Chords for Continental Drift

Tempo:
119.8 bpm
Chords used:

A

E

D

C

Am

Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
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Continental Drift chords
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[C] [D] [A]
[D] [E] In the year [C] of 1910 [Dm] there was a scientist whose name [Am] was Albert Megane.
[C] [D] [A]
He noticed that the continents [E] looked just like pieces of [Am] a broken puzzle.
[C] [E] [D]
By 1915 [Am] he called it continental drift.
It caused [E] a rift with this fellow scientist [A] who sang,
Ha ha ha you [E] are a crazy [A] man, Albert Megane you are a crazy hippo.
[C] [D] [A]
[C] [A] They reminded him he [Em] had no proof for how or why the [A] continents could be [C] this.
[F] [A] And until you show just how or why you merely have one interesting hypothesis.
[C] [D] Until this evidence we see [E] you don't have a theory.
[Bb]
[A] Albert [D] Megane you [E] are a crazy [A] man, [D] Albert Megane you [E] are a crazy hippo.
[C] [F]
[A] [E] [F]
[Ab] In [Dm] the year of 1930 [Am] on an expedition to [Dm] Greenland,
Megane got caught [Am] in a blizzard.
In a blizzard.
When they finally found him [Am] it was much, much too [Bb] late.
[E] And they [B] buried him in an icy [E] mausoleum.
[A]
Thirty years after he died [D] a new idea came to [A] light.
[B]
It changed the way geologists saw the world [E] and brought continental drift back to life.
Now everybody [A] sing.
Albert [D] Megane you are a brilliant [A] man, Albert [D] Megane you [E] are a brilliant [A]
man.
[D] [E] [A]
Continental drift, [D] [E] Alfred Megane's [A] theory, continental drift,
[D] [E] Alfred Megane's [A] theory, continental drift,
[D] [E] Alfred Megan's [A] theory, continental drift.
[D] [B] Alfred Bane is brilliant [A] too!
Key:  
A
1231
E
2311
D
1321
C
3211
Am
2311
A
1231
E
2311
D
1321
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_ [C] _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [E] In the year [C] of 1910 [Dm] there was a scientist whose name [Am] was Albert Megane.
[C] _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ [A]
He noticed that the continents [E] looked just like pieces of [Am] a broken puzzle.
[C] _ _ _ [E] _ _ _ [D] _
By 1915 [Am] he called it continental drift.
It caused [E] a rift _ with this fellow scientist [A] who sang,
Ha ha ha you [E] are a crazy [A] man, _ Albert Megane you are a crazy hippo.
[C] _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ [A] _
_ [C] _ _ _ _ _ [A] They reminded him he [Em] had no proof for how or why the [A] continents could be [C] this.
_ _ [F] _ _ [A] And until you show just how or why you merely have one interesting hypothesis.
[C] _ _ [D] _ _ _ Until this evidence we see [E] you don't have a theory.
[Bb] _
_ [A] _ _ Albert [D] Megane you [E] are a crazy [A] man, _ _ _ [D] Albert Megane you [E] are a crazy hippo.
_ [C] _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ _ _ [F] _
[Ab] _ _ _ _ _ In [Dm] the year of _ 1930 [Am] on an expedition to _ [Dm] Greenland,
Megane got caught [Am] in a _ blizzard.
In a blizzard.
_ When they finally found him [Am] it was much, much too [Bb] late.
_ [E] And they [B] buried him in an icy _ _ [E] mausoleum.
_ _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Thirty years after he died [D] a new idea came to [A] light.
_ [B] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ It changed the way geologists saw the world [E] and brought continental drift back to life. _ _ _
_ _ _ Now everybody [A] sing.
_ Albert [D] Megane you are a brilliant [A] man, Albert [D] Megane you [E] are a brilliant [A] _
man.
_ [D] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _
Continental drift, [D] _ [E] Alfred Megane's [A] theory, continental drift,
[D] _ [E] Alfred Megane's [A] theory, continental drift,
[D] _ _ [E] Alfred Megan's [A] theory, continental drift.
[D] _ _ [B] Alfred Bane is brilliant [A] _ too! _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _