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Home R Rise Against Chamber The Cartridge Intro Guitar Tab

This song has the coolest intro...
e------------------------------------------------------|
b------------------------------------------------------|
g----------------------------------------------O-------|
d-----O-1--O-1-3-1-O-1-O--------O-1--O-1-3-1-O---3-1---|O
a--3---------------------3-1-3-------------------------|
e------------------------------------------------------| (2X) then pick slide
On the second time around end on a--3.
The intro was easy to figure out...there's another way to play it that's all on the a
but i think this is easier...now I just have to figure out the rest of the song!
let me know if you think this is right or if you have any suggestions for the rest of
song... jmaye_33@hotmail.com


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Tab Discussion, Comments, and Critiques
 
 
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R.I.P Dimebag D
Professional
#1 by R.I.P Dimebag Darrell at Sep 29, 2007 at 9:09 AM EST
this is a great song to open the new cd with. i think it talks about all the corruption and fakeness of today's society and wondering if we can still change.
 
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Thomas
Average
#2 by Thomas Buckman at Sep 29, 2007 at 5:01 PM EST
Can't believe no one has commented on this song yet. Freakin awesome song.
 
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John
Wanna Be
#3 by John Agopian at Sep 29, 2007 at 7:54 PM EST
I agree. I only have this CD and ssotcc but on both of them, the opening track seems to take a lot more from the hardcore roots than the tracks that follow them.
 
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mike
Rhythm Player
#4 by mike jordan at Sep 30, 2007 at 12:44 AM EST
"this is noise" no shit, but still a good song
 
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Vicky
Average
#5 by Vicky Barnard at Sep 30, 2007 at 8:32 AM EST
Blind to this impending fate We'll let the world carry our weight Its back breaks with every mile But we all live in denial We refuse to see what we are doing to the world. Can we be saved, has the damage all been done? Is it too late to reverse what we've become? A lesson to learn at a crucial point in time What's mine was always yours, and yours is mine First three lines here are obvious, straightforward. What's mine was always yours, and yours is mine. Have to agree with nyghtcrawler. What we do here affects people there, and vise versa. I also think it can mean that the world wasn’t solely meant for humans, but all life in nature. But Mother Culture seems to say otherwise doesn’t she? Anywhere you turn you She tells us that WE are the saviors of the planet, it is OUR planet. I couldn’t disagree with this statement any more than what I do now.
 
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Allen
Average
#6 by Allen Stone at Oct 5, 2007 at 4:47 PM EST
For me this song is defiantly about the environment and the state of the world. Tim is questioning whether the earth can be repaired or whether we have already done too much damage. That is defiantly what these lines mean to me: I’m blind to this impending fate We'll let the world carry their weight Its back breaks with every mile But they all live in denial When he says: "What's mine was always yours, and yours is mine" I think he is referring to the idea that we all share the one earth. So if I damage part of it, it effects every one else as well. This is one of the first Rise Against tracks with an obvious environmentalist bend. I wonder if Tim has been thinking of the state of the earth lately.
 
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Angus
Rhythm Player
#7 by Angus Young at Oct 8, 2007 at 9:09 AM EST
i was going to the cubs game today and we took the CTA there and we got to the stop Noyes and me and my friends heard the voice go "this is Noyes" and i was like wait, that sounds familar and we figured out that it was from this song! amazingness. yay for chicago!
 
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josh
Average
#8 by josh stagel at Oct 8, 2007 at 2:14 PM EST
I can't say I am a huge fan of this song. I do like, "Worth Dying For", and "Prayer of a Refugee" xox
 
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Justin
Wanna Be
#9 by Justin Neafsey at Oct 9, 2007 at 9:52 AM EST
Fun fact - the intro to this song actually says "This is Noyes," not "this is noise." It's a recording of the CTA train's automated voice at Noyes stop on the purple line in Evanston, a northern suburb of Chicago.
 
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Mauricio
Wanna Be
#10 by Mauricio Tonon at Oct 10, 2007 at 10:33 AM EST
1 - tjd5388 its still probably figurative 2 - although Rise Against has definately recently put increasing importance on the environment, global warming, etc, this song still also pertains to problems in society as well. saving us from what we have become in a society. our lives becoming grey - having no individuality. brushing past a myriad of scenes - not caring about the welfare of ppl around you. there are definate environmental concerns, but it's still also about problems in society
 
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phoen
Average
#11 by phoen bay at Oct 11, 2007 at 9:45 PM EST
i donno what it means but im almost postive its about how he feels we are lettignt he planet down?
 
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Fatty [eats chi
Average
#12 by Fatty [eats children] kid at Oct 13, 2007 at 6:38 PM EST
Yeah probably about the environment. I wonder if "An Invonvient Truth" was an inspiration for this...a very persuasive documentary by Al Gore about global warming, do yourself a favor and watch it.
 
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pat
Wanna Be
#13 by pat smear at Oct 16, 2007 at 3:02 PM EST
i love this songggg.
 
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leester
Professional
#14 by leester at Oct 16, 2007 at 4:55 PM EST
Who cares no one had commented on the fucken song, the cd even come out yet.
 
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Sally
Average
#15 by Sally Gray at Oct 19, 2007 at 12:07 AM EST
ps the lyrics are wrong in some spots. it starts off "down beyond these city streets through gutters filled with black debris..." and later on "And so we carry on each day as if our lives were not so real..." and also " single mom of three, a tv personality" - straight outta the CD booklet