Drovers Road

Mark Knopfler

Transposer:

Intro: | | | | | It?s a drover?s road High up where ravens fly And soon I?ll lose my way And I won?t know It?s a drover?s road From days so long gone by When we knew who we were And where to go It?s a drover?s road It winds a hundred miles You?d sleep out in the open Calm and still You could trust a friend To keep a watch awhile Your cattle grazing Quiet on the hill Walk with me    And you can leave that old dog be      He does much better on his own   Leave him be    He?s a better man than me   He likes to find his own way home | | | | | x3 On a drover?s road With the moon and misty stars We walked these hills Before this all began Before we gazed at screens Went shopping in our cars And a million houses Sprawled across the land Walk with me    And you can leave that old dog be      He does much better on his own   Leave him be    He?s a better man than me   He likes to find his own way home | | | | | (x4) | |

Du même artiste :

empty heart empty heart D, Em, G, A, a, d
empty heart empty heart G, C, Em, D, C/G, D/A
empty heart empty heart Am, Am7, Am6, F, C/G, G, C/E, C, Em, D2
empty heart empty heart Bm, E, D, C, G, A, F#7, Db, F#, Em, Am7
empty heart empty heart Em, A, D, Bm, B
empty heart empty heart D6, A, Db, D, Dmaj7, E, Bm7, Dbm, F#m
empty heart empty heart Am, G6, Em, F, Am7, G
empty heart empty heart C, Am7, G, F, Dm, Am, E, D, B, Em7, A, Bm, F#, Em, A7, D9, Db7, F#m, F#m7, Dbm, E6, B7, E9, Bm7, Fm9, Dbmaj7, Bbm7, C7, G#, Cmaj7, Db, a, F7, D5, Fmaj7, C5, F13, E7, F6, G6, Dm7, G9, F9, Eb9, G7, Bb, Ebm, Bb7, G#m7, Bmaj7, F#maj7, Ebm7, G#7, Ebm9, E5
empty heart empty heart E, A7, B7
empty heart empty heart C, F, Dm, G, Am
La chanson évoque un chemin de conduite, où le narrateur se remémore des temps passés, plus simples et authentiques. Il se perd dans ses pensées, se rappelant une époque où la connexion avec la nature et les amis était centrale, loin des distractions modernes. La description des paysages, des nuits sous les étoiles et de la tranquillité de la vie rurale souligne une nostalgie pour une existence plus ancrée et moins complexe. Le narrateur semble aussi faire référence à un vieux chien, symbole de loyauté et d'indépendance, qui incarne la sagesse de ces choix de vie.