Chords for Odd Børretzen - Degos Calypso (den 17. mai)
Tempo:
131.4 bpm
Chords used:
G
D
C
Am
F
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret

Start Jamming...
Come to Norway [Am] with the Danish boat, [D] I'm so glad [G] I'm on the boat.
I sang a song [Am] while I went far on the [G] Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
Madonna, I want to be a [C] proxy, mother, I want to be a representative,
under the [D] aggravate, hip hip [G] hip hip all the time.
Norway, no [C] discrimination, [G] Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
I met [Em] this man on the street, [G] he says, are you Swedish?
No, I'm not Swedish, but I'm Swedish enough, [C] he says, and white with a flag.
You must not think that we have forgotten that you betrayed [F] us during the war,
your Swedish, he [G] says, Madonna, we have.
And do you think [C] that the Eidsvollsmenn and [D] Kristian [G] Mikkelsen and Alf Preussen
and so on were very talented during the war,
[D] to get a lot of Swedes, and that means speaking Swedish in the middle of May 17th,
and everything, and putting black [Am] kids on their daughters' throats.
You are a [G] communist too, you, your [D] gypsies, you talk like a cat, you nazi.
Bought a high-heeled [C] jacket on Olev Hvist,
[D] old lady [G] so happy, and speaks well,
with leg-glasses [C] that hang in the corner,
[G] legs [D] of the lady, [G] so like my mother, my, and [C] this is a Christian home,
and we don't want [G]
Catholics, and Muslims, and Danes around the room,
we don't want any other kind of [C] sport, here, you know,
because if we take that with us into the house,
then they just have to be aware [F] that everyone must be out of the house
before [G] seven o'clock in the morning.
And we can notice [C] a lot of foreigners,
rowing around in the stairs, [G] and people going down to get the post,
[C] I'm sure you understand that, but the cook in [D] the room we don't want,
and they must be so kind, like Auguste Hviteløk,
who is stuck in the curtains, and not to be allowed to get off in the [C] cold water.
The price is 200 kroner per [G] bed, and we are used to [D] being cleaned up properly,
and cleaning up the beds before you go in the morning,
that's how we dress to have it.
[C] We don't want any pig-shaped bed, you know,
[D] in the closet they must be so kind and let stand [G] in peace,
because there my husband's body armor hangs,
that must hang.
Like [C] children play best, said my husband,
my [G] husband was the chairman of the [D] KFM-choir for all [G] years,
without payment, and he was against it.
[C] Criticism and annoyance,
water can be brought [G] in the sink,
on the toilet, the kitchen stairs.
We [C] want to remember our great countryman,
Tytte Oppenansen's enormous effort for the [F] Russian refugees,
[Dm] and his enormous [G] work in the People's Organization in the interwar years,
[C] and not the truth,
[G] we see it time and time again, when the means are to be created,
[C] the failure in the world,
when [D] the Norwegian women and men open their hearts,
and their portmanteaus,
and our borders are about to open,
because the unfortunate [Am] ones need a place to fly,
because [G] our means [D] are far short, and often long.
But if, for example, the invited gypsies believe,
that [Cm] our society needs, or can [D] tolerate,
small-scale work, [G]
begging, and begging,
and small-scale work from people,
who are [Am] wandering around without proper clothing,
and [D] without also sharing the society's [G] obligations,
then he is wrong, sadly [C] wrong.
We welcome strangers, as we have always done,
but then we expect them to behave like good [C] Norwegians,
who are not afraid to take a step.
Gypsies we welcome,
[F] but they stop being so funny.
[G] The disapakis,
what do you [C] say to what you should do with the [D] disapakis?
[G] Take all the disapakis [Am] in an old boat,
and drive [D] them out on a journey,
and close the [G] valve on the track.
And like that, now you can go to the University Street,
[Am] or down there,
and think you are in Costa [D] Rica, or somewhere,
but the money is in [G] the clothes,
and hanging around in the cafes,
and they have money for that.
There [C] is soon no room for Norwegians there.
[D] No, take them out on a journey,
and close [G]
the valve on the track,
before they are sold,
and take this cocaine, and heroin,
[Am] and benzadrine,
[D] and vangladresen,
or whatever they have with them.
[G] That's not it.
Come to Norway,
[Am] with the Danish boat,
[D] I am so glad,
[G] that I was on the boat.
I sang a song,
[C] while I was walking,
on the shore of the [D] Gospel,
on the [G] 17th of May.
I sang a song [Am] while I went far on the [G] Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
Madonna, I want to be a [C] proxy, mother, I want to be a representative,
under the [D] aggravate, hip hip [G] hip hip all the time.
Norway, no [C] discrimination, [G] Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
I met [Em] this man on the street, [G] he says, are you Swedish?
No, I'm not Swedish, but I'm Swedish enough, [C] he says, and white with a flag.
You must not think that we have forgotten that you betrayed [F] us during the war,
your Swedish, he [G] says, Madonna, we have.
And do you think [C] that the Eidsvollsmenn and [D] Kristian [G] Mikkelsen and Alf Preussen
and so on were very talented during the war,
[D] to get a lot of Swedes, and that means speaking Swedish in the middle of May 17th,
and everything, and putting black [Am] kids on their daughters' throats.
You are a [G] communist too, you, your [D] gypsies, you talk like a cat, you nazi.
Bought a high-heeled [C] jacket on Olev Hvist,
[D] old lady [G] so happy, and speaks well,
with leg-glasses [C] that hang in the corner,
[G] legs [D] of the lady, [G] so like my mother, my, and [C] this is a Christian home,
and we don't want [G]
Catholics, and Muslims, and Danes around the room,
we don't want any other kind of [C] sport, here, you know,
because if we take that with us into the house,
then they just have to be aware [F] that everyone must be out of the house
before [G] seven o'clock in the morning.
And we can notice [C] a lot of foreigners,
rowing around in the stairs, [G] and people going down to get the post,
[C] I'm sure you understand that, but the cook in [D] the room we don't want,
and they must be so kind, like Auguste Hviteløk,
who is stuck in the curtains, and not to be allowed to get off in the [C] cold water.
The price is 200 kroner per [G] bed, and we are used to [D] being cleaned up properly,
and cleaning up the beds before you go in the morning,
that's how we dress to have it.
[C] We don't want any pig-shaped bed, you know,
[D] in the closet they must be so kind and let stand [G] in peace,
because there my husband's body armor hangs,
that must hang.
Like [C] children play best, said my husband,
my [G] husband was the chairman of the [D] KFM-choir for all [G] years,
without payment, and he was against it.
[C] Criticism and annoyance,
water can be brought [G] in the sink,
on the toilet, the kitchen stairs.
We [C] want to remember our great countryman,
Tytte Oppenansen's enormous effort for the [F] Russian refugees,
[Dm] and his enormous [G] work in the People's Organization in the interwar years,
[C] and not the truth,
[G] we see it time and time again, when the means are to be created,
[C] the failure in the world,
when [D] the Norwegian women and men open their hearts,
and their portmanteaus,
and our borders are about to open,
because the unfortunate [Am] ones need a place to fly,
because [G] our means [D] are far short, and often long.
But if, for example, the invited gypsies believe,
that [Cm] our society needs, or can [D] tolerate,
small-scale work, [G]
begging, and begging,
and small-scale work from people,
who are [Am] wandering around without proper clothing,
and [D] without also sharing the society's [G] obligations,
then he is wrong, sadly [C] wrong.
We welcome strangers, as we have always done,
but then we expect them to behave like good [C] Norwegians,
who are not afraid to take a step.
Gypsies we welcome,
[F] but they stop being so funny.
[G] The disapakis,
what do you [C] say to what you should do with the [D] disapakis?
[G] Take all the disapakis [Am] in an old boat,
and drive [D] them out on a journey,
and close the [G] valve on the track.
And like that, now you can go to the University Street,
[Am] or down there,
and think you are in Costa [D] Rica, or somewhere,
but the money is in [G] the clothes,
and hanging around in the cafes,
and they have money for that.
There [C] is soon no room for Norwegians there.
[D] No, take them out on a journey,
and close [G]
the valve on the track,
before they are sold,
and take this cocaine, and heroin,
[Am] and benzadrine,
[D] and vangladresen,
or whatever they have with them.
[G] That's not it.
Come to Norway,
[Am] with the Danish boat,
[D] I am so glad,
[G] that I was on the boat.
I sang a song,
[C] while I was walking,
on the shore of the [D] Gospel,
on the [G] 17th of May.
Key:
G
D
C
Am
F
G
D
C
_ _ _ _ Come to Norway [Am] with the Danish boat, [D] I'm so glad [G] I'm on the boat.
I sang a song [Am] while I went far on the [G] _ Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
Madonna, I want to be a [C] proxy, mother, I want to be a representative,
under the [D] aggravate, hip hip [G] hip hip all the time.
_ _ _ Norway, no [C] discrimination, _ [G] _ Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
I met [Em] this man on the street, [G] he says, are you Swedish?
No, I'm not Swedish, but I'm Swedish enough, [C] he says, and white with a flag.
You must not think that we have forgotten that you betrayed [F] us during the war,
your Swedish, he [G] says, Madonna, we have.
And do you think [C] that the Eidsvollsmenn and [D] Kristian [G] Mikkelsen and Alf Preussen
and so on were very talented during the war,
[D] to get a lot of Swedes, and that means speaking Swedish in the middle of May 17th,
and everything, and putting black [Am] kids on their daughters' throats.
You are a [G] communist too, you, your [D] gypsies, you talk like a cat, you nazi.
_ Bought a high-heeled [C] jacket on Olev Hvist,
[D] _ old lady [G] so happy, and speaks well,
with leg-glasses [C] that hang in the corner,
_ [G] legs [D] of the lady, [G] so like my mother, my, and [C] this is a Christian home,
and we don't want [G]
Catholics, and Muslims, and Danes around the room,
we don't want any other kind of [C] sport, here, you know,
because if we take that with us into the house,
then they just have to be aware [F] that everyone must be out of the house
before [G] seven o'clock in the morning.
And we can notice [C] a lot of foreigners,
rowing around in the stairs, [G] and people going down to get the post,
[C] I'm sure you understand that, but the cook in [D] the room we don't want,
and they must be so kind, like Auguste Hviteløk,
who is stuck in the curtains, and not to be allowed to get off in the [C] cold water.
The price is 200 kroner per [G] bed, and we are used to [D] being cleaned up properly,
and cleaning up the beds before you go in the morning,
that's how we dress to have it.
[C] We don't want any pig-shaped bed, you know,
[D] in the closet they must be so kind and let stand [G] in peace,
because there my husband's body armor hangs,
that must hang.
Like [C] children play best, said my husband,
my [G] husband was the chairman of the [D] KFM-choir for all [G] years,
without payment, and he was against it.
[C] Criticism and annoyance,
water can be brought [G] in the sink,
on the toilet, the kitchen stairs.
_ We [C] want to remember our great countryman,
Tytte Oppenansen's enormous effort for the [F] Russian refugees,
[Dm] and his enormous [G] work in the People's Organization in the interwar years,
[C] and not the truth,
[G] we see it time and time again, when the means are to be created,
[C] the failure in the world,
when [D] the Norwegian women and men open their hearts,
and their portmanteaus,
and our borders are about to open,
because the unfortunate [Am] ones need a place to fly,
because [G] our means [D] are far short, and often long.
But if, for example, the invited gypsies believe,
that [Cm] our society needs, or can [D] tolerate,
small-scale work, [G]
begging, and begging,
and small-scale work from people,
who are [Am] wandering around without proper clothing,
and [D] without also sharing the society's [G] obligations,
then he is wrong, sadly [C] wrong.
We welcome strangers, as we have always done,
but then we expect them to behave like good [C] Norwegians,
who are not afraid to take a step.
Gypsies we welcome,
[F] but they stop being so funny.
[G] The disapakis,
what do you [C] say to what you should do with the [D] disapakis?
_ [G] Take all the disapakis [Am] in an old boat,
and drive [D] them out on a journey,
and close the [G] valve on the track.
And like that, now you can go to the University Street,
[Am] or down there,
and think you are in Costa [D] Rica, or somewhere,
but the money is in [G] the clothes,
and hanging around in the cafes,
and they have money for that.
There [C] is soon no room for Norwegians there.
[D] No, take them out on a journey,
and close [G]
the valve on the track,
before they are sold,
and take this cocaine, and heroin,
[Am] and benzadrine,
[D] and vangladresen,
or whatever they have with them.
[G] That's not it.
_ _ _ Come to Norway,
[Am] with the Danish boat,
[D] I am so glad,
[G] that I was on the boat.
I sang a song,
[C] while I was walking,
on the shore of the [D] Gospel,
on the [G] 17th of May. _ _ _ _ _
I sang a song [Am] while I went far on the [G] _ Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
Madonna, I want to be a [C] proxy, mother, I want to be a representative,
under the [D] aggravate, hip hip [G] hip hip all the time.
_ _ _ Norway, no [C] discrimination, _ [G] _ Kajendegåska lifeboat on May 17th.
I met [Em] this man on the street, [G] he says, are you Swedish?
No, I'm not Swedish, but I'm Swedish enough, [C] he says, and white with a flag.
You must not think that we have forgotten that you betrayed [F] us during the war,
your Swedish, he [G] says, Madonna, we have.
And do you think [C] that the Eidsvollsmenn and [D] Kristian [G] Mikkelsen and Alf Preussen
and so on were very talented during the war,
[D] to get a lot of Swedes, and that means speaking Swedish in the middle of May 17th,
and everything, and putting black [Am] kids on their daughters' throats.
You are a [G] communist too, you, your [D] gypsies, you talk like a cat, you nazi.
_ Bought a high-heeled [C] jacket on Olev Hvist,
[D] _ old lady [G] so happy, and speaks well,
with leg-glasses [C] that hang in the corner,
_ [G] legs [D] of the lady, [G] so like my mother, my, and [C] this is a Christian home,
and we don't want [G]
Catholics, and Muslims, and Danes around the room,
we don't want any other kind of [C] sport, here, you know,
because if we take that with us into the house,
then they just have to be aware [F] that everyone must be out of the house
before [G] seven o'clock in the morning.
And we can notice [C] a lot of foreigners,
rowing around in the stairs, [G] and people going down to get the post,
[C] I'm sure you understand that, but the cook in [D] the room we don't want,
and they must be so kind, like Auguste Hviteløk,
who is stuck in the curtains, and not to be allowed to get off in the [C] cold water.
The price is 200 kroner per [G] bed, and we are used to [D] being cleaned up properly,
and cleaning up the beds before you go in the morning,
that's how we dress to have it.
[C] We don't want any pig-shaped bed, you know,
[D] in the closet they must be so kind and let stand [G] in peace,
because there my husband's body armor hangs,
that must hang.
Like [C] children play best, said my husband,
my [G] husband was the chairman of the [D] KFM-choir for all [G] years,
without payment, and he was against it.
[C] Criticism and annoyance,
water can be brought [G] in the sink,
on the toilet, the kitchen stairs.
_ We [C] want to remember our great countryman,
Tytte Oppenansen's enormous effort for the [F] Russian refugees,
[Dm] and his enormous [G] work in the People's Organization in the interwar years,
[C] and not the truth,
[G] we see it time and time again, when the means are to be created,
[C] the failure in the world,
when [D] the Norwegian women and men open their hearts,
and their portmanteaus,
and our borders are about to open,
because the unfortunate [Am] ones need a place to fly,
because [G] our means [D] are far short, and often long.
But if, for example, the invited gypsies believe,
that [Cm] our society needs, or can [D] tolerate,
small-scale work, [G]
begging, and begging,
and small-scale work from people,
who are [Am] wandering around without proper clothing,
and [D] without also sharing the society's [G] obligations,
then he is wrong, sadly [C] wrong.
We welcome strangers, as we have always done,
but then we expect them to behave like good [C] Norwegians,
who are not afraid to take a step.
Gypsies we welcome,
[F] but they stop being so funny.
[G] The disapakis,
what do you [C] say to what you should do with the [D] disapakis?
_ [G] Take all the disapakis [Am] in an old boat,
and drive [D] them out on a journey,
and close the [G] valve on the track.
And like that, now you can go to the University Street,
[Am] or down there,
and think you are in Costa [D] Rica, or somewhere,
but the money is in [G] the clothes,
and hanging around in the cafes,
and they have money for that.
There [C] is soon no room for Norwegians there.
[D] No, take them out on a journey,
and close [G]
the valve on the track,
before they are sold,
and take this cocaine, and heroin,
[Am] and benzadrine,
[D] and vangladresen,
or whatever they have with them.
[G] That's not it.
_ _ _ Come to Norway,
[Am] with the Danish boat,
[D] I am so glad,
[G] that I was on the boat.
I sang a song,
[C] while I was walking,
on the shore of the [D] Gospel,
on the [G] 17th of May. _ _ _ _ _