Notice
Okay, as with many of my other Pumpkins tabs, I've had to compensate with the overdubs because of PTE's 7 guitar limit. For a better understanding of how to overdubs all come together, here's a list of the guitars used in the song.
--The intro is a sitar tape loop sampled with additional tape distortion and noise. I decided not to waste a guitar on tabbing such a small part.
--There are four guitar overdubs with distortion that come in during the Intro and Choruses. They play respective voicings an octave apart, and then split into a layered G chord at the end of their segments.
--There are two distorted rhythm guitars that come in after the Intro, and carry all of the distorted rhythm parts throughout the song. These are not the same tracks as the previously mentioned overdubs.
--Also in the intro, there are two lead guitars that play an interesting solo part. They essentially play the same things, and then split off into slightly different parts in a few spots. To bend behind the nut, as notated in meas. 23-24, bring your picking thumb around to the headstock and apply pressure to the lowest string in the spot right before the headstock meets the fretboard and gradually release the pressure. These same guitars also double each other octaves apart for the guitar solo.
--In the verses, there are two clean guitars with quite a bit of reverb that are panned oppositely. They arpeggiate the chords being carried by the rhythm and alternate back and forth, allowing the previous guitar's chord to ring out as the next one is being played . There is a more subtle clean overdub strumming the chords rhythmically as well.
--There is a faint double tracked overdub in the section preceding the guitar solo, once again voiced octaves apart.
--The outro consists of two clean guitars with reverb playing loosely the same thing until they split off for the outro solo. There are subtle studio delay repeats in a few random spots, and then a significant amount of delay on the lead guitar during the solo (with reverb in the opposite channel).
--A misc. distorted overdub fades in feedback and makes use of the tremolo bar to abruptly lower the pitch just before the ending of the song.