(trad., John/Alan Lomax)
Recorded in Bonnie Beecher's appartment, with Tony Glover at the
recording wheels, on what came to be known as the Minnesota
Hotel Tape (Released on No direction home [2005]). Also played once during the second Rolling Thunder Revue
(Apr 25, 1976) in a duet with Joan Baez.
Tabbed by Eyolf Østrem
Dylan told Bonnie Beecher that he learned the song from a woman called Dink. So did Alan Lomax, several years earlier... Read the whole story in The Telegraph, or in Roger McGuinn's Folk Den, where you can also hear his version of the song.
Capo 3rd fret (Original key Eb major)
Played by alternately lowering and raising all the fingers in a steady rhythmical pattern over the chords C and F, later G and Am:
C F C F : . . . : . . . |-----------------|-----------------| |-1-----1---0-1-0-|-1-----1---0-1-0-| |-0-----2---0-2-0-|-0-----2---0-2-0-| |-2-----3---0-3-0-|-2-----3---0-3-0-| etc. |-3-----3---0-3-0-|-3-----3---0-3-0-| |-----------------|-----------------|
This pattern is usually repeated also at the end of each line, so that the first line is:
C F C F C F C F If I had wings
Chords (The 1st string should be kept silent, except in the Am chord):
C 332010 F(maj) x33210 Am 002210 G 320003
The turn to G at the end is very rudimentary in some verses – occasionally it isn't even there but he goes straight to the C-F-thing instead.
And don't forget the foot, tapping the rhythm a la John Lee Hooker.
C F C F C F C F If I had wings C F C F like Noah's dove, C F Am I'd fly the river C F to the one I love. C Am F G Fare thee well, my honey, C F fare thee well. I had a man who was long and tall, moved his body like a cannonball. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. 'member one evening was drizzling rain, and round my heart I felt an aching pain. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. Once I wore my apron low, couldn't keep you away from my door. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. Now my apron is up to my chin, you'll pass my door but you'll never come in. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. Mighty river runs muddy and wild, can't care the bloody for my unborn child. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. Number nine train done no harm, number nine train, take my poor baby home. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. Fastest man I ever saw, was in Missouri on the way to Arkansas. Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well.
Glover: Is that the way the original goes?
Bob: Huh?
Glover: Is that the way the original goes?
Bob: That's the way I heard it. I heard that from a lady named Dink. I
don't know who wrote it. Hah!
Capo 2nd fret
G If I had wings C G like Noah's dove, Em I'd fly the river C to the one I love. G C/g G Fare thee well, my honey, C G fare thee well.