Chords for Chet Atkins Patriotic Medley.avi
Tempo:
116.1 bpm
Chords used:
A
D
G
E
C
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
ever leaving the guitar.
[A]
[E]
[Em] [Bm] [C#m] [D] [G#] [A]
[F#] [A] [E] [A]
[E]
[B] [Bm] [E]
[A] [B] [A] [E]
[A] [B] [A]
[D] [Bm] [A]
[D] [D#] [E]
[A]
[D] [F#m]
[G] [D]
[F#] [Bm]
[G] [D] [A] [D]
[G] [D]
[F#] [Bm] [D]
[Em] [D]
[G]
[C] [G]
[D] [G]
[C] [G]
[D] [G] [C]
[Am] [D] [G] [C]
[G] [D] [G] [D]
[G] [D]
[G]
[C]
[G] [F]
[G] [F]
[C] [F]
[C] [G] [C]
[E] [A] All right, because President Bush is going to be here and all that, we may run short
of time [E] and this is [A] something that will save a little time.
I'm going to play two tunes
at once.
Yankee Doodle and Dixie.
[Em]
[A]
[Em] [G#m] [A]
[E] [A]
[D] [B]
[E] [A] [D] [A]
[E] [A] [E]
[D] [G#] [A] [E]
[A]
[E] [A]
[E]
[B] [G#m] [A]
[Am] Chester!
[N]
Hey!
Shows I'm brave, I think.
Shows you're brave?
Yeah, to try something like that on television.
Well, you've done that before.
I've done it before, but not too much on TV.
You did it on Pop Goes the Country one time.
I never will forget that.
You were taping it to include in a record.
And that was a
strange audience.
A lot of television audiences will do exactly what you tell them or ask
them to do, but they will wait for you to tell them to do it.
Chet is doing, Ricky,
he's doing Yankee Doodle and Dixie together.
And the audience is just sitting there.
He
finally looked up, he said, that's great, applaud that.
That's hard to do, too.
I tell you, I got on a new pair of shoes.
Yeah, tell them about your shoes.
I think this is a funny story.
They're new shoes, but I didn't get them in the store.
I got them out the golf club.
I
left my shoes to be shined while I was playing golf.
I got back, I found these and I thought,
boy, he put a great shine on my shoes.
And I looked inside and they're a different brand.
So somebody out there is wearing my shoes.
I like these pretty good.
With thinner socks,
they're not bad.
Jerry Reed probably has your shoes.
He always wanted to walk in your shoes.
That's true.
A lot of things have been happening to me.
I got a rooster.
You have a rooster?
I got a cockadoodledoo, yeah.
Chet, you live in a rather exclusive neighborhood.
Do you get a chicken house for your [B] neighborhood?
It's in a chicken wire [N] fence.
I played golf down in Florida somewhere a few years ago.
And along the course there, they had these Bantam roosters that would crow.
And I thought,
I want one of those.
And so I got one from the fair out here.
Bill Carlisle got it for
me and I named it Hot Shot, which is Bill's nickname.
That's a comedy act he used to do.
It's a fine rooster, Ralph.
No hens.
Why not?
Well, I don't know.
I'm afraid I'd have about 200.
So do you get up?
You told me backstage that, well, you said to me, do you like to hear
a rooster crow in the morning?
Oh, I love it.
I get up early anyway.
It would be nice to hear a rooster crow like we used
to hear back home.
I remember one night, I stayed all night with this kid up in East
Tennessee and we were about eight years old.
And you know when in the middle of the night,
you got to go to the bathroom.
We didn't have a bathroom.
You go out on the porch.
You remember that?
Oh, yeah.
We called it going out on the porch.
Yeah.
Well, he got up, went up out on the porch.
I was asleep.
And you know how roosters will
clap their wings and then they'll crow.
[A]
Well, he came running in screaming, [N] said, somebody's
out there slapping their britches legs at me.
It was the rooster?
About that time the rooster crowed.
Do you know a lot about roosters?
I don't know.
What are they trying to say when they flap their wings?
You know, I don't know.
Bill Carlisle told me, he says, you got to pet that rooster.
But I don't know how to pet a rooster.
I'm afraid he'd spur me or something.
He's a fighter,
I think.
Does this rooster, you said you named it Hot Shot.
Named it Hot Shot, yeah.
The Bantam rooster.
Well, I think you ought to get it some company, don't you?
I think so.
I wonder if he'll crow without a hen around.
I don't think I would, [C]
but
There are some things he won't [D] grow into.
[A]
[E]
[Em] [Bm] [C#m] [D] [G#] [A]
[F#] [A] [E] [A]
[E]
[B] [Bm] [E]
[A] [B] [A] [E]
[A] [B] [A]
[D] [Bm] [A]
[D] [D#] [E]
[A]
[D] [F#m]
[G] [D]
[F#] [Bm]
[G] [D] [A] [D]
[G] [D]
[F#] [Bm] [D]
[Em] [D]
[G]
[C] [G]
[D] [G]
[C] [G]
[D] [G] [C]
[Am] [D] [G] [C]
[G] [D] [G] [D]
[G] [D]
[G]
[C]
[G] [F]
[G] [F]
[C] [F]
[C] [G] [C]
[E] [A] All right, because President Bush is going to be here and all that, we may run short
of time [E] and this is [A] something that will save a little time.
I'm going to play two tunes
at once.
Yankee Doodle and Dixie.
[Em]
[A]
[Em] [G#m] [A]
[E] [A]
[D] [B]
[E] [A] [D] [A]
[E] [A] [E]
[D] [G#] [A] [E]
[A]
[E] [A]
[E]
[B] [G#m] [A]
[Am] Chester!
[N]
Hey!
Shows I'm brave, I think.
Shows you're brave?
Yeah, to try something like that on television.
Well, you've done that before.
I've done it before, but not too much on TV.
You did it on Pop Goes the Country one time.
I never will forget that.
You were taping it to include in a record.
And that was a
strange audience.
A lot of television audiences will do exactly what you tell them or ask
them to do, but they will wait for you to tell them to do it.
Chet is doing, Ricky,
he's doing Yankee Doodle and Dixie together.
And the audience is just sitting there.
He
finally looked up, he said, that's great, applaud that.
That's hard to do, too.
I tell you, I got on a new pair of shoes.
Yeah, tell them about your shoes.
I think this is a funny story.
They're new shoes, but I didn't get them in the store.
I got them out the golf club.
I
left my shoes to be shined while I was playing golf.
I got back, I found these and I thought,
boy, he put a great shine on my shoes.
And I looked inside and they're a different brand.
So somebody out there is wearing my shoes.
I like these pretty good.
With thinner socks,
they're not bad.
Jerry Reed probably has your shoes.
He always wanted to walk in your shoes.
That's true.
A lot of things have been happening to me.
I got a rooster.
You have a rooster?
I got a cockadoodledoo, yeah.
Chet, you live in a rather exclusive neighborhood.
Do you get a chicken house for your [B] neighborhood?
It's in a chicken wire [N] fence.
I played golf down in Florida somewhere a few years ago.
And along the course there, they had these Bantam roosters that would crow.
And I thought,
I want one of those.
And so I got one from the fair out here.
Bill Carlisle got it for
me and I named it Hot Shot, which is Bill's nickname.
That's a comedy act he used to do.
It's a fine rooster, Ralph.
No hens.
Why not?
Well, I don't know.
I'm afraid I'd have about 200.
So do you get up?
You told me backstage that, well, you said to me, do you like to hear
a rooster crow in the morning?
Oh, I love it.
I get up early anyway.
It would be nice to hear a rooster crow like we used
to hear back home.
I remember one night, I stayed all night with this kid up in East
Tennessee and we were about eight years old.
And you know when in the middle of the night,
you got to go to the bathroom.
We didn't have a bathroom.
You go out on the porch.
You remember that?
Oh, yeah.
We called it going out on the porch.
Yeah.
Well, he got up, went up out on the porch.
I was asleep.
And you know how roosters will
clap their wings and then they'll crow.
[A]
Well, he came running in screaming, [N] said, somebody's
out there slapping their britches legs at me.
It was the rooster?
About that time the rooster crowed.
Do you know a lot about roosters?
I don't know.
What are they trying to say when they flap their wings?
You know, I don't know.
Bill Carlisle told me, he says, you got to pet that rooster.
But I don't know how to pet a rooster.
I'm afraid he'd spur me or something.
He's a fighter,
I think.
Does this rooster, you said you named it Hot Shot.
Named it Hot Shot, yeah.
The Bantam rooster.
Well, I think you ought to get it some company, don't you?
I think so.
I wonder if he'll crow without a hen around.
I don't think I would, [C]
but
There are some things he won't [D] grow into.
Key:
A
D
G
E
C
A
D
G
_ ever leaving the guitar. _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ [Em] _ [Bm] _ [C#m] _ [D] _ [G#] _ _ [A] _
[F#] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [B] _ _ [Bm] _ _ [E] _ _
[A] _ _ _ [B] _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[A] _ [B] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
[D] _ _ [Bm] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ [D#] _ [E] _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [D] _ _ _ _ _ _ [F#m] _
[G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [F#] _ _ [Bm] _ _
[G] _ _ [D] _ [A] _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [F#] _ _ [Bm] _ [D] _
[Em] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[D] _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[D] _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
[Am] _ _ [D] _ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _
[G] _ _ _ [D] _ [G] _ _ [D] _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ _ _ [G] _ [F] _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _ _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ [A] All right, _ _ _ because President Bush is going to be here and all that, we may run short
of time [E] and this is [A] something that will save a little time.
I'm going to play two tunes
at once.
_ _ Yankee Doodle and Dixie.
_ _ _ _ [Em] _ _
[A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Em] _ [G#m] _ [A] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [E] _ _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [B] _ _
[E] _ _ [A] _ _ _ [D] _ _ [A] _
_ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
[D] _ _ [G#] _ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [E] _ [A] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ [B] _ [G#m] _ [A] _ _ _ _ _
[Am] Chester!
_ _ [N] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ Hey! _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ Shows I'm brave, I think.
Shows you're brave?
Yeah, to try something like that on television.
Well, you've done that before.
I've done it before, but not too much on TV.
You did it on Pop Goes the Country one time.
I never will forget that.
You were taping it to include in a record.
And that was a
strange audience.
A lot of television audiences will do exactly what you tell them or ask
them to do, but they will wait for you to tell them to do it.
Chet is doing, Ricky,
he's doing Yankee Doodle and Dixie together.
And the audience is just sitting there.
He
finally looked up, he said, that's great, applaud that. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ That's hard to do, too.
I tell you, I got on a new pair of shoes.
Yeah, tell them about your shoes.
I think this is a funny story.
They're new shoes, but I didn't get them in the store.
I got them out the golf club.
I
left my shoes to be shined while I was playing golf.
I got back, I found these and _ I thought,
boy, he put a great shine on my shoes.
And I looked inside and they're a different brand.
So somebody out there is wearing my shoes.
_ _ _ I like these pretty good.
_ With thinner socks,
they're not bad.
Jerry Reed probably has your shoes.
He always wanted to walk in your shoes.
That's true.
_ A lot of things have been happening to me.
I got a rooster.
_ You have a rooster?
I got a cockadoodledoo, yeah.
_ Chet, you live in a rather exclusive neighborhood.
_ Do you get a chicken house for your [B] neighborhood?
It's in a chicken wire [N] fence.
I played golf down in Florida somewhere a few years ago.
And along the course there, they had these Bantam roosters that would crow.
And I thought,
I want one of those.
And so I got one from the fair out here.
Bill Carlisle got it for
me and I named it Hot Shot, which is Bill's nickname.
That's a comedy act he used to do.
_ It's a fine rooster, Ralph.
No hens.
_ _ Why not?
Well, I don't know.
I'm afraid I'd have about 200. _ _ _
So do you get up?
You told me backstage that, well, you said to me, do you like to hear
a rooster crow in the morning?
Oh, I love it.
I get up early anyway.
It would be nice to hear a rooster crow like we used
to hear back home.
I remember one night, I stayed all night with this kid _ up in East
Tennessee and we were about eight years old.
And you know when in the middle of the night,
you got to go to the bathroom.
We didn't have a bathroom.
You go out on the porch.
You remember that?
Oh, yeah.
We called it going out on the porch.
Yeah.
_ Well, he got up, went up out on the porch.
I was asleep.
And you know how roosters will
_ clap their _ wings _ and then they'll crow.
[A]
Well, he came running in screaming, [N] said, somebody's
out there slapping their britches legs at me.
It was the rooster?
About that time the rooster crowed.
Do you know a lot about roosters?
I don't know.
What are they trying to say when they flap their wings?
You know, I don't know.
Bill Carlisle told me, he says, you got to pet that rooster.
_ But I don't know how to pet a rooster.
I'm afraid he'd spur me or something.
He's a fighter,
I think.
Does this rooster, you said you named it Hot Shot.
Named it Hot Shot, yeah.
The Bantam rooster.
Well, I think you ought to get it some company, don't you? _
I think so.
I wonder if he'll crow without a hen around.
I don't think I would, _ [C] _ _
but_
There are some things he won't [D] grow into. _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ [Em] _ [Bm] _ [C#m] _ [D] _ [G#] _ _ [A] _
[F#] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [B] _ _ [Bm] _ _ [E] _ _
[A] _ _ _ [B] _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[A] _ [B] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
[D] _ _ [Bm] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ [D#] _ [E] _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [D] _ _ _ _ _ _ [F#m] _
[G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [F#] _ _ [Bm] _ _
[G] _ _ [D] _ [A] _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [F#] _ _ [Bm] _ [D] _
[Em] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[D] _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[D] _ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
[Am] _ _ [D] _ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _
[G] _ _ _ [D] _ [G] _ _ [D] _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ _ _ [G] _ [F] _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _ _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ [A] All right, _ _ _ because President Bush is going to be here and all that, we may run short
of time [E] and this is [A] something that will save a little time.
I'm going to play two tunes
at once.
_ _ Yankee Doodle and Dixie.
_ _ _ _ [Em] _ _
[A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Em] _ [G#m] _ [A] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [E] _ _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [B] _ _
[E] _ _ [A] _ _ _ [D] _ _ [A] _
_ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
[D] _ _ [G#] _ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [E] _ [A] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ [B] _ [G#m] _ [A] _ _ _ _ _
[Am] Chester!
_ _ [N] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ Hey! _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ Shows I'm brave, I think.
Shows you're brave?
Yeah, to try something like that on television.
Well, you've done that before.
I've done it before, but not too much on TV.
You did it on Pop Goes the Country one time.
I never will forget that.
You were taping it to include in a record.
And that was a
strange audience.
A lot of television audiences will do exactly what you tell them or ask
them to do, but they will wait for you to tell them to do it.
Chet is doing, Ricky,
he's doing Yankee Doodle and Dixie together.
And the audience is just sitting there.
He
finally looked up, he said, that's great, applaud that. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ That's hard to do, too.
I tell you, I got on a new pair of shoes.
Yeah, tell them about your shoes.
I think this is a funny story.
They're new shoes, but I didn't get them in the store.
I got them out the golf club.
I
left my shoes to be shined while I was playing golf.
I got back, I found these and _ I thought,
boy, he put a great shine on my shoes.
And I looked inside and they're a different brand.
So somebody out there is wearing my shoes.
_ _ _ I like these pretty good.
_ With thinner socks,
they're not bad.
Jerry Reed probably has your shoes.
He always wanted to walk in your shoes.
That's true.
_ A lot of things have been happening to me.
I got a rooster.
_ You have a rooster?
I got a cockadoodledoo, yeah.
_ Chet, you live in a rather exclusive neighborhood.
_ Do you get a chicken house for your [B] neighborhood?
It's in a chicken wire [N] fence.
I played golf down in Florida somewhere a few years ago.
And along the course there, they had these Bantam roosters that would crow.
And I thought,
I want one of those.
And so I got one from the fair out here.
Bill Carlisle got it for
me and I named it Hot Shot, which is Bill's nickname.
That's a comedy act he used to do.
_ It's a fine rooster, Ralph.
No hens.
_ _ Why not?
Well, I don't know.
I'm afraid I'd have about 200. _ _ _
So do you get up?
You told me backstage that, well, you said to me, do you like to hear
a rooster crow in the morning?
Oh, I love it.
I get up early anyway.
It would be nice to hear a rooster crow like we used
to hear back home.
I remember one night, I stayed all night with this kid _ up in East
Tennessee and we were about eight years old.
And you know when in the middle of the night,
you got to go to the bathroom.
We didn't have a bathroom.
You go out on the porch.
You remember that?
Oh, yeah.
We called it going out on the porch.
Yeah.
_ Well, he got up, went up out on the porch.
I was asleep.
And you know how roosters will
_ clap their _ wings _ and then they'll crow.
[A]
Well, he came running in screaming, [N] said, somebody's
out there slapping their britches legs at me.
It was the rooster?
About that time the rooster crowed.
Do you know a lot about roosters?
I don't know.
What are they trying to say when they flap their wings?
You know, I don't know.
Bill Carlisle told me, he says, you got to pet that rooster.
_ But I don't know how to pet a rooster.
I'm afraid he'd spur me or something.
He's a fighter,
I think.
Does this rooster, you said you named it Hot Shot.
Named it Hot Shot, yeah.
The Bantam rooster.
Well, I think you ought to get it some company, don't you? _
I think so.
I wonder if he'll crow without a hen around.
I don't think I would, _ [C] _ _
but_
There are some things he won't [D] grow into. _ _