Chords for Kitty Wells Thank you for the Roses
Tempo:
80.4 bpm
Chords used:
F#
C#
G#
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Thank you for the roses.
That's the name of the song.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, Kitty Wells.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the [C#] roses bring.
At my door, one [F#] dozen roses.
[G#] On the car, there [C#] was no name.
My life revolved [F#] around the cinder.
[G#] Haunting memories, they [C#] still remain.
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses.
[G#] They give life a [C#] breath of spring.
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses [G#] and the memories that the [C#] roses bring.
Our [F#] [F#]
[G#] [C#]
careless love [F#] shined so brightly, [G#] then burned out [C#] like a flame.
Those happy times we [F#] remember.
There [G#] was sunshine and [C#] now the rain.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the roses [C#] bring.
[C#]
Thank you.
[N] Thank you.
Thank you for the roses.
That was a big record for you in 1979.
And I know it made a lot of impact on a lot of people as evidenced by the picture we're about to show.
And this was taken on your birthday, right?
This one?
Uh-huh.
The roses were sent from an Indian chief in Minnesota.
He's a great fan of ours and he also books our shows up there sometimes.
And his name is Indian Chief Glenn Crook.
Glenn Crook?
Right.
Any relation to the crook sitting over there?
I really don't know.
You never know.
But that was on your birthday, August 30th?
August 30th.
And he sent you a large number of roses.
How many?
75.
Is that right?
That's the largest bunch of roses I've ever seen in one time anyway.
Well, we thank the chief for the roses.
We thank you for the song.
Oh, thank you.
And thanks for watching.
We'll be back with
That's the name of the song.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, Kitty Wells.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the [C#] roses bring.
At my door, one [F#] dozen roses.
[G#] On the car, there [C#] was no name.
My life revolved [F#] around the cinder.
[G#] Haunting memories, they [C#] still remain.
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses.
[G#] They give life a [C#] breath of spring.
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses [G#] and the memories that the [C#] roses bring.
Our [F#] [F#]
[G#] [C#]
careless love [F#] shined so brightly, [G#] then burned out [C#] like a flame.
Those happy times we [F#] remember.
There [G#] was sunshine and [C#] now the rain.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the roses [C#] bring.
[C#]
Thank you.
[N] Thank you.
Thank you for the roses.
That was a big record for you in 1979.
And I know it made a lot of impact on a lot of people as evidenced by the picture we're about to show.
And this was taken on your birthday, right?
This one?
Uh-huh.
The roses were sent from an Indian chief in Minnesota.
He's a great fan of ours and he also books our shows up there sometimes.
And his name is Indian Chief Glenn Crook.
Glenn Crook?
Right.
Any relation to the crook sitting over there?
I really don't know.
You never know.
But that was on your birthday, August 30th?
August 30th.
And he sent you a large number of roses.
How many?
75.
Is that right?
That's the largest bunch of roses I've ever seen in one time anyway.
Well, we thank the chief for the roses.
We thank you for the song.
Oh, thank you.
And thanks for watching.
We'll be back with
Key:
F#
C#
G#
F#
C#
G#
F#
C#
Thank you for the roses.
That's the name of the song.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, Kitty Wells. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
_ Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the [C#] roses bring.
At my door, one [F#] dozen roses. _
[G#] On the car, there [C#] was no name.
My life revolved [F#] around the cinder.
[G#] Haunting memories, they [C#] still remain. _
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses. _
[G#] They give life a [C#] breath of spring. _
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses _ [G#] and the memories that the [C#] roses bring. _
Our _ _ _ [F#] _ _ [F#] _ _
[G#] _ _ _ _ [C#] _ _ _
careless _ love [F#] shined so brightly, _ [G#] then burned out [C#] like a flame.
Those happy times we [F#] remember.
There [G#] was sunshine and [C#] now the rain.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the roses [C#] bring.
_ _ [C#] _
_ Thank you.
_ [N] Thank you. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ Thank you for the roses.
That was a big record for you in 1979.
And I know it made a lot of impact on a lot of people as evidenced by the picture we're about to show.
And this was taken on your birthday, right?
This one?
Uh-huh.
The roses were sent from an Indian chief in Minnesota.
He's a great fan of ours and he also books our shows up there sometimes.
And his name is Indian Chief Glenn Crook.
Glenn Crook?
Right.
Any relation to the crook sitting over there?
I really don't know.
You never know.
But that was on your birthday, August 30th?
August 30th.
And he sent you a large number of roses.
How many?
75.
Is that right?
That's the largest _ bunch of roses I've ever seen in one time anyway.
Well, we thank the chief for the roses.
We thank you for the song.
Oh, thank you.
And thanks for watching.
We'll be back with
That's the name of the song.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, Kitty Wells. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
_ Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the [C#] roses bring.
At my door, one [F#] dozen roses. _
[G#] On the car, there [C#] was no name.
My life revolved [F#] around the cinder.
[G#] Haunting memories, they [C#] still remain. _
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses. _
[G#] They give life a [C#] breath of spring. _
Oh, I thank you [F#] for the roses _ [G#] and the memories that the [C#] roses bring. _
Our _ _ _ [F#] _ _ [F#] _ _
[G#] _ _ _ _ [C#] _ _ _
careless _ love [F#] shined so brightly, _ [G#] then burned out [C#] like a flame.
Those happy times we [F#] remember.
There [G#] was sunshine and [C#] now the rain.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses.
They [G#] give life a breath [C#] of spring.
Oh, I thank you for [F#] the roses and [G#] the memories that the roses [C#] bring.
_ _ [C#] _
_ Thank you.
_ [N] Thank you. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ Thank you for the roses.
That was a big record for you in 1979.
And I know it made a lot of impact on a lot of people as evidenced by the picture we're about to show.
And this was taken on your birthday, right?
This one?
Uh-huh.
The roses were sent from an Indian chief in Minnesota.
He's a great fan of ours and he also books our shows up there sometimes.
And his name is Indian Chief Glenn Crook.
Glenn Crook?
Right.
Any relation to the crook sitting over there?
I really don't know.
You never know.
But that was on your birthday, August 30th?
August 30th.
And he sent you a large number of roses.
How many?
75.
Is that right?
That's the largest _ bunch of roses I've ever seen in one time anyway.
Well, we thank the chief for the roses.
We thank you for the song.
Oh, thank you.
And thanks for watching.
We'll be back with