Chords for Carolina Chocolate Drops - Ruby Are you Mad at Your Man?
Tempo:
70.725 bpm
Chords used:
D
E
Dm
Ab
G
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
We play a lot of music that people would have been singing together, you know, it wouldn't have been stuff that would have been [Dm] on stage
It would have been after a long day of work
We would have [E] been able to get together and sing and these are the kind of [Ab] songs that we're doing
So [G] anytime you want to jump in you just [F] jump in
[D] All right
[G] We're gonna do a song from [D] Kentucky now.
[C] It's called [E] Ruby.
Are you mad at your man?
[D]
Women named cousin Emmy
[Bm] So [Gm] the kind of [E] banjo that I'm playing this is not bluegrass what we do
It's old times older than [N] bluegrass
And a banjo is African American [Abm] instrument actually and some of the earliest styles [Bm] of playing are very very African
And one of them is called claw hammer, which is what I'm
[Ab] Instead of the roles [D] from bluegrass
[Gb] I'm gonna tune this though.
[D] Give me a second
Hey, where do you guys are probably wondering?
Where does the Carolina Chocolate Drops learn all these songs?
Well, we've learned some of them from
Albums like from record companies like yassir records, etc
So we learned from watching YouTube videos and we also got a few from old song books
Song books we have song books, please buy one song book
My sound guy saying no stop Okay, sorry
There are no song books actually turns out
We're in North Carolina the whole thing we run the whole state
So Charlotte, all right
I'll take you in the shade, I'll struggle with the stake, I'll take you in the ground, oh my.
Oh Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play.
I've done all I can do to try to get along with you,
till you're not satisfied.
Oh Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play.
[D]
If you don't believe I'm right, just follow me tonight,
I'll take you to my shade to suck up.
Oh Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
Thank you.
[N]
It would have been after a long day of work
We would have [E] been able to get together and sing and these are the kind of [Ab] songs that we're doing
So [G] anytime you want to jump in you just [F] jump in
[D] All right
[G] We're gonna do a song from [D] Kentucky now.
[C] It's called [E] Ruby.
Are you mad at your man?
[D]
Women named cousin Emmy
[Bm] So [Gm] the kind of [E] banjo that I'm playing this is not bluegrass what we do
It's old times older than [N] bluegrass
And a banjo is African American [Abm] instrument actually and some of the earliest styles [Bm] of playing are very very African
And one of them is called claw hammer, which is what I'm
[Ab] Instead of the roles [D] from bluegrass
[Gb] I'm gonna tune this though.
[D] Give me a second
Hey, where do you guys are probably wondering?
Where does the Carolina Chocolate Drops learn all these songs?
Well, we've learned some of them from
Albums like from record companies like yassir records, etc
So we learned from watching YouTube videos and we also got a few from old song books
Song books we have song books, please buy one song book
My sound guy saying no stop Okay, sorry
There are no song books actually turns out
We're in North Carolina the whole thing we run the whole state
So Charlotte, all right
I'll take you in the shade, I'll struggle with the stake, I'll take you in the ground, oh my.
Oh Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play.
I've done all I can do to try to get along with you,
till you're not satisfied.
Oh Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play.
[D]
If you don't believe I'm right, just follow me tonight,
I'll take you to my shade to suck up.
Oh Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
Thank you.
[N]
Key:
D
E
Dm
Ab
G
D
E
Dm
We play a lot of music that people would have been singing together, you know, it wouldn't have been stuff that would have been [Dm] on stage
It would have been after a long day of work
We would have [E] been able to get together and sing and these are the kind of [Ab] songs that we're doing
So [G] anytime you want to jump in you just [F] jump in
_ [D] All right
[G] We're gonna do a song from [D] Kentucky now.
[C] It's called [E] Ruby.
Are you mad at your man?
[D] _
Women named cousin Emmy
[Bm] So [Gm] the kind of [E] banjo that I'm playing this is not bluegrass what we do
It's old times older than [N] bluegrass
And a banjo is African American [Abm] instrument actually and some of the earliest styles [Bm] of playing are very very African
And one of them is called claw hammer, which is what I'm
[Ab] Instead of the roles [D] from bluegrass
_ _ _ [Gb] I'm gonna tune this though.
[D] Give me a second
_ _ _ _ _ Hey, where do you guys are probably wondering?
Where does the Carolina Chocolate Drops learn all these songs?
Well, we've learned some of them from
Albums like from record companies like yassir records, etc
So we learned from watching YouTube videos and we also got a few from old song books
Song books we have song books, please buy one song book _
My sound guy saying no stop _ Okay, sorry
There are no song books actually turns out
_ We're in North Carolina the whole thing we run the whole state
_ _ _ So Charlotte, all right
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ I'll take you in the shade, _ I'll struggle with the stake, I'll take you in the ground, oh my.
Oh _ _ Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ I've done all I can do to try to get along with you,
_ till you're not satisfied.
_ _ _ _ Oh Ruby, _ _ _ _ _ _ Ruby, play how you may like to play.
_ _ [D] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ If you don't believe I'm right, _ just follow me tonight,
I'll take you to my shade to suck _ _ _ up.
Oh Ruby, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Ruby, play how you may like to _ _ _ _ _ _ play. _
Play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
_ _ Play how you may like to play. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ Thank _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ you. _ _ _
[N] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
It would have been after a long day of work
We would have [E] been able to get together and sing and these are the kind of [Ab] songs that we're doing
So [G] anytime you want to jump in you just [F] jump in
_ [D] All right
[G] We're gonna do a song from [D] Kentucky now.
[C] It's called [E] Ruby.
Are you mad at your man?
[D] _
Women named cousin Emmy
[Bm] So [Gm] the kind of [E] banjo that I'm playing this is not bluegrass what we do
It's old times older than [N] bluegrass
And a banjo is African American [Abm] instrument actually and some of the earliest styles [Bm] of playing are very very African
And one of them is called claw hammer, which is what I'm
[Ab] Instead of the roles [D] from bluegrass
_ _ _ [Gb] I'm gonna tune this though.
[D] Give me a second
_ _ _ _ _ Hey, where do you guys are probably wondering?
Where does the Carolina Chocolate Drops learn all these songs?
Well, we've learned some of them from
Albums like from record companies like yassir records, etc
So we learned from watching YouTube videos and we also got a few from old song books
Song books we have song books, please buy one song book _
My sound guy saying no stop _ Okay, sorry
There are no song books actually turns out
_ We're in North Carolina the whole thing we run the whole state
_ _ _ So Charlotte, all right
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ I'll take you in the shade, _ I'll struggle with the stake, I'll take you in the ground, oh my.
Oh _ _ Ruby, Ruby, play how you may like to play. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ I've done all I can do to try to get along with you,
_ till you're not satisfied.
_ _ _ _ Oh Ruby, _ _ _ _ _ _ Ruby, play how you may like to play.
_ _ [D] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ If you don't believe I'm right, _ just follow me tonight,
I'll take you to my shade to suck _ _ _ up.
Oh Ruby, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Ruby, play how you may like to _ _ _ _ _ _ play. _
Play how you may like to play.
Play how you may like to play.
_ _ Play how you may like to play. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ Thank _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ you. _ _ _
[N] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _