Chords for Dolly Parton & Alabama - Mountain Music ,1987 , 720p

Tempo:
77.425 bpm
Chords used:

D

A

E

G

Bm

Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
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Dolly Parton & Alabama - Mountain Music ,1987 , 720p chords
Start Jamming...
I guess I don't get folks introduced properly.
This is Randy, this is Ted, and this is Jeff.
And I want you folks to know I'm really happy to have you with me today.
Coming to visit.
You know I was talking about mountain music and the Smoky Mountains.
I know we all have our memories of like our mountain music.
Do you remember your first country [G] song you ever heard?
Your first mountain memory of music?
Well, I remember the, uh, there was a radio that was on top of our refrigerator.
The first song I remember hearing was I Saw the Light.
Oh, I love that.
That's a Hank Williams song, right?
You still remember it?
You ever sing it?
Oh, well, yeah.
You feel led to do a little of it right now?
Chief, Chief.
I saw the light, I saw the [C] light.
No more darkness, [G] no more night.
Now I'm so happy, no sorrow in sight.
Praise the Lord, [D] I saw [G] the light.
Praise the [D] Lord, I saw [G] [C] the light.
[G] Now that'll take you home.
[N] That's great.
You have a special mountain memory?
You remember your first song?
It's not really a mountain song, but they asked me to get up in church and sing.
And the only song I knew was, He's Got the Whole World in His Hands.
That's a good one.
Do you have a favorite?
It probably wasn't a mountain song, but my mother and dad wore out several records of Goodnight Irene to get me to sleep when I was a baby.
Yeah, that's a good one.
I always liked that, too.
My first memory of, uh, my first memory, period, not just a song, but was of an old lady.
Even before I remember, Mom and Daddy and my brothers and sisters, this old woman used to live close to us.
In fact, she owned the farm where we lived and my daddy used to share crop.
She used to put me on her knees and she'd sing, you know how you dance your kids up and down like a trotty horse, trotty horse?
She'd sing, tiptoe, tiptoe, little dolly parton, tiptoe, tiptoe, ain't she fine.
Tiptoe, tiptoe, little dolly parton, she's got a red dress just like mine.
She's got a red dress, she's got nine.
She's got a red dress just like mine.
And I'd go, ha ha ha, sing it some more, Aunt Mark, sing it some more.
And she would, you know, she'd just sing it over and over and she'd give me gingerbread to my little stomach.
And we just pooched out the hair and years later I kept eating gingerbread and it got out to there and then it went back.
Anyway, you guys wrote a song years ago, not so many years ago, just a few years back, that I love.
And it talks about mountain music and it kind of brings back a lot of memories.
And I just wondered if it wouldn't be imposing on you if you'd let me sing a little bit of that with you today.
Sure, we'd love it.
Good.
All right, hit [A] it.
[D]
[E] [A] Oh baby, some mountain [D] music, [B] like grandma and granny.
[D] Can [B] I blow my [E] little Cajun [A] hideaway?
[Abm] [A] Swim [D] across the river, [A] just to prove [D] that I'm a man.
[A] And the days [D] of being lazy [G] and being [E] nature's friend.
[A] Oh baby, [D] some mountain music, [A] like grandma and grandpa used to [D] play.
[A] Then I'll float on [D] [Bm] down to [E] Cajun hideaway.
[A] Well, I'm [D] Tom Hedrick, [A] bending over [D] skinny cats.
Playing [A] baseball [D] with shirt rocks.
I'll [G] use a sawmill slab [E] for a bath, yeah.
[A] Play some back [D] home, home music.
[A] Let calm [D] from heart, tell them Teddy.
[A]
Play something, [D] a lot to feel in.
Cause [Bm] that's where music has [E] to start.
[A] Oh baby, some [D] mountain music, like [A] grandma and grandpa [D] used to play.
[A] [D] [Bm] To [E] Cajun hideaway.
Hey, you're gonna kill me.
[A]
[D] [A]
[D] [A] [D] [E]
[A] Oh baby, [D] mountain [A]
[D] [A] [D] [E]
[A] [D] [A] music.
[D] [A] [D] [E]
[A] [G] [D] Lee [A]
[N]
Springernails, that ain't easy.
Thank you guys.
I hope they had a microphone on you.
Did they?
They do, don't they?
Yeah, I do.
I don't know where they got it stuck, but they got one.
Anyway, I think that was a lot of fun.
I don't know if they've faded out into commercial or if they're expecting me to take us into one.
If you are, well take it away boys.
And if you ain't, well I'm looking real stupid right now.
Key:  
D
1321
A
1231
E
2311
G
2131
Bm
13421112
D
1321
A
1231
E
2311
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I guess I don't get folks introduced properly.
This is Randy, this is Ted, and this is Jeff.
And I want you folks to know I'm really happy to have you with me today.
Coming to visit.
You know I was talking about mountain music and the Smoky Mountains.
I know we all have our memories of like our mountain music.
Do you remember your first country [G] song you ever heard?
Your first mountain memory of music?
Well, I remember the, uh, there was a radio that was on top of our refrigerator.
_ The first song I remember hearing was I Saw the Light.
Oh, I love that.
That's a Hank Williams song, right?
You still remember it?
You ever sing it?
Oh, well, yeah.
You feel led to do a little of it right now?
Chief, Chief.
I saw the light, I saw the [C] light.
No more darkness, [G] no more night.
Now I'm so happy, no sorrow in sight.
Praise the Lord, [D] I saw [G] the light.
Praise the [D] Lord, I saw [G] [C] the light.
_ _ [G] Now that'll take you home.
_ [N] _ That's great.
You have a special mountain memory?
You remember your first song?
It's not really a mountain song, but they asked me to get up in church and sing.
And the only song I knew was, He's Got the Whole World in His Hands.
That's a good one.
Do you have a favorite?
It probably wasn't a mountain song, but my mother and dad wore out several records of Goodnight Irene to get me to sleep when I was a baby.
Yeah, that's a good one.
I always liked that, too.
My first memory of, uh, my first memory, period, not just a song, but was of an old lady.
Even before I remember, Mom and Daddy and my brothers and sisters, this old woman used to live close to us.
In fact, she owned the farm where we lived and my daddy used to share crop.
She used to put me on her knees and she'd sing, you know how you dance your kids up and down like a trotty horse, trotty horse?
She'd sing, tiptoe, tiptoe, little dolly parton, tiptoe, tiptoe, ain't she fine.
Tiptoe, tiptoe, little dolly parton, she's got a red dress just like mine.
She's got a red dress, she's got nine.
She's got a red dress just like mine.
And I'd go, ha ha ha, sing it some more, Aunt Mark, sing it some more.
And she would, you know, she'd just sing it over and over and she'd give me gingerbread to my little stomach.
And we just pooched out the hair and years later I kept eating gingerbread and it got out to there and then it went back.
Anyway, you guys wrote a song years ago, not so many years ago, just a few years back, that I love.
And it talks about mountain music and it kind of brings back a lot of memories.
And I just wondered if it wouldn't be imposing on you if you'd let me sing a little bit of that with you today.
Sure, we'd love it.
Good.
All right, hit [A] it.
_ _ [D] _ _ _
[E] _ _ [A] _ _ Oh baby, some mountain [D] music, [B] like grandma and granny.
[D] _ Can [B] I blow my _ [E] little Cajun [A] hideaway?
[Abm] _ [A] Swim [D] across the river, [A] just to prove [D] that I'm a man.
[A] And the days [D] of being lazy [G] and being [E] nature's friend.
[A] Oh baby, [D] some mountain music, [A] like grandma and grandpa used to [D] play.
[A] Then I'll float on [D] _ [Bm] down to _ [E] Cajun hideaway.
[A] Well, I'm [D] Tom Hedrick, [A] bending over [D] skinny cats.
Playing [A] baseball [D] with shirt rocks.
I'll [G] use a sawmill slab [E] for a bath, yeah.
_ _ [A] Play some back [D] home, home music.
[A] Let calm [D] from heart, tell them Teddy.
[A]
Play something, [D] a lot to feel in.
Cause [Bm] that's where music has [E] to start.
_ _ _ [A] Oh baby, some [D] mountain music, like [A] grandma and grandpa [D] used to play. _
[A] _ _ [D] _ _ [Bm] To [E] Cajun hideaway.
Hey, _ you're gonna kill me.
[A] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ [A] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ [D] _ _ [E] _
_ [A] _ _ Oh baby, [D] mountain _ [A] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ [D] _ _ [E] _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _ [A] music.
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ [D] _ _ [E] _
_ [A] _ _ [G] _ [D] Lee _ [A] _
_ _ [N] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ Springernails, that ain't easy.
Thank you guys.
I hope they had a microphone on you.
Did they?
They do, don't they?
Yeah, I do.
I don't know where they got it stuck, but they got one.
Anyway, I think that was a lot of fun.
I don't know if they've faded out into commercial or if they're expecting me to take us into one.
If you are, well take it away boys.
And if you ain't, well I'm looking real stupid right now. _ _

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