Ukulele Tab without chords.
|-0--3--0--0--0--5--0----1--1------0--3--7--5--1--3--0--1--3--3--5--3-|
|-1--1--0--0--1--1--1--3-3--1--1-3-1--1--4--4--3--3--0--3--1--2--3--3-|
|-0--0--1--1--2--2--2----2--1------0--0--4--4--2--2--0--0--0--3--5--4-|
|-2--2--0--0--2--2--2----0--0------2--2--4--4--0--0--0--0--2--2--3--3-|
|-0--3--0--0--0--5--0----1--1------0--3--7--5--1--3--0--1--0--1--0--0-|
|-1--1--0--0--1--1--1--3-3--1--1-3-1--1--4--4--3--3--0--3--1--1--1--0-|
|-0--0--1--1--2--2--2----2--1------0--0--4--4--2--2--0--0--0--1--0--1-|
|-2--2--0--0--2--2--2----0--0------2--2--4--4--0--0--0--0--2--0--2--0-|
|---0------1--0---0----1----0------1--3--0--2----0------1--3--5--7--5-|
|---1--0---0----1-1----1----1--0---0--1--1--1----1--0---0--1--1--4--4-|
|-2-2------2------2-2--2--2-2------2--0--0--2--2-2------2--0--0--4--4-|
|---2----0-0------2----1----2----0-0--2--2--0----2----0-0--2--2--4--4-|
|-3--3--3-------------------------------------------------------------|
|-0--2--3-------------------------------------------------------------|
|-0--3--4-------------------------------------------------------------|
|-2--2--3-------------------------------------------------------------|
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Tab comments (4)
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thongar
(Adelaide)
I like your tab of "Georgia on My Mind". You haven't written out the tab with correct timing & rhythm though which is the only thing I'd say to edit. But the tabs for this are good.
29 Jun 2010
gmiraglia
(Lexington)
Tab was good, but lack of any sort of rhythmical template was vastly unhelpful.
26 May 2010
Top Tabs & Chords by Ray Charles, don't miss these songs!
About this song: Georgia On My Mind
"Georgia on My Mind" is a song written in 1930 by Hoagy Carmichael (music) and Stuart Gorrell (lyrics). It is the official state song of the U.S. state of Georgia. Gorrell wrote the lyrics for Hoagy's sister, Georgia Carmichael. However, the lyrics of the song are ambiguous enough to refer either to the state or to a woman named "Georgia". Carmichael's 1965 autobiography, Sometimes I Wonder, records the origin: a friend, saxophonist and bandleader Frankie Trumbauer, suggested: "Why don't you write a song called 'Georgia?' Nobody lost much writing about the South.