Chords for Kevin Costner & Bill Paxton about "Hatfield & McCoys"
Tempo:
97.125 bpm
Chords used:
A
G
D#
F#m
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Where to stop all this nonsense?
I guess you can kind of blame that.
You've still got something left.
What do you want, Randall?
Hmm?
What do you want out of this life?
Just get through it.
If ever two men misunderstood each other, it was us.
So when's it end?
When there's no blood left to be spilled.
Well, my movies are usually four hours long, so I can't do anything quick.
Can you tell her what this movie's about?
Well, this is the story of the two famous families from eastern Kentucky.
The McCoys and the other was from west Virginia.
There was a little river that ran between, separated the two of them.
And these were two men that had fought in the Civil War together,
but they became estranged and they came home from the war,
and this feud started between them.
It was almost like an obsession, more, I think, from a McCoy character
because he stayed through the whole war and came back after being a prisoner of war
and was really destitute, and his family was destitute.
And he had left the war early and was actually become a successful lumberman.
I don't think so.
Devil, Ants Hatfield, I rue the day I saved your life.
May God damn your eternal soul.
You feel the need to [A] bring up God one more time, whose side he sits on?
[G] [D#] We really used whatever bag of tricks we had for this one.
All our level of experience went into this.
We did a lot for a little, and we did it in a place that was,
while it was open arms to us, it wasn't convenient.
And it was, you know, making good film is hard.
It's just hard to do.
It's an art form.
It ain't pertinent to the case.
It's about sin, Devil, Ants.
What's Christian right [F#m] and damnation [N] wrong.
Cut!
This case is dismissed.
Everybody get the hell out of here.
The world sees the finished product, and we are out there for three or four months,
and we have a lot of other experiences that go above and beyond cut and wrap.
We have, you know, Bill lost his father when we were out there.
So there's a lot of life that goes on while you're trying to make up this make-believe life.
And he went away and came back to us and buried somebody, the man most important to him.
So what his hat feels and McCoy's to Bill, it will be a lot of things,
but it will also mark the passing, you know, of a father.
My God, I will gut shoot the next agitator who further disrespects my courtroom.
McCoy or Hatfield.
I reckon this is what I should have expected from a Hatfield court.
One more word out of you, McCoy.
But it was tough to go home, and I have to say when I came, I got back,
I had to literally fly home and bury my dad and then go right back to shooting.
And I got back on Thanksgiving night, and Leslie and the producer,
they had arranged a Thanksgiving dinner for all of us.
And that's when I saw all these guys, and we had already been together for several months.
And it was quite a homecoming for me, and it really was.
I felt a lot of love in that room that night.
I find you both guilty of this heinous crime,
for which you are to be taken to some convenient spot without delay
and thereby hanged by the neck until you are dead.
Sentence which I hereby suspend, since no one can say whether it were self-defense or not.
God is just and shall return to us the years that the locust hath eaten.
You're just a huckabab of a persimmon, ain't you?
I want to find something to do with Kevin.
I'd like to direct Kevin in a film.
Well, I just read a great book by Tom Epperson, Billy Bob Thornton's old writing partner, called Sailor.
And I want to get Kevin to get the rights to that and get Tom to write a script.
Now everybody's scrambling to get the rights.
Way to go, Bucket Mouth.
It's like you're going to have eight assistants charging down to pick this up.
That's a great book.
Yeah, I mean, that's what comes out of these movies.
Hatfield & Coy's was an experience I won't ever forget.
And the people that I met, I believe that I'll have a professional relationship with them
and a friendship with them long after this movie.
So it worked perfectly in that way.
You are a lying spawn of hell who voted his Hatfield-wise afferent strength.
Oh, Randall, just leave it on out of this.
Don't give yourself apoplexy, all this to do over a pig.
This is about honor.
About lying and stealing and murdering.
I guess you can kind of blame that.
You've still got something left.
What do you want, Randall?
Hmm?
What do you want out of this life?
Just get through it.
If ever two men misunderstood each other, it was us.
So when's it end?
When there's no blood left to be spilled.
Well, my movies are usually four hours long, so I can't do anything quick.
Can you tell her what this movie's about?
Well, this is the story of the two famous families from eastern Kentucky.
The McCoys and the other was from west Virginia.
There was a little river that ran between, separated the two of them.
And these were two men that had fought in the Civil War together,
but they became estranged and they came home from the war,
and this feud started between them.
It was almost like an obsession, more, I think, from a McCoy character
because he stayed through the whole war and came back after being a prisoner of war
and was really destitute, and his family was destitute.
And he had left the war early and was actually become a successful lumberman.
I don't think so.
Devil, Ants Hatfield, I rue the day I saved your life.
May God damn your eternal soul.
You feel the need to [A] bring up God one more time, whose side he sits on?
[G] [D#] We really used whatever bag of tricks we had for this one.
All our level of experience went into this.
We did a lot for a little, and we did it in a place that was,
while it was open arms to us, it wasn't convenient.
And it was, you know, making good film is hard.
It's just hard to do.
It's an art form.
It ain't pertinent to the case.
It's about sin, Devil, Ants.
What's Christian right [F#m] and damnation [N] wrong.
Cut!
This case is dismissed.
Everybody get the hell out of here.
The world sees the finished product, and we are out there for three or four months,
and we have a lot of other experiences that go above and beyond cut and wrap.
We have, you know, Bill lost his father when we were out there.
So there's a lot of life that goes on while you're trying to make up this make-believe life.
And he went away and came back to us and buried somebody, the man most important to him.
So what his hat feels and McCoy's to Bill, it will be a lot of things,
but it will also mark the passing, you know, of a father.
My God, I will gut shoot the next agitator who further disrespects my courtroom.
McCoy or Hatfield.
I reckon this is what I should have expected from a Hatfield court.
One more word out of you, McCoy.
But it was tough to go home, and I have to say when I came, I got back,
I had to literally fly home and bury my dad and then go right back to shooting.
And I got back on Thanksgiving night, and Leslie and the producer,
they had arranged a Thanksgiving dinner for all of us.
And that's when I saw all these guys, and we had already been together for several months.
And it was quite a homecoming for me, and it really was.
I felt a lot of love in that room that night.
I find you both guilty of this heinous crime,
for which you are to be taken to some convenient spot without delay
and thereby hanged by the neck until you are dead.
Sentence which I hereby suspend, since no one can say whether it were self-defense or not.
God is just and shall return to us the years that the locust hath eaten.
You're just a huckabab of a persimmon, ain't you?
I want to find something to do with Kevin.
I'd like to direct Kevin in a film.
Well, I just read a great book by Tom Epperson, Billy Bob Thornton's old writing partner, called Sailor.
And I want to get Kevin to get the rights to that and get Tom to write a script.
Now everybody's scrambling to get the rights.
Way to go, Bucket Mouth.
It's like you're going to have eight assistants charging down to pick this up.
That's a great book.
Yeah, I mean, that's what comes out of these movies.
Hatfield & Coy's was an experience I won't ever forget.
And the people that I met, I believe that I'll have a professional relationship with them
and a friendship with them long after this movie.
So it worked perfectly in that way.
You are a lying spawn of hell who voted his Hatfield-wise afferent strength.
Oh, Randall, just leave it on out of this.
Don't give yourself apoplexy, all this to do over a pig.
This is about honor.
About lying and stealing and murdering.
Key:
A
G
D#
F#m
A
G
D#
F#m
Where to stop all this nonsense?
I guess you can kind of blame that.
You've still got something left.
What do you want, Randall?
Hmm?
_ What do you want out of this life? _
_ _ _ _ _ Just get through it.
_ _ If ever two men misunderstood each other, it was us.
_ So when's it end?
_ When there's no blood left to be spilled. _ _ _ _
Well, my movies are usually four hours long, so I can't do anything quick.
Can you tell her what this movie's about?
Well, this is the story of the two famous families from eastern Kentucky.
The McCoys and the other was from west Virginia.
There was a little river that ran between, separated the two of them.
And these were two men that had fought in the Civil War together,
but they became estranged and they came home from the war,
and this feud started between them.
It was almost like an obsession, more, I think, from a McCoy character
because he stayed through the whole war and came back after being a prisoner of war
and was really destitute, and his family was destitute.
And he had left the war early and was actually become a successful lumberman.
I don't think so.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Devil, Ants Hatfield, _ I rue the day I saved your life.
_ _ May God damn your eternal soul.
You feel the need to [A] bring up God one more time, whose side he sits on?
_ [G] _ _ [D#] We really used whatever bag of tricks we had for this one.
All our level of experience went into this.
We did a lot for a little, and we did it in a place that was,
while it was open arms to us, it wasn't convenient.
And it was, you know, making good film is hard.
It's just hard to do.
It's an art form.
It ain't pertinent to the case.
It's about sin, Devil, Ants.
What's Christian right [F#m] and damnation [N] wrong.
_ Cut! _ _
This case is dismissed.
Everybody get the hell out of here.
The world sees the finished product, and we are out there for three or four months,
and we have a lot of other experiences that go above and beyond cut and wrap.
We have, you _ know, Bill lost his father when we were out there.
So there's a lot of life that goes on while you're trying to make up this make-believe life.
And he went away and came back to us and buried somebody, the man most important to him.
So what his hat feels and McCoy's to Bill, it will be a lot of things,
but it will also mark the passing, you know, of a _ father.
_ My God, I will gut shoot the next agitator who further disrespects my courtroom.
McCoy or Hatfield.
I reckon this is what I should have expected from a Hatfield court.
One more word out of you, McCoy.
But it was tough to go home, and I have to say when I came, I got back,
I had to literally fly home and bury my dad and then go right back to shooting.
And I got back on Thanksgiving night, and Leslie and the producer,
they had arranged a Thanksgiving dinner for all of us.
And that's when I saw all these guys, and we had already been together for several months.
And _ it was quite a homecoming for me, and it really was.
I felt a lot of love in that room that night.
I find you both guilty of this heinous crime,
for which you are to be taken to some convenient spot without delay
and thereby hanged by the neck until you are dead. _ _ _
_ Sentence _ _ _ _ which I hereby suspend, since no one can say whether it were self-defense or not.
_ God is just and shall return to us the years that the locust hath eaten. _ _ _
_ You're just a huckabab of a persimmon, ain't you?
I want to find something to do with Kevin.
I'd like to direct Kevin in a film. _
Well, I just read a great book by Tom Epperson, Billy Bob Thornton's old writing partner, called Sailor.
And I want to get Kevin to get the rights to that and get Tom to write a script.
Now everybody's scrambling to get the rights.
Way to go, Bucket Mouth.
It's like you're going to have eight assistants charging down to pick this up.
That's a great book.
Yeah, I mean, that's what comes out of these movies.
Hatfield & Coy's was an experience I won't ever forget.
And the people that I met, I believe that I'll have a professional relationship with them
and a friendship with them long after this movie.
So it worked perfectly in that way.
You are a lying spawn of hell who voted his Hatfield-wise afferent strength.
Oh, Randall, just leave it on out of this.
Don't give yourself _ apoplexy, all this to do over a pig.
This is about honor.
About lying and stealing and murdering. _
I guess you can kind of blame that.
You've still got something left.
What do you want, Randall?
Hmm?
_ What do you want out of this life? _
_ _ _ _ _ Just get through it.
_ _ If ever two men misunderstood each other, it was us.
_ So when's it end?
_ When there's no blood left to be spilled. _ _ _ _
Well, my movies are usually four hours long, so I can't do anything quick.
Can you tell her what this movie's about?
Well, this is the story of the two famous families from eastern Kentucky.
The McCoys and the other was from west Virginia.
There was a little river that ran between, separated the two of them.
And these were two men that had fought in the Civil War together,
but they became estranged and they came home from the war,
and this feud started between them.
It was almost like an obsession, more, I think, from a McCoy character
because he stayed through the whole war and came back after being a prisoner of war
and was really destitute, and his family was destitute.
And he had left the war early and was actually become a successful lumberman.
I don't think so.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Devil, Ants Hatfield, _ I rue the day I saved your life.
_ _ May God damn your eternal soul.
You feel the need to [A] bring up God one more time, whose side he sits on?
_ [G] _ _ [D#] We really used whatever bag of tricks we had for this one.
All our level of experience went into this.
We did a lot for a little, and we did it in a place that was,
while it was open arms to us, it wasn't convenient.
And it was, you know, making good film is hard.
It's just hard to do.
It's an art form.
It ain't pertinent to the case.
It's about sin, Devil, Ants.
What's Christian right [F#m] and damnation [N] wrong.
_ Cut! _ _
This case is dismissed.
Everybody get the hell out of here.
The world sees the finished product, and we are out there for three or four months,
and we have a lot of other experiences that go above and beyond cut and wrap.
We have, you _ know, Bill lost his father when we were out there.
So there's a lot of life that goes on while you're trying to make up this make-believe life.
And he went away and came back to us and buried somebody, the man most important to him.
So what his hat feels and McCoy's to Bill, it will be a lot of things,
but it will also mark the passing, you know, of a _ father.
_ My God, I will gut shoot the next agitator who further disrespects my courtroom.
McCoy or Hatfield.
I reckon this is what I should have expected from a Hatfield court.
One more word out of you, McCoy.
But it was tough to go home, and I have to say when I came, I got back,
I had to literally fly home and bury my dad and then go right back to shooting.
And I got back on Thanksgiving night, and Leslie and the producer,
they had arranged a Thanksgiving dinner for all of us.
And that's when I saw all these guys, and we had already been together for several months.
And _ it was quite a homecoming for me, and it really was.
I felt a lot of love in that room that night.
I find you both guilty of this heinous crime,
for which you are to be taken to some convenient spot without delay
and thereby hanged by the neck until you are dead. _ _ _
_ Sentence _ _ _ _ which I hereby suspend, since no one can say whether it were self-defense or not.
_ God is just and shall return to us the years that the locust hath eaten. _ _ _
_ You're just a huckabab of a persimmon, ain't you?
I want to find something to do with Kevin.
I'd like to direct Kevin in a film. _
Well, I just read a great book by Tom Epperson, Billy Bob Thornton's old writing partner, called Sailor.
And I want to get Kevin to get the rights to that and get Tom to write a script.
Now everybody's scrambling to get the rights.
Way to go, Bucket Mouth.
It's like you're going to have eight assistants charging down to pick this up.
That's a great book.
Yeah, I mean, that's what comes out of these movies.
Hatfield & Coy's was an experience I won't ever forget.
And the people that I met, I believe that I'll have a professional relationship with them
and a friendship with them long after this movie.
So it worked perfectly in that way.
You are a lying spawn of hell who voted his Hatfield-wise afferent strength.
Oh, Randall, just leave it on out of this.
Don't give yourself _ apoplexy, all this to do over a pig.
This is about honor.
About lying and stealing and murdering. _