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Home W Waits, Tom Hoist That Rag Guitar Tab

Real Gone Tabs:

  1. Hoist That Rag »
  2. How's It Gonna End
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Hoist That Rag - Tom Waits
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Tabbed by: SDLJunkie
Email:flatoutinc@hotmail.com
Tuning: Standard
e|--5---6---3---5------------------------------------------------------------|
B|--6---6---3---5------------------------------------------------------------|
G|--7---7---3---6------------------------------------------------------------|
D|--7---8---5---7------------------------------------------------------------|
A|--5---8---5---7------------------------------------------------------------|
E|--5---6---3---5------------------------------------------------------------|
This is the main riff...Tom is...Real Gone

Source: http://www.guitarmasta.net/w/waits,_tom/359853.html

Tab Discussion, Comments, and Critiques
 
 
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Brandon
Average
#1 by Brandon Weathers at Oct 3, 2007 at 12:55 PM EST
well not that every song has to be pinned down to one granite meaning but this to me is all about war, the rag is obviously a flag and the guttural bark of 'hoist that rag' sums up superbly the horrific vomiting bark of jingoism. Getting even more specific it could not have been written when it was without alluding however indirectly to foreign policy of the good old us of a. Hoist that Ring!
 
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Maarten
Average
#2 by Maarten Wuyts at Oct 3, 2007 at 6:23 PM EST
I always think of the american civil war for some reason...
 
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jessie
Wanna Be
#3 by jessie sinanan at Oct 4, 2007 at 2:42 AM EST
Y'know, personally I think that by "hoist that rag" he doesn't mean a flag of any sort. What else do you hoist? Sails. Hoist them sails, 'cept this's a pirate ship, me scum-eyed beauties so ye'll be hoistin' a rag t'day. Never really bothered to digest in hidden meaning in this one, though.
 
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jimmy
Lead Player
#4 by jimmy matthews at Oct 4, 2007 at 12:44 PM EST
You got it right, Stogie. Hit the nail right on the head. Nice job. Love those lyrics...
 
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Doolittle
Lead Player
#5 by Doolittle at Oct 4, 2007 at 5:08 PM EST
Awesome song.
 
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KISS is the gre
Average
#6 by KISS is the greatest at Oct 5, 2007 at 10:42 PM EST
Couldnīt the "hoisting of the rag" also refer to the image of the white flag, someone hoisting a tattered white rag to mediate a peace?
 
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anthony
Average
#7 by anthony clark at Oct 6, 2007 at 9:59 AM EST
This is one of the greatest songs ever. Tom Waits looks like he's taking an unfriendly dump whenever he sings. Doesn't surprise. That mother fucker still owes me money for that carpet of mine he shat on. You should have seen it. It was a Heavy Domestic Woven Axminster Cornfield Springleaf carpet with intertwining ferns covering it's surface.....well there i go again bragging about my pretentious delicacies. Welp, I'm off to wash my scarves and LaCosta shirts because they reek of bad hipster sex. Suck my wingy slut bitch thundercunt!
 
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Jp
Wanna Be
#8 by Jp Collins at Oct 6, 2007 at 10:19 AM EST
in my opinion, his best song (except for Tom Traubert's Blues) and definately one of the best songs ever. that 1:30 minute guitar solo is one of the best moments in music history
 
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Steven
Average
#9 by Steven Daniel at Oct 9, 2007 at 3:07 PM EST
"So just open fire As you hit the shore" D-Day?
 
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Brad
Lead Player
#10 by Brad Vincent at Oct 9, 2007 at 9:09 PM EST
"If the packed theater houses of the Bowery (whose audiences would yell 'H'ist dat rag!' when the curtain failed to rise promptly at the scheduled time)..." Borges, "The Disinterested Killer Bill Harrigan." That's the only other place I've seen the term hoist that rag, but I guess flags and sails make sense too. The story is about Billy the Kid, who is born in New York when the street gangs were everywhere, and he learns how to kill without caring. He moves west and starts shooting people. Kind of works with that, I guess, except the shore bit.
 
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Keith
Average
#11 by Keith Amaral at Oct 10, 2007 at 9:16 PM EST
I hope Tom Waits goes to hell, and plays music like this down there, because i'd totally commit every sin on earth to just listen to him for eternity.
 
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Steven
Average
#12 by Steven Daniel at Oct 11, 2007 at 2:14 PM EST
I think this song is an accusation of imperialism directed toward the people who sold America the invasion of Iraq. "Hoist that rag"= raise the flag over the conquered territory. "Rag" is sometimes used as a derogatory term for flag, but I don't think Tom is calling the American flag a rag, as much as implying that it's been stained and abused by the use it's been put to lately. "Well I learned the trade From Piggy Knowles Sing Sing Tommy Shay Boys" Great names for shady characters. Piggy Knowles = Karl Rove? It's a name that describes him well. "god used me as hammer boys To beat his weary drum today" George Bush used a religious imagery, such as crusades, in his public speeches before the invasion of Iraq. He even told Ha'aretz, an Israeli newspaper, that God had told him to go to war! "The sun is up the world is flat" As good a description of Iraq as any. It's a country of flat plains and desert. "Damn good address for a rat" Saddam was certainly vermin. "The smell of blood The Drone of flies" Dead bodies all around, check. Fits Iraq. Here's the payoff: "Well we stick our fingers in The ground, heave and Turn the world around" Remember the grandiose promises before the invasion? It was supposed to be effortless, and it would change the world (turn the world around). But the plan was really as crazy as thinking you could do what the lyrics say. "Smoke is blacking out the sun At night I pray and clean my gun" Remember 1991, when the Iraqis set fire to all the oil wells in Kuwait as they retreated? Smoke did indeed black out the sun. Praying and cleaning a gun in the disastrous night = the paranoia and delusion that enabled the Gulf War's repeat. "The cracked bell rings as The ghost bird sings and the gods Go beggin here" Postwar Iraq, the promised beacon of freedom (the liberty bell and bald eagles) is in reality a land where all of the virtues (gods) are oppressed by evil, and can be sustained only by losing all semblance of their former pride. "So just open fire As you hit the shore All is fair in love And war" As a former US Marine, this verse echoes in my head. Take no prisoners, and take that beach!
 
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Zach
Rhythm Player
#13 by Zach at Oct 11, 2007 at 2:39 PM EST
I always thought "Hoist that Rag", considering the music, meant to shake the skirt as in the dancefloor. Hoist that rag translates directly into spanish as "Sacude ese trapo" to mean a skirt. In latin/caribbean music it is extremely popular to call out dancers with expressions like "Sacude" o "Agita", and using the skirt as a part of the dance is culturally established in these traditions. But, it could also be a flag at the same time. Either way the meaning for me is ironic, as to say amidst an apocalyptic backdrop we just dance and have a goodtime.
 
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Jesse
Professional
#14 by Jesse Garcia at Oct 11, 2007 at 8:15 PM EST
My impression is its about WW1. The lines 'So just open fire As you hit the shore' sort of describes what happened during the war between Australian and Turkish soldiers at Galipoli (for example) one army would be deployed on the shore line and open fire on the enemy that would be waiting for them. Also 'hoist that rag' may be a reference to waving or hoisting a white flag, which means surrender in military terms.
 
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katie
Average
#15 by katie focner at Oct 14, 2007 at 9:32 PM EST
Can't get this song out of my head.
 
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gabby
Professional
#16 by gabby at Oct 15, 2007 at 4:40 AM EST
I dunno about the meaning but the music is incredible. One of the best Waits' songs to date.
 
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Simon (Si)
Lead Player
#17 by Simon (Si) Brown at Oct 15, 2007 at 9:59 PM EST
Yeah, of course, doubleoh. "So just open fire/As you hit the shore/All is fair in love/and war/Hoist that rag". Well it seems that cloth is no cloth anymore for Tom Waits, and a rag sure represents the glory of a flag whose glorious times are long gone. One truthful now ragged, powerful lyrics for a powerful song. And adding to Imnotsure's this song is also played with Marc Ribot of the Cubanos Postisos and a long time Waits colaborator from Swordfishtrombomes (or before I'm not sure) and the music is alike to the "Son" music from Cuba. Interesting indeed. And still one of Wait's Best.
 
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Wacko
Average
#18 by Wacko Jacko at Oct 16, 2007 at 12:22 AM EST
GUITAR SOLO GENIUS. What a great song. I'd add what a great vocal too, but that's somewhat obvious being Waits. But that guitar solo.... i've listened to this tune a thousand times and it hasn't lost an ounce of brilliance to my ears... I don't even know why,,,, sounds like he's holding back with every note, almost losing it, but not. This is something all the Vais and Van Halens in the wiorld could NEVER replicate. FACT. Rackety, shimmering genius, Mr. Ribot.
 
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Batmanuel
Badass
#19 by Batmanuel at Oct 16, 2007 at 7:06 AM EST
I somewhat agree with doubleoh, but I think there might be a little more to it (I'm just not sure what that is...) In addition, bass-god Les Claypool (Primus, C2B3) plays the bass on this track.
 
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frosty
Average
#20 by frosty Angel at Oct 16, 2007 at 10:35 AM EST
I think that he's trying to represent a hopeless world and a man who stands alone (you know, that comic book stuff, in a rotten world), a very dark meaning. My favourite line, and maybe my favourite line in music history (yeah, i like this song xD) is: "At night I pray and clean my gun". I think I'll get it tattooed some time soon
 
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*evan*
Average
#21 by *evan* at Oct 16, 2007 at 11:20 PM EST
My take on this song is that it's Tom's assessment of pro-America jingoism... "You know what to do if the baby cries/Hoist that rag" seems to sum it up. As long as we're waving old glory, everything will be okay. ...I don't think Tom is exactly subscribing to this school of thought.
 
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TonkpilS
Average
#22 by TonkpilS at Oct 17, 2007 at 11:16 AM EST
I always thought that "Hoist that rag" referred to like old Baptist preachers who would hoist up a rag while singing/preaching Who knows...either way the song is incredible
 
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rockman
Average
#23 by rockman the sequel at Oct 18, 2007 at 6:48 AM EST
I mean rag
 
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Alexxx <3
Lead Player
#24 by Alexxx <3 at Oct 19, 2007 at 3:48 PM EST
The first verse: Piggy Knowles (correctly Piggy Noles) and Tommy Shay were members of New Yorks 'Hook Gang'. The Hook Gang were at times a street gang, and for a while, river pirates. Sing Sing, of course, is a New York prison. This verse doesn't really share the same apocalyptic hysteria that the 2nd and 3rd possess, and I think it's a bit much to read a big tale about Iraq out of that, although I'd certainly agree with the final verses final line being D-Day inspired, or something similar.