
All right.
[F] [Gm] [Am]
[Bb] [F] [Gm] [Am]
[Bb] [F] Once upon a [Gm] time you dressed so [Am] fine.
You threw the bombs [Bb] a dime in your [C] prime.
Didn't you?
[F] People called and said, [Gm] beware, [Am] doll, you about to fall.
You thought [Bb] that they were [C] all kidding you.
[Bb] You [C] used to laugh [Bb] about everybody that [C] was hanging [Bb] out.
Now [Am] you [Gm] don't talk so [Am] loud.
[Bb] And [Am] now you [Gm] don't feel [Am] so [Bb] proud about having [F] to be scrounging [C] your next meal.
How does [F] it feel?
[Dm]
[C] How does [F] it [Am] feel?
[Bb] To [C] be on [F] your [Gm] own [Am] with no direction [F] [Gm] home?
[A] Like a Rolling [F] Stone.
[Bb]
[Gm] [Am] [Bb] You [F] [Gm]
[Bb] [C]
[F] never turned [Gm] around to see the [Am] frowns on the jugglers and the clouds.
[Bb] Well, they're [C] all playing tricks for you.
[F] You never understood [Gm] that it ain't [Am] no good.
Shouldn't let [Bb] other people get [C] your kicks for you.
[Bb] You used to ride on a [A] chrome horse [C] with your [Bb] diplomat.
Sitting on his [C] shoulders was a Siamese [Bb] cat.
[Am] And ain't it sad when [Gm] you discover [A] [F] that [Bb] he [Am] wasn't [Gm] all [A] where it's at.
[Bb]
After he [F] took from you everything he [C] could steal.
How does [F] it [Am] feel?
[C] How does [F] it feel?
[Am]
[Bb] To be on [F] your [Dm] own [Bb] with no direction [F] home?
[Am]
[C] Like a Rolling [F] [Am] Stone.
[C] How [F] does it [Gm]
feel?
[Am] [C] How does it [Am] feel?
[C]
How does [B] it feel?
To be on your own with no direction home?
It's really out of sight here.
Denny and Rain.
No buttons to push.
[E] [Gb] [E] I'd like [B] to dedicate this song to everybody here with hearts, any kind of hearts and ears.
[G] [E] [Gb]
[Em] [Gb] [B] [N]
Key:
F
Bb
Am
C
Gm
F
Bb
Am
Okay, one last question about this reality show.
When's it going to, well, two questions.
When is it going to start?
When is it going to air?
Well, we have no set date, but the rumor has it, it should be the fall.
It's called My Life is a Telenovela, airing this fall.
So nothing's guaranteed.
You're still walking on_
I'm still, hello?
I'm still a barista at Theodore's Coffeehouse.
I'm here living my life incognito, just like simmering on the possibilities of being known.
When I think of these reality TV shows, I think of drama, not made up drama, real drama.
Is there a lot of drama between you and the other actresses?
I guess that's a yes.
No, I am the benevolent piece of bohemian love.
I am a piece that visits every single character on the show, and just, I love every one of
them for their characteristics.
Oh, Josephine, everyone who watches the show is going to fall in love with you.
Oh, thank you, Michael.
You know, and since you were coming on the show and I was doing a tribute to Bob Dylan,
I asked you to see if you knew a Bob Dylan song, and you said yes, you'd be happy to perform one.
Bob Dylan really was a huge foundation to me as a musician.
I started off with the clarinet, and then I shifted-
In high school?
In middle school.
I mean, that was my dream, the New York Philharmonic and the New World Symphony Orchestra.
The clarinet!
I still play it!
I still play it, I jam out with my dad and do Brazilian songs with it.
But the first song I ever tried to learn as a singer and a guitar player was Bob Dylan,
Tambourine Man.
Okay.
And it was New York City, senior year of high school, and I was with my dad, and my dad's
like, you should try Bob Dylan and emulate that.
_ I was like, I can't emulate that.
But Bob Dylan was really a huge part of my foundation as a singer-songwriter.
Well, that's encouraging to know because Bob Dylan was an impact on all of American culture.
Yeah.
So before you leave, you said you do a little of something.
Yes.
You know that Bob Dylan songs felt like Bible pages, right?
With the amount of information and lyrical poetry.
So I'm going to take two verses of like a Rolling Stone.
Do you remember the first time you heard this?
I think I do.
And it was probably on a road trip in a very old white station wagon.
And my dad's a big music buff, especially the 60s and 70s.
And I think he's more of a Rolling Stones kind of guy than a Bob Dylan guy.
But since I've always loved writing and I fancy myself to be a writer, he knew that
I was going to gravitate towards his subject, right?
And what he stood for and the movement he was making.
So, yeah, I remember just being like, and I think that's why I like writers because of Bob Dylan.
I'm like, do you write?
That's sexy.
_ _ So, yeah.
Great.
So let's hear it.
Let's [F] hear what you got.
_ We're going to do a little [C] bit of like a Rolling Stone.
So we're going to mix up the verses, all of you Bob Dylan.
This is a challenging song.
Is [F] it?
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ [C] _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _ [Bb] _
_ All right.
[F] _ _ [Gm] _ [Am] _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ [F] _ _ [Gm] _ _ [Am] _
_ [Bb] _ _ [F] Once upon a [Gm] time you dressed so [Am] fine.
You threw the bombs [Bb] a dime in your [C] prime.
_ Didn't you?
_ _ _ [F] People called and said, [Gm] beware, [Am] doll, you about to fall.
You thought [Bb] that they were [C] all _ kidding you.
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ You [C] used to laugh [Bb] about _ everybody that [C] was hanging [Bb] out.
Now [Am] you [Gm] don't talk so [Am] loud.
[Bb] And [Am] now you [Gm] don't feel [Am] so [Bb] proud about having [F] to be scrounging [C] your next meal. _
_ _ _ How does [F] it feel?
[Dm] _
_ [C] _ _ How does [F] it [Am] feel?
_ [Bb] _ To [C] be on [F] your [Gm] own _ [Am] with no direction [F] _ [Gm] home?
_ [A] _ Like a Rolling [F] Stone.
[Bb] _
[Gm] _ [Am] _ [Bb] You _ [F] _ _ [Gm] _
_ [Bb] _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [F] never turned [Gm] around to see the [Am] frowns on the jugglers and the clouds.
[Bb] Well, they're [C] all playing tricks for you.
_ _ [F] You never understood [Gm] that it ain't [Am] no good.
Shouldn't let [Bb] other people get [C] your _ kicks for you.
_ _ _ [Bb] You used to ride on a [A] chrome horse [C] with your [Bb] diplomat.
_ Sitting on his [C] shoulders was a Siamese [Bb] cat.
[Am] And ain't it sad when [Gm] you discover [A] [F] that [Bb] he [Am] wasn't [Gm] all [A] where it's at.
[Bb] _ _
After he [F] took from you everything he [C] could steal.
How _ _ does [F] it [Am] feel?
_ [C] _ _ How does [F] it feel?
[Am] _
_ [Bb] _ To be on [F] your [Dm] own _ [Bb] with no direction [F] home?
[Am] _
_ [C] _ Like a Rolling [F] _ [Am] Stone.
_ [C] _ _ How [F] does it _ [Gm]
feel?
[Am] _ _ _ _ _ [C] How _ _ does it _ [Am] feel?
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
How does _ _ _ [B] it feel?
To be on your own with no direction home? _
It's really out of sight here.
Denny and Rain.
No buttons to push. _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ [Gb] _ [E] I'd like [B] to dedicate this song to everybody here with hearts, any kind of hearts and ears. _
_ [G] _ _ _ [E] _ _ _ [Gb] _
_ [Em] _ _ [Gb] _ [B] _ _ _ [N] _
When's it going to, well, two questions.
When is it going to start?
When is it going to air?
Well, we have no set date, but the rumor has it, it should be the fall.
It's called My Life is a Telenovela, airing this fall.
So nothing's guaranteed.
You're still walking on_
I'm still, hello?
I'm still a barista at Theodore's Coffeehouse.
I'm here living my life incognito, just like simmering on the possibilities of being known.
When I think of these reality TV shows, I think of drama, not made up drama, real drama.
Is there a lot of drama between you and the other actresses?
I guess that's a yes.
No, I am the benevolent piece of bohemian love.
I am a piece that visits every single character on the show, and just, I love every one of
them for their characteristics.
Oh, Josephine, everyone who watches the show is going to fall in love with you.
Oh, thank you, Michael.
You know, and since you were coming on the show and I was doing a tribute to Bob Dylan,
I asked you to see if you knew a Bob Dylan song, and you said yes, you'd be happy to perform one.
Bob Dylan really was a huge foundation to me as a musician.
I started off with the clarinet, and then I shifted-
In high school?
In middle school.
I mean, that was my dream, the New York Philharmonic and the New World Symphony Orchestra.
The clarinet!
I still play it!
I still play it, I jam out with my dad and do Brazilian songs with it.
But the first song I ever tried to learn as a singer and a guitar player was Bob Dylan,
Tambourine Man.
Okay.
And it was New York City, senior year of high school, and I was with my dad, and my dad's
like, you should try Bob Dylan and emulate that.
_ I was like, I can't emulate that.
But Bob Dylan was really a huge part of my foundation as a singer-songwriter.
Well, that's encouraging to know because Bob Dylan was an impact on all of American culture.
Yeah.
So before you leave, you said you do a little of something.
Yes.
You know that Bob Dylan songs felt like Bible pages, right?
With the amount of information and lyrical poetry.
So I'm going to take two verses of like a Rolling Stone.
Do you remember the first time you heard this?
I think I do.
And it was probably on a road trip in a very old white station wagon.
And my dad's a big music buff, especially the 60s and 70s.
And I think he's more of a Rolling Stones kind of guy than a Bob Dylan guy.
But since I've always loved writing and I fancy myself to be a writer, he knew that
I was going to gravitate towards his subject, right?
And what he stood for and the movement he was making.
So, yeah, I remember just being like, and I think that's why I like writers because of Bob Dylan.
I'm like, do you write?
That's sexy.
_ _ So, yeah.
Great.
So let's hear it.
Let's [F] hear what you got.
_ We're going to do a little [C] bit of like a Rolling Stone.
So we're going to mix up the verses, all of you Bob Dylan.
This is a challenging song.
Is [F] it?
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ [C] _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _ [Bb] _
_ All right.
[F] _ _ [Gm] _ [Am] _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ [F] _ _ [Gm] _ _ [Am] _
_ [Bb] _ _ [F] Once upon a [Gm] time you dressed so [Am] fine.
You threw the bombs [Bb] a dime in your [C] prime.
_ Didn't you?
_ _ _ [F] People called and said, [Gm] beware, [Am] doll, you about to fall.
You thought [Bb] that they were [C] all _ kidding you.
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ You [C] used to laugh [Bb] about _ everybody that [C] was hanging [Bb] out.
Now [Am] you [Gm] don't talk so [Am] loud.
[Bb] And [Am] now you [Gm] don't feel [Am] so [Bb] proud about having [F] to be scrounging [C] your next meal. _
_ _ _ How does [F] it feel?
[Dm] _
_ [C] _ _ How does [F] it [Am] feel?
_ [Bb] _ To [C] be on [F] your [Gm] own _ [Am] with no direction [F] _ [Gm] home?
_ [A] _ Like a Rolling [F] Stone.
[Bb] _
[Gm] _ [Am] _ [Bb] You _ [F] _ _ [Gm] _
_ [Bb] _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [F] never turned [Gm] around to see the [Am] frowns on the jugglers and the clouds.
[Bb] Well, they're [C] all playing tricks for you.
_ _ [F] You never understood [Gm] that it ain't [Am] no good.
Shouldn't let [Bb] other people get [C] your _ kicks for you.
_ _ _ [Bb] You used to ride on a [A] chrome horse [C] with your [Bb] diplomat.
_ Sitting on his [C] shoulders was a Siamese [Bb] cat.
[Am] And ain't it sad when [Gm] you discover [A] [F] that [Bb] he [Am] wasn't [Gm] all [A] where it's at.
[Bb] _ _
After he [F] took from you everything he [C] could steal.
How _ _ does [F] it [Am] feel?
_ [C] _ _ How does [F] it feel?
[Am] _
_ [Bb] _ To be on [F] your [Dm] own _ [Bb] with no direction [F] home?
[Am] _
_ [C] _ Like a Rolling [F] _ [Am] Stone.
_ [C] _ _ How [F] does it _ [Gm]
feel?
[Am] _ _ _ _ _ [C] How _ _ does it _ [Am] feel?
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
How does _ _ _ [B] it feel?
To be on your own with no direction home? _
It's really out of sight here.
Denny and Rain.
No buttons to push. _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ [Gb] _ [E] I'd like [B] to dedicate this song to everybody here with hearts, any kind of hearts and ears. _
_ [G] _ _ _ [E] _ _ _ [Gb] _
_ [Em] _ _ [Gb] _ [B] _ _ _ [N] _