Chords for Eddie Noack - Firewater Luke
Tempo:
103.95 bpm
Chords used:
E
D
A
Eb
B
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[D]
In the hills of Oklahoma, [G] there's a legend about a man [D] who roamed the Indian country
[E] ever since the rush of a [A] man.
[D] Far water was his [G] business, some say his name was Luke.
[D] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and a bottle [Gbm] in his boot.
[D] [G] From Muskogee to Okmulgee, [D] through Lockton and Shore,
[E]
[A] [D]
[G] [D] he had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and [D] a bottle in his boot.
[Eb]
Luke had built a reputation [Ab] with both outlaw and the law.
He [Eb] was quick with his bootlegging, even [F] quicker on [Bb] the draw.
[Eb] Many an Oklahoma lawman [Ab] found his shoes, and he [Eb] tossed them into glory.
[Bb] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle [Eb] in his boot.
[Ab] The Oklahoma City, none too [Eb] big and none too small,
treating [F] everybody [C] equally, [Bb] believe [Eb] Indian or
[Ab] Kaloo.
He [Eb] had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle in his boot.
[E]
The six-gun was protected [A] from both Indian and law.
He'd [E] get the warriors on the lower path, and they'd [Gb] sneak off with their [B]
[E] quads.
His firewater was the finest, so he seldom had to shoot.
The [Db] six-gun, [E] he had a [B] topcoat, and a bottle in [E] his boot.
Largest about a century, Luke [A] had everything his way.
[E] Then a hungry politician [Gb] ran for governor one [B] day.
He took [E] over Luke's firewater, gave [A] the government his name.
But [E] you still could see Luke [B] everywhere in the Oklahoma [E] hills.
From [A] Tuskogee to Oklahoma, [E] he's appearing every night.
[Gb] Coming close for prohibition, [B] his rock, rich, and tight.
[E] But he's dreaming of the day he'll wear a brand-new pinstripe suit.
With a six-gun beneath his top, and a bottle in his boot.
In the hills of Oklahoma, [G] there's a legend about a man [D] who roamed the Indian country
[E] ever since the rush of a [A] man.
[D] Far water was his [G] business, some say his name was Luke.
[D] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and a bottle [Gbm] in his boot.
[D] [G] From Muskogee to Okmulgee, [D] through Lockton and Shore,
[E]
[A] [D]
[G] [D] he had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and [D] a bottle in his boot.
[Eb]
Luke had built a reputation [Ab] with both outlaw and the law.
He [Eb] was quick with his bootlegging, even [F] quicker on [Bb] the draw.
[Eb] Many an Oklahoma lawman [Ab] found his shoes, and he [Eb] tossed them into glory.
[Bb] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle [Eb] in his boot.
[Ab] The Oklahoma City, none too [Eb] big and none too small,
treating [F] everybody [C] equally, [Bb] believe [Eb] Indian or
[Ab] Kaloo.
He [Eb] had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle in his boot.
[E]
The six-gun was protected [A] from both Indian and law.
He'd [E] get the warriors on the lower path, and they'd [Gb] sneak off with their [B]
[E] quads.
His firewater was the finest, so he seldom had to shoot.
The [Db] six-gun, [E] he had a [B] topcoat, and a bottle in [E] his boot.
Largest about a century, Luke [A] had everything his way.
[E] Then a hungry politician [Gb] ran for governor one [B] day.
He took [E] over Luke's firewater, gave [A] the government his name.
But [E] you still could see Luke [B] everywhere in the Oklahoma [E] hills.
From [A] Tuskogee to Oklahoma, [E] he's appearing every night.
[Gb] Coming close for prohibition, [B] his rock, rich, and tight.
[E] But he's dreaming of the day he'll wear a brand-new pinstripe suit.
With a six-gun beneath his top, and a bottle in his boot.
Key:
E
D
A
Eb
B
E
D
A
_ _ [D] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ In the hills of Oklahoma, [G] there's a legend about a man [D] who roamed the Indian country
[E] ever since the rush of a [A] man.
[D] Far water was his [G] business, some say his name was Luke.
[D] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and a bottle [Gbm] in his boot.
[D] _ _ [G] From Muskogee to Okmulgee, [D] through Lockton and Shore,
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _
[A] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ [D] he had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and [D] a bottle in his boot.
_ _ _ [Eb] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ Luke had built a reputation [Ab] with both outlaw and the law.
He [Eb] was quick with his bootlegging, even [F] quicker on [Bb] the draw.
[Eb] Many an Oklahoma lawman [Ab] found his shoes, and he [Eb] tossed them into glory.
[Bb] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle [Eb] in his boot.
_ [Ab] The Oklahoma City, none too [Eb] big and none too small,
treating [F] everybody [C] equally, [Bb] believe _ _ _ [Eb] Indian or _
[Ab] _ _ Kaloo.
He [Eb] had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle in his boot.
_ _ [E] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
The six-gun was protected [A] from both Indian and law.
He'd [E] get the warriors on the lower path, and they'd [Gb] sneak off with their [B]
[E] quads.
His firewater was the finest, so he seldom had to shoot.
The [Db] six-gun, [E] he had a [B] topcoat, and a bottle in [E] his boot.
_ _ Largest about a century, Luke [A] had everything his way.
[E] Then a hungry politician [Gb] ran for governor one [B] day.
He took [E] over Luke's firewater, gave [A] the government his name.
But [E] you still could see Luke [B] everywhere in the Oklahoma [E] hills.
_ From [A] Tuskogee to Oklahoma, [E] he's appearing every night.
[Gb] Coming close for prohibition, [B] his rock, rich, and tight.
[E] But he's dreaming of the day he'll wear a brand-new pinstripe suit.
With a six-gun beneath his top, and a bottle in his boot. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ In the hills of Oklahoma, [G] there's a legend about a man [D] who roamed the Indian country
[E] ever since the rush of a [A] man.
[D] Far water was his [G] business, some say his name was Luke.
[D] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and a bottle [Gbm] in his boot.
[D] _ _ [G] From Muskogee to Okmulgee, [D] through Lockton and Shore,
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _
[A] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ [D] he had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, [A] and [D] a bottle in his boot.
_ _ _ [Eb] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ Luke had built a reputation [Ab] with both outlaw and the law.
He [Eb] was quick with his bootlegging, even [F] quicker on [Bb] the draw.
[Eb] Many an Oklahoma lawman [Ab] found his shoes, and he [Eb] tossed them into glory.
[Bb] He had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle [Eb] in his boot.
_ [Ab] The Oklahoma City, none too [Eb] big and none too small,
treating [F] everybody [C] equally, [Bb] believe _ _ _ [Eb] Indian or _
[Ab] _ _ Kaloo.
He [Eb] had a six-gun, he had a topcoat, and a bottle in his boot.
_ _ [E] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
The six-gun was protected [A] from both Indian and law.
He'd [E] get the warriors on the lower path, and they'd [Gb] sneak off with their [B]
[E] quads.
His firewater was the finest, so he seldom had to shoot.
The [Db] six-gun, [E] he had a [B] topcoat, and a bottle in [E] his boot.
_ _ Largest about a century, Luke [A] had everything his way.
[E] Then a hungry politician [Gb] ran for governor one [B] day.
He took [E] over Luke's firewater, gave [A] the government his name.
But [E] you still could see Luke [B] everywhere in the Oklahoma [E] hills.
_ From [A] Tuskogee to Oklahoma, [E] he's appearing every night.
[Gb] Coming close for prohibition, [B] his rock, rich, and tight.
[E] But he's dreaming of the day he'll wear a brand-new pinstripe suit.
With a six-gun beneath his top, and a bottle in his boot. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _