Ballad Of A Teenage Queen Chords by Johnny Cash
Tempo:
95.85 bpm
Chords used:
Bb
F
Eb
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, [F] prettiest girl you've ever [Bb] seen.
There's [Eb] a story in [Bb] our town of the prettiest girl around.
Golden hair and eyes of blue, [F] how those eyes could please [Bb] you.
How those eyes could please you.
Boys hung around [F] her by the store, but she loved the boy [Bb] next door,
who [F] worked at the Kansas [Bb] store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, prettiest [F] girl [Bb] you've ever seen.
She was tops in all they said, and never [F] once went to her head.
She had everything [Bb] it seemed, not a [F] careless [Bb] teenage queen.
Not a careless teenage queen.
Other boys could offer more, but she loved the boy next door,
who worked [F] at the [Bb] Kansas store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, you should be a movie queen.
He would marry her next spring, save his [F] money [Bb] for the ring.
Then one day a movie scout came to town to take her out.
Came to town to take her out.
Hollywood could offer more, so she left the boy next door,
working at the candy store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, see [F] you on the [Bb] movie screen.
Very soon she was a star, pretty house and shiny car,
swimming pool and a fenced around, but she missed her old hometown.
But she missed her old hometown.
All the world was at her door, all except the boy next door,
who worked at [F] the Kansas store.
[Bb] Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, saddest girl we've ever seen.
Then one day the teenage star sold her house [F] and all [Bb] her cars,
[Eb] gave up all her wealth [Bb] and fame, left it all and caught a train.
Left it all and caught a train.
[Eb] Do I have [Bb] to tell you more?
She [F] came back to the boy [Bb] next door, who worked at the candy store.
Now this story has some more, you'll hear it [F] all at the
There's [Eb] a story in [Bb] our town of the prettiest girl around.
Golden hair and eyes of blue, [F] how those eyes could please [Bb] you.
How those eyes could please you.
Boys hung around [F] her by the store, but she loved the boy [Bb] next door,
who [F] worked at the Kansas [Bb] store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, prettiest [F] girl [Bb] you've ever seen.
She was tops in all they said, and never [F] once went to her head.
She had everything [Bb] it seemed, not a [F] careless [Bb] teenage queen.
Not a careless teenage queen.
Other boys could offer more, but she loved the boy next door,
who worked [F] at the [Bb] Kansas store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, you should be a movie queen.
He would marry her next spring, save his [F] money [Bb] for the ring.
Then one day a movie scout came to town to take her out.
Came to town to take her out.
Hollywood could offer more, so she left the boy next door,
working at the candy store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, see [F] you on the [Bb] movie screen.
Very soon she was a star, pretty house and shiny car,
swimming pool and a fenced around, but she missed her old hometown.
But she missed her old hometown.
All the world was at her door, all except the boy next door,
who worked at [F] the Kansas store.
[Bb] Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, saddest girl we've ever seen.
Then one day the teenage star sold her house [F] and all [Bb] her cars,
[Eb] gave up all her wealth [Bb] and fame, left it all and caught a train.
Left it all and caught a train.
[Eb] Do I have [Bb] to tell you more?
She [F] came back to the boy [Bb] next door, who worked at the candy store.
Now this story has some more, you'll hear it [F] all at the
Key:
Bb
F
Eb
Bb
F
Eb
Bb
F
_ Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, [F] prettiest girl you've ever [Bb] seen.
There's [Eb] a story in [Bb] our town of the prettiest girl around.
Golden hair and eyes of blue, [F] how those eyes could please [Bb] you.
How those eyes could please you.
Boys hung around [F] her by the store, but she loved the boy [Bb] next door,
who [F] worked at the Kansas [Bb] store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, prettiest [F] girl [Bb] you've ever seen.
She was tops in all they said, and never [F] once went to her head.
She had everything [Bb] it seemed, not a [F] careless [Bb] teenage queen.
Not a careless teenage queen.
Other boys could offer more, but she loved the boy next door,
who worked [F] at the [Bb] Kansas store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, you should be a movie queen.
He would marry her next spring, save his [F] money [Bb] for the ring.
Then one day a movie scout came to town to take her out.
Came to town to take her out.
Hollywood could offer more, so she left the boy next door,
working at the candy store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, see [F] you on the [Bb] movie screen.
Very soon she was a star, pretty house and shiny car,
swimming pool and a fenced around, but she missed her old hometown.
But she missed her old hometown.
All the world was at her door, all except the boy next door,
who worked at [F] the Kansas store.
[Bb] Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, saddest girl we've ever seen.
Then one day the teenage star sold her house [F] and all [Bb] her cars,
[Eb] gave up all her wealth [Bb] and fame, left it all and caught a train.
Left it all and caught a train.
[Eb] Do I have [Bb] to tell you more?
She [F] came back to the boy [Bb] next door, who worked at the candy store.
Now this story has some more, you'll hear it [F] all at the
There's [Eb] a story in [Bb] our town of the prettiest girl around.
Golden hair and eyes of blue, [F] how those eyes could please [Bb] you.
How those eyes could please you.
Boys hung around [F] her by the store, but she loved the boy [Bb] next door,
who [F] worked at the Kansas [Bb] store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, prettiest [F] girl [Bb] you've ever seen.
She was tops in all they said, and never [F] once went to her head.
She had everything [Bb] it seemed, not a [F] careless [Bb] teenage queen.
Not a careless teenage queen.
Other boys could offer more, but she loved the boy next door,
who worked [F] at the [Bb] Kansas store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, you should be a movie queen.
He would marry her next spring, save his [F] money [Bb] for the ring.
Then one day a movie scout came to town to take her out.
Came to town to take her out.
Hollywood could offer more, so she left the boy next door,
working at the candy store.
Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, see [F] you on the [Bb] movie screen.
Very soon she was a star, pretty house and shiny car,
swimming pool and a fenced around, but she missed her old hometown.
But she missed her old hometown.
All the world was at her door, all except the boy next door,
who worked at [F] the Kansas store.
[Bb] Dream on, dream on, teenage queen, saddest girl we've ever seen.
Then one day the teenage star sold her house [F] and all [Bb] her cars,
[Eb] gave up all her wealth [Bb] and fame, left it all and caught a train.
Left it all and caught a train.
[Eb] Do I have [Bb] to tell you more?
She [F] came back to the boy [Bb] next door, who worked at the candy store.
Now this story has some more, you'll hear it [F] all at the