#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE---------------------------------#
#This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the #
#song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research. #
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------#
#
Golgi Apparatus
From: Jonah.David.Seiger@um.cc.umich.edu
From: Eric Berman (ericbe@microsoft.com)

Hello everyone, I was bored yesterday afternoon, so I decided to  transcribe the music to Golgi.  I am pretty sure that this is correct, but if you find a  mistake or know a better way to play
this, please let me know.  Also, I have given the  chord formations for those of you how may not  know how to fret some of these notes.
Golgi Apparatus: music notation for guitar w/lyrics from the "lyrics file" (chords are placed over lyrics for emphasis, but the rhythm is obviously much more complex)

F#+    G                               G                  G
     I look into the finance box just to check my status
C/G
(status)

          G                  G            G                  G
I look into the microscope, See a Golgi Apparatus
Gm7(I) -> Am7 -> Fm7 -> Gm7(II) (SEE BELOW FOR CHORD FORMATIONS)

   Eb    F        Bb
Golgi, oh, woe is me

     Eb     F            Bb
You can't even see the sea

Eb      F             Bb
Golgi, olgi, ho ooo olgi
Golgi
  C9 -> C#9 -> D9

     G                       G       G      G               G
They call him lysasome 'Cause he runs so fast

C
Runs like a junkyard dog with a brain of brass

Gm7(I) -> Am7 -> Fm7 -> Gm7(II) (SEE BELOW FOR CHORD FORMATIONS)

   Eb    F        Bb
Golgi, oh, woe is me

     Eb     F            Bb
You can't even see the sea

Eb      F             Bb
Golgi, olgi, ho ooo olgi
Golgi
  C9 -> C#9 -> D9

CHORUS:*
G             G7
I saw you...
                                                        (x3)
C                                C/F
With a ticket stub in your hand

G        G
I saw you....

        F--->----->---------->------------>-------  (pedal on E string)
Under the light, middle of the night, couldn't get it wrong...

(REPEAT CHORUS)

So I had to..... (and into Trey's most excellent solo.... tablature follow)

Chord Forms:
(intro)  (See a Golgi Appa...) (Golgi woe) (before chorus)
   F#+   Gm7(I) Gm7(II)  Am7   Eb  F  Bb   C9   C#9  D9
E--x-------10-----3-------5-----x------6---3----4----5
B--7-------11-----3-------5-----8--10--6---3----4----5
G--7-------10-----3-------5-----8--10--7---3----4----5
D--8-------12-----3-------5-----8--10--8---2----3----4
A--9-------10-----x-------x-----6--8---8---3----4----5
E--x-------x------x-------x------------6--------------

Golgi Solo
From: Jonah.Seiger@um.cc.umich.edu
From: mdbruce@leland.Stanford.EDU (Michael David Bruce)

---> A few things for those who are not totally familiar with guitar tablature notation:
Tablature cannot convey precise information about timing and the duration of notes. Nor does it help you to understand harmonic structure.  BUT, it is very helpful for those like me who
are not totally comfortable reading and writing in music notation.

I hope that you can at least get the drift of Trey's brilliant piece of guitar playing from the notation below.  I suggest you listen to the song while reading/playing this for the first time. 
Pretty soon you'll get it

The first thing that you *should* know about the golgi solo part is that it is *not* in a straight (i.e multiple of 4) time signature--count it out!!

There are 15 beats per phrase (where you would expect 16).  It doesn't matter how you do it, but I find three 4/4 measures and one 3/4 measure convienient.

For the 1st part of the solo (starting @ 1:25), play:

Beats:(* = downbeat)
     * ^  ^ ^ *  ^ ^ ^ *   ^ ^ ^ * ^ ^
E|------------------------------------|
B|--3--3-4-6-66-4-3---1->>6-4-3-4-6-4-|
G|--3--3-3-3-33-3-3---1---------------|
D|--3--3-5-3-33-5-3---1----------3--5-|
A|------------------------------------|
E|------------------------------------|
                                ^^^^
This little thingy is *very* important, IMHO.  Trey does it quite a bit in his playing. i.e. rather than just playing two notes consecutively, he sticks another note in there (cf. The divided sky
slow part).  They're not always that easy to hear, but without them, the music loses its feel, it's color--everything.  This is what makes it interesting.


The second half of the solo is the same thing with everything jacked up 2 frets (i.e. now in the key of C rather than Bb).

Above is for 4 repetitions, then go up two frets:
     * ^  ^ ^ *  ^ ^ ^ *   ^ ^ ^ * ^ ^
E|------------------------------------|
B|--5--5-6-8-88-6-5---3->>8-6-5-6-8-6-|
G|--5--5-5-5-55-5-5---3---------------|
D|--5--5-7-5-55-7-5---3----------5--7-|
A|------------------------------------|
E|------------------------------------|

Above repeats 3 times, and the fourth is played differently:
E|------------------------------------------|
B|--5--5-6-8-88-6-5--->>8-6-4-6-8-9-11>>>13-|
G|--5--5-5-5-55-5-5---3---------------------|
D|--5--5-7-5-55-7-5---3----------------5--7-|
A|------------------------------------------|
E|------------------------------------------|

NOTE: numbers directly above one another (like 5/5/5 above) are played at the SAME TIME;  numbers that are not directly above one another (like B/5...G/7 above) are played in
succession.


AND THIS LEADS INTO THE SOLO....

E|-------------------------------------------------------------------|
B|-13-11->>9-9--11>>13-11-9-8-8-8^^9-11-9----------------------------|
G|-------------8------------------------------11-8--11-10-9-8---10-13|
D|-------------------------------------------------9---------9-11----|
A|-------------------------------------------------------------------|
E|-------------------------------------------------------------------|

E|---------------------------------------------------------------|
B|-11-9>>7-7--9>>11-9-7-6-6-6^^7-9-7-----------------------------|
G|-----------6-------------------------9-6--9-8-7-6---8---11>>>--|
D|-----------------------------------------7-------7-9-----------|
A|---------------------------------------------------------------|
E|---------------------------------------------------------------|

E|----------------------------------------------------------------|
B|-9-7>>5-5--7>>9-7-5>4-4-4^^5-7-5--------------------------------|
G|----------4-----------------------7-4--7-6-5-4-----6-9>>>-------|
D|--------------------------------------5--------5-7--------------|
A|----------------------------------------------------------------|
E|----------------------------------------------------------------|

E|---------------------------------------------------------------|
B|-7-5>>3-3--5>>7-5-3>2-2-2^^3-5-3-------------------------------|
G|----------2----------------------5-2--5-4-3-2-----4-7>---------|
D|-------------------------------------3--------3--5-------------|
A|---------------------------------------------------------------|
E|---------------------------------------------------------------|

And then back to:
     * ^  ^ ^ *  ^ ^ ^ *   ^ ^ ^ * ^ ^
E|------------------------------------|
B|--5--5-6-8-88-6-5---3->>8-6-5-6-8-6-|
G|--5--5-5-5-55-5-5---3---------------|
D|--5--5-7-5-55-7-5---3----------5--7-|
A|------------------------------------|
E|------------------------------------|

Four times through.
 After the solo (which I won't repost), you go back to that main riff above (here again, it's two frets up--in C) and then suddenly, you chop it off right after the end of measure three and play:

A ^ ^ ^ A ^ ^ ^ Asus4 ^ ^ ^ Asus4 ^ ^ ^

over and over again, until it feels just right.  And of course, if you're phish, you change your volumes, lie down, jump up and down, play ditties over that and so on.  Then for that fantastic
glorious build, you play

F ^ Eb ^ D ^ Eb ^ F ^ Eb ^ D ^ Eb ^ F ^ G ^ A ^ Bb ^ C ^ C# ^ D!!!!!!!!

And back to the chorus.  All of these are played with the D-shaped chord and  then slid up and down the fretboard starting at fret 5.  Play around with it.  Of course, I have seen Trey use
the A-shaped chord as a substitute for the first coupla bars.  Depends on what you've been doing just prior to that.  The beauty is that with improvisational music, nothing is set in stone.


NOTES:
1)  I have done my best to show the timing of the notes, but the rhythm is difficult to convey in tablature.  You're going to have to listen to the song to get the time.

2)  A ">" or a ">>" means that the previous note "slides" up to the next... A " ^^ " means that the note is "hammered" 

3)  The numbers correspond to the FRET on which that particular STRING is played