Chords for Brennen Leigh Songwriter Series Feature
Tempo:
64.25 bpm
Chords used:
D
E
C
A
G
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[D] Welcome back to the Texas music scene, y'all.
You know, I'm [A] feeling like a Jack Ingram songwriter series feature.
Y'all up for it?
Let's do it, Jack.
Woo-hoo!
[F#] [D]
[Dm] [D] Thank you, Brother Ray.
You know, I'd call Brennan Lee a [G] musician's musician, and she works her tail off at it.
[Em] She tours all over the globe as a solo [D] act or in any [C] one of her three bands,
Nashville's [D] Antiques Persuasion as a duet with Noel McKay,
[G] or the Austin-based string band High Plains Jamboree.
By the way, any lady that has an album of nothing but lefty Vazelle tunes is doing it right in my book.
Make no mistake, Brennan Lee's a damn good songwriter, too.
Just killer with melodies.
[Cm] Just hear it for yourself.
[E]
I don't want instant package, I want made at home.
[A] I don't want advertisements on my telephone.
[B] I don't want letters, robos, [E] a big box.
Shopping [Am] malls, digitally remastered, formatted to fit [E] your TV.
[B] I want analog, analog, [E] baby.
I wrote analog about the desire to go back to [A] simpler things.
Not necessarily disparaging technology, although there is some of [G#m] that in the song.
[B] Just a desire to simplify.
At the time [E] when I wrote it, I felt kind of alone in my sentiments [Am] about it.
But after playing it out for [E] a while, I've realized a lot of people, especially people my own age, feel the same [B] way.
I'd rather [G#m] listen to a faulty record than a [E] soulless [C] MP3.
But you know, I [F] do listen to [C] MP3s, but mostly at home I listen to [G] vinyl [D] albums.
I ain't knocking progress, [C] but it hurts me son to say
[F] That Georgia mules and country boys are fading [C] fast away.
I'm definitely what you might call an aficionado or a freak about country music.
[G] And within country [Gm] music, there are more than a few sub-genres.
One of the ones that I grew up with and was [F] close to my heart my whole life was [D] bluegrass.
Recently [G] becoming involved with the High Plains Jamboree Band.
[C] That's been a great outlet for that.
We do some banjo, I play mandolin.
[Dm] We do [C] original music, but it's bluegrass.
Traditional bluegrass, original song.
Country music's [D] coming back in style.
And I hope it stays around here [C] for a long time.
It's about to turn that town [D] into a smile.
[F]
Country [G] music's coming back [C] in style.
Noel McKay and I work together really well.
[D] We travel together, write songs together.
[G] We write songs separately while [C] touring together and that's always a challenge.
[D] I'm going to go in the other room and write a song.
Or will you [G] help me with this one?
[C] I wouldn't call it a competitiveness because we're always cheering each other on.
[F#] But we definitely inspire each other to work harder.
I've been so blue blossom all [C#] these days.
I love you, I'll prove it a thousand [F#] ways.
About a year and a half ago, maybe two years,
I became [C#] really [C#] obsessed with the catalog of Lefty Grizzell.
Someone [F#] gave me a copy of the box set.
It was the Bear Family box set.
I listened to the whole thing a whole bunch of times.
When we tour, I'm [C#] often the night driver
because I have this weird ability to stay up all night,
drink coffee or tea, and [F#] put my headphones in
and just listen to whatever I'm into at the time.
[C#] At the time, it was Lefty.
I got it in my head [F#] that I had to make a tribute record to him,
which is the craziest thing you can do.
It's like a really insane, [C#] irresponsible thing
because [F#] arguably he was the greatest country singer to ever live.
So if I'm going to try to imitate this guy or at least do him any kind of justice,
[C#m] I have some learning to do.
[A] I [D] learned a lot in the course of that.
I learned how to [D] sing differently.
[A] I [E] just learned how to crawl into a song and [A] interpret it differently.
I love the girl [E] from [A] Saginaw, Michigan.
[D] The daughter of [A] a wealthy, [E] wealthy man.
I'm [A] hoping to record something very soon.
I have sort of a theme going [D] with my songs right now,
and it is [E] the analog theme.
It's a [A] nostalgia kind of theme.
It just happened.
[B] I didn't plan it that way.
It's just what's been on my mind the last few years.
We [E] also play that song in High Plains Jamboree.
If you go out and see that band, you [Am] might hear that song.
[E] [B] [E]
You know, I'm [A] feeling like a Jack Ingram songwriter series feature.
Y'all up for it?
Let's do it, Jack.
Woo-hoo!
[F#] [D]
[Dm] [D] Thank you, Brother Ray.
You know, I'd call Brennan Lee a [G] musician's musician, and she works her tail off at it.
[Em] She tours all over the globe as a solo [D] act or in any [C] one of her three bands,
Nashville's [D] Antiques Persuasion as a duet with Noel McKay,
[G] or the Austin-based string band High Plains Jamboree.
By the way, any lady that has an album of nothing but lefty Vazelle tunes is doing it right in my book.
Make no mistake, Brennan Lee's a damn good songwriter, too.
Just killer with melodies.
[Cm] Just hear it for yourself.
[E]
I don't want instant package, I want made at home.
[A] I don't want advertisements on my telephone.
[B] I don't want letters, robos, [E] a big box.
Shopping [Am] malls, digitally remastered, formatted to fit [E] your TV.
[B] I want analog, analog, [E] baby.
I wrote analog about the desire to go back to [A] simpler things.
Not necessarily disparaging technology, although there is some of [G#m] that in the song.
[B] Just a desire to simplify.
At the time [E] when I wrote it, I felt kind of alone in my sentiments [Am] about it.
But after playing it out for [E] a while, I've realized a lot of people, especially people my own age, feel the same [B] way.
I'd rather [G#m] listen to a faulty record than a [E] soulless [C] MP3.
But you know, I [F] do listen to [C] MP3s, but mostly at home I listen to [G] vinyl [D] albums.
I ain't knocking progress, [C] but it hurts me son to say
[F] That Georgia mules and country boys are fading [C] fast away.
I'm definitely what you might call an aficionado or a freak about country music.
[G] And within country [Gm] music, there are more than a few sub-genres.
One of the ones that I grew up with and was [F] close to my heart my whole life was [D] bluegrass.
Recently [G] becoming involved with the High Plains Jamboree Band.
[C] That's been a great outlet for that.
We do some banjo, I play mandolin.
[Dm] We do [C] original music, but it's bluegrass.
Traditional bluegrass, original song.
Country music's [D] coming back in style.
And I hope it stays around here [C] for a long time.
It's about to turn that town [D] into a smile.
[F]
Country [G] music's coming back [C] in style.
Noel McKay and I work together really well.
[D] We travel together, write songs together.
[G] We write songs separately while [C] touring together and that's always a challenge.
[D] I'm going to go in the other room and write a song.
Or will you [G] help me with this one?
[C] I wouldn't call it a competitiveness because we're always cheering each other on.
[F#] But we definitely inspire each other to work harder.
I've been so blue blossom all [C#] these days.
I love you, I'll prove it a thousand [F#] ways.
About a year and a half ago, maybe two years,
I became [C#] really [C#] obsessed with the catalog of Lefty Grizzell.
Someone [F#] gave me a copy of the box set.
It was the Bear Family box set.
I listened to the whole thing a whole bunch of times.
When we tour, I'm [C#] often the night driver
because I have this weird ability to stay up all night,
drink coffee or tea, and [F#] put my headphones in
and just listen to whatever I'm into at the time.
[C#] At the time, it was Lefty.
I got it in my head [F#] that I had to make a tribute record to him,
which is the craziest thing you can do.
It's like a really insane, [C#] irresponsible thing
because [F#] arguably he was the greatest country singer to ever live.
So if I'm going to try to imitate this guy or at least do him any kind of justice,
[C#m] I have some learning to do.
[A] I [D] learned a lot in the course of that.
I learned how to [D] sing differently.
[A] I [E] just learned how to crawl into a song and [A] interpret it differently.
I love the girl [E] from [A] Saginaw, Michigan.
[D] The daughter of [A] a wealthy, [E] wealthy man.
I'm [A] hoping to record something very soon.
I have sort of a theme going [D] with my songs right now,
and it is [E] the analog theme.
It's a [A] nostalgia kind of theme.
It just happened.
[B] I didn't plan it that way.
It's just what's been on my mind the last few years.
We [E] also play that song in High Plains Jamboree.
If you go out and see that band, you [Am] might hear that song.
[E] [B] [E]
Key:
D
E
C
A
G
D
E
C
[D] Welcome back to the Texas music scene, y'all.
You know, I'm [A] feeling like a Jack Ingram songwriter series feature.
Y'all up for it?
Let's do it, Jack.
Woo-hoo!
[F#] _ _ [D] _ _
[Dm] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ Thank you, Brother Ray.
You know, I'd call Brennan Lee a [G] musician's musician, and she works her tail off at it.
[Em] She tours all over the globe as a solo [D] act or in any [C] one of her three bands,
Nashville's [D] Antiques Persuasion as a duet with Noel McKay,
[G] or the Austin-based string band High Plains Jamboree.
By the way, any lady that has an album of nothing but lefty Vazelle tunes is doing it right in my book.
Make no mistake, Brennan Lee's a damn good songwriter, too.
Just killer with melodies.
[Cm] Just hear it for yourself.
[E] _
I don't want instant package, I want made at home.
[A] I don't want advertisements on my telephone.
[B] I don't want letters, robos, [E] a big box.
Shopping [Am] malls, digitally remastered, formatted to fit [E] your TV. _
[B] I want analog, analog, [E] baby.
I wrote analog about the desire to go back to [A] simpler things.
Not necessarily disparaging technology, although there is some of [G#m] that in the song.
[B] Just a desire to simplify.
At the time [E] when I wrote it, I felt kind of alone in my sentiments [Am] about it.
But after playing it out for [E] a while, I've realized a lot of people, especially people my own age, feel the same [B] way.
I'd rather [G#m] listen to a faulty record than a [E] soulless [C] MP3.
But you know, I [F] do listen to [C] MP3s, but mostly at home I listen to [G] vinyl [D] albums.
I ain't knocking progress, [C] but it hurts me son to say
[F] That Georgia mules and country boys are fading [C] fast away.
I'm definitely what you might call an aficionado or a freak about country music.
[G] And within country [Gm] music, there are more than a few sub-genres.
One of the ones that I grew up with and was [F] close to my heart my whole life was [D] bluegrass.
Recently [G] becoming involved with the High Plains Jamboree Band.
[C] That's been a great outlet for that.
We do some banjo, I play mandolin.
[Dm] We do [C] original music, but it's bluegrass.
Traditional bluegrass, original song.
Country music's [D] coming back in style.
And I hope it stays around here [C] for a long time.
It's about to turn that town [D] into a smile.
[F]
Country [G] music's coming back [C] in style.
Noel McKay and I work together really well.
[D] We travel together, write songs together.
[G] We write songs separately while [C] touring together and that's always a challenge.
[D] I'm going to go in the other room and write a song.
Or will you [G] help me with this one?
[C] I wouldn't call it a competitiveness because we're always cheering each other on.
[F#] But we definitely inspire each other to work harder.
I've been so blue _ blossom all [C#] these days.
I love you, I'll prove it a thousand [F#] ways.
About a year and a half ago, maybe two years,
I became [C#] really [C#] obsessed with the catalog of Lefty Grizzell.
Someone [F#] gave me a copy of the box set.
It was the Bear Family box set.
I listened to the whole thing a whole bunch of times.
When we tour, I'm [C#] often the night driver
because I have this weird ability to stay up all night,
drink coffee or tea, and [F#] put my headphones in
and just listen to whatever I'm into at the time.
[C#] At the time, it was Lefty.
I got it in my head [F#] that I had to make a tribute record to him,
which is the craziest thing you can do.
It's like a really insane, [C#] irresponsible thing
because [F#] arguably he was the greatest country singer to ever live.
So if I'm going to try to imitate this guy or at least do him any kind of justice,
[C#m] I have some learning to do.
[A] I [D] learned a lot in the course of that.
I learned how to [D] sing differently.
[A] I [E] just learned how to crawl into a song and [A] interpret it differently.
I love the girl [E] from [A] Saginaw, Michigan.
[D] The daughter of [A] a wealthy, [E] wealthy man.
I'm [A] hoping to record something very soon.
I have sort of a theme going [D] with my songs right now,
and it is [E] the analog theme.
It's a [A] nostalgia kind of theme.
It just happened.
[B] I didn't plan it that way.
It's just what's been on my mind the last few years.
We [E] also play that song in High Plains Jamboree.
If you go out and see that band, you [Am] might hear that song.
_ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _ [B] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
You know, I'm [A] feeling like a Jack Ingram songwriter series feature.
Y'all up for it?
Let's do it, Jack.
Woo-hoo!
[F#] _ _ [D] _ _
[Dm] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ Thank you, Brother Ray.
You know, I'd call Brennan Lee a [G] musician's musician, and she works her tail off at it.
[Em] She tours all over the globe as a solo [D] act or in any [C] one of her three bands,
Nashville's [D] Antiques Persuasion as a duet with Noel McKay,
[G] or the Austin-based string band High Plains Jamboree.
By the way, any lady that has an album of nothing but lefty Vazelle tunes is doing it right in my book.
Make no mistake, Brennan Lee's a damn good songwriter, too.
Just killer with melodies.
[Cm] Just hear it for yourself.
[E] _
I don't want instant package, I want made at home.
[A] I don't want advertisements on my telephone.
[B] I don't want letters, robos, [E] a big box.
Shopping [Am] malls, digitally remastered, formatted to fit [E] your TV. _
[B] I want analog, analog, [E] baby.
I wrote analog about the desire to go back to [A] simpler things.
Not necessarily disparaging technology, although there is some of [G#m] that in the song.
[B] Just a desire to simplify.
At the time [E] when I wrote it, I felt kind of alone in my sentiments [Am] about it.
But after playing it out for [E] a while, I've realized a lot of people, especially people my own age, feel the same [B] way.
I'd rather [G#m] listen to a faulty record than a [E] soulless [C] MP3.
But you know, I [F] do listen to [C] MP3s, but mostly at home I listen to [G] vinyl [D] albums.
I ain't knocking progress, [C] but it hurts me son to say
[F] That Georgia mules and country boys are fading [C] fast away.
I'm definitely what you might call an aficionado or a freak about country music.
[G] And within country [Gm] music, there are more than a few sub-genres.
One of the ones that I grew up with and was [F] close to my heart my whole life was [D] bluegrass.
Recently [G] becoming involved with the High Plains Jamboree Band.
[C] That's been a great outlet for that.
We do some banjo, I play mandolin.
[Dm] We do [C] original music, but it's bluegrass.
Traditional bluegrass, original song.
Country music's [D] coming back in style.
And I hope it stays around here [C] for a long time.
It's about to turn that town [D] into a smile.
[F]
Country [G] music's coming back [C] in style.
Noel McKay and I work together really well.
[D] We travel together, write songs together.
[G] We write songs separately while [C] touring together and that's always a challenge.
[D] I'm going to go in the other room and write a song.
Or will you [G] help me with this one?
[C] I wouldn't call it a competitiveness because we're always cheering each other on.
[F#] But we definitely inspire each other to work harder.
I've been so blue _ blossom all [C#] these days.
I love you, I'll prove it a thousand [F#] ways.
About a year and a half ago, maybe two years,
I became [C#] really [C#] obsessed with the catalog of Lefty Grizzell.
Someone [F#] gave me a copy of the box set.
It was the Bear Family box set.
I listened to the whole thing a whole bunch of times.
When we tour, I'm [C#] often the night driver
because I have this weird ability to stay up all night,
drink coffee or tea, and [F#] put my headphones in
and just listen to whatever I'm into at the time.
[C#] At the time, it was Lefty.
I got it in my head [F#] that I had to make a tribute record to him,
which is the craziest thing you can do.
It's like a really insane, [C#] irresponsible thing
because [F#] arguably he was the greatest country singer to ever live.
So if I'm going to try to imitate this guy or at least do him any kind of justice,
[C#m] I have some learning to do.
[A] I [D] learned a lot in the course of that.
I learned how to [D] sing differently.
[A] I [E] just learned how to crawl into a song and [A] interpret it differently.
I love the girl [E] from [A] Saginaw, Michigan.
[D] The daughter of [A] a wealthy, [E] wealthy man.
I'm [A] hoping to record something very soon.
I have sort of a theme going [D] with my songs right now,
and it is [E] the analog theme.
It's a [A] nostalgia kind of theme.
It just happened.
[B] I didn't plan it that way.
It's just what's been on my mind the last few years.
We [E] also play that song in High Plains Jamboree.
If you go out and see that band, you [Am] might hear that song.
_ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _ [B] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _