Chords for Old Crow Medicine Show - Wagon Wheel live From Big Easy Express)
Tempo:
71.275 bpm
Chords used:
A
D
E
F#m
G
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[F#] [G] The sand shall hand me that long [D] distance phone.
I just want [F#m] to talk [E] to that bride [D] of mine.
[E]
[D] When I was like a teenager, I started getting into sort of a [A] rambling [E] lifestyle, you know,
and started listening to [D] Woody Guthrie and folk music [F] and stuff, you know,
traveling [C] out and leaving home and running [G] away from all that.
It was, you know, very romantic to a guy like me that [F] loves that old kind of [G] music.
[N] It's
[A] [E] [F#m]
[D] [A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] [F#m] a satisfying train.
[D] [A] [E] [A] [D]
[A] Headed down south [E] to the land of the pine.
[F#m] I'm coming my way to [D] North [A] Carolina.
Staring up the road, [E] I pray to God [C#m] I see [D] a headlight.
[A] I made it down the coast in [E] the 17 [F#m]-i's.
I'm taking me a [D] bouquet of dollar [A] vines.
And I'm hoping for a rally I [E] can see my [A] baby [D] tonight.
[A] So ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
[F#m] Ride with your mama [D] any way [A] you please.
Hey, [E] [A] [D] like me.
[A] Ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
Ride with your mama [F#m] like [D] a [A] southbound train.
Hey, [E] mama, [D] like me.
[A] [E] [F#m] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [A] [F#m] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] Walking due [E] south, had a rollin' oak.
I [F#m] caught a trucker out of Philly.
Had a nice long toad.
But he's a-headin' west [E] from the Cumberland [D] Gap to Johnson City.
[A] Tennessee and I gotta get a move [E] on.
[A] For the first time, I hit my baby [F#m] callin' [D] money.
I know that she's the [A] only one.
If I die in a [E] rally, least [C#m] I will [D] die free.
[A] [E] And [F#m] we are rockin'.
[D] [A] [N] [A#m]
Um, John, you guys need to go inside, [N] please.
Everybody.
Someone tried to jump on the train.
That's why this all happened.
Oh, this, that's [A#] why.
Yeah.
Just some, some, some fan tried to hop on the train.
Out here?
Probably a mile back or something.
Oh, my God.
Bunch of damn hippies on that thing is what [N] it looked like to me, Fred.
Give him a big ol' Texas whip.
Well, we're at Austin High.
And we jumped in pickup trucks about 1 o'clock this afternoon from our hotel.
It's our first day of exercise, having been stuck on that train for four days.
We've all just been playing nonstop.
We've been singing and dancing and drinking.
Water.
Copious amounts of water.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not enough, unfortunately.
And, um, I think everyone on the train would agree that just the personnel, [A#] like, all these new people, these new faces, are just [Em] the perfect [N] combination.
Like, how can you get 130 people to interact and [G] do that?
[A#] With Old Crow, we've [F#] toured with them before.
We [N] toured Europe with them.
As for the Edward Sharp guys, we met them once very briefly at Telluride, like, a while ago.
I think on this tour they've become my favourite live band to watch.
Yeah.
I just want [F#m] to talk [E] to that bride [D] of mine.
[E]
[D] When I was like a teenager, I started getting into sort of a [A] rambling [E] lifestyle, you know,
and started listening to [D] Woody Guthrie and folk music [F] and stuff, you know,
traveling [C] out and leaving home and running [G] away from all that.
It was, you know, very romantic to a guy like me that [F] loves that old kind of [G] music.
[N] It's
[A] [E] [F#m]
[D] [A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] [F#m] a satisfying train.
[D] [A] [E] [A] [D]
[A] Headed down south [E] to the land of the pine.
[F#m] I'm coming my way to [D] North [A] Carolina.
Staring up the road, [E] I pray to God [C#m] I see [D] a headlight.
[A] I made it down the coast in [E] the 17 [F#m]-i's.
I'm taking me a [D] bouquet of dollar [A] vines.
And I'm hoping for a rally I [E] can see my [A] baby [D] tonight.
[A] So ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
[F#m] Ride with your mama [D] any way [A] you please.
Hey, [E] [A] [D] like me.
[A] Ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
Ride with your mama [F#m] like [D] a [A] southbound train.
Hey, [E] mama, [D] like me.
[A] [E] [F#m] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [A] [F#m] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] Walking due [E] south, had a rollin' oak.
I [F#m] caught a trucker out of Philly.
Had a nice long toad.
But he's a-headin' west [E] from the Cumberland [D] Gap to Johnson City.
[A] Tennessee and I gotta get a move [E] on.
[A] For the first time, I hit my baby [F#m] callin' [D] money.
I know that she's the [A] only one.
If I die in a [E] rally, least [C#m] I will [D] die free.
[A] [E] And [F#m] we are rockin'.
[D] [A] [N] [A#m]
Um, John, you guys need to go inside, [N] please.
Everybody.
Someone tried to jump on the train.
That's why this all happened.
Oh, this, that's [A#] why.
Yeah.
Just some, some, some fan tried to hop on the train.
Out here?
Probably a mile back or something.
Oh, my God.
Bunch of damn hippies on that thing is what [N] it looked like to me, Fred.
Give him a big ol' Texas whip.
Well, we're at Austin High.
And we jumped in pickup trucks about 1 o'clock this afternoon from our hotel.
It's our first day of exercise, having been stuck on that train for four days.
We've all just been playing nonstop.
We've been singing and dancing and drinking.
Water.
Copious amounts of water.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not enough, unfortunately.
And, um, I think everyone on the train would agree that just the personnel, [A#] like, all these new people, these new faces, are just [Em] the perfect [N] combination.
Like, how can you get 130 people to interact and [G] do that?
[A#] With Old Crow, we've [F#] toured with them before.
We [N] toured Europe with them.
As for the Edward Sharp guys, we met them once very briefly at Telluride, like, a while ago.
I think on this tour they've become my favourite live band to watch.
Yeah.
Key:
A
D
E
F#m
G
A
D
E
[F#] _ _ _ [G] The sand shall hand me that long [D] distance phone.
_ I just want [F#m] to talk [E] to that bride [D] of mine.
_ [E]
[D] When I was like a teenager, I started getting into sort of a [A] rambling [E] lifestyle, you know,
and started listening to [D] Woody Guthrie and folk music [F] and stuff, you know,
traveling [C] out and leaving home and running [G] away from all that.
It was, you know, very romantic to a guy like me that [F] loves that old kind of [G] music.
_ [N] It's _
_ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [F#m] _ _
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ [F#m] a satisfying train.
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ [A] _ [D] _ _
_ [A] Headed down south [E] to the land of the pine.
[F#m] I'm coming my way to [D] North [A] Carolina.
Staring up the road, [E] I pray to God [C#m] I see [D] a headlight. _
[A] I made it down the coast in [E] the 17 [F#m]-i's.
I'm taking me a [D] bouquet of dollar [A] vines.
And I'm hoping for a rally I [E] can see my [A] baby [D] tonight. _
[A] So ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
[F#m] Ride with your mama [D] any way [A] you please.
Hey, _ [E] _ [A] [D] like me. _
_ [A] Ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
Ride with your mama [F#m] _ like [D] a [A] southbound train.
Hey, _ [E] mama, [D] like me.
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [F#m] _ _ [D] _
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _ _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ [A] _ [F#m] _ _ [D] _
_ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _ _ _
_ [A] Walking due [E] south, had a rollin' oak.
I [F#m] caught a trucker out of Philly.
Had a nice long toad.
But he's a-headin' west [E] from the Cumberland [D] Gap to Johnson City.
[A] Tennessee and I gotta get a move [E] on.
[A] For the first time, I hit my baby [F#m] callin' [D] money.
I know that she's the [A] only one.
If I die in a [E] rally, least [C#m] I will [D] die free.
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] And [F#m] we are rockin'.
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ [N] _ _ _ [A#m]
Um, _ John, you guys need to go inside, [N] please.
Everybody.
Someone tried to jump on the train.
That's why this all happened.
Oh, this, that's [A#] why.
Yeah.
Just some, some, some fan tried to hop on the train.
Out here?
Probably a mile back or something.
Oh, my God. _
Bunch of damn hippies on that thing is what [N] it looked like to me, Fred.
_ Give him a big ol' Texas whip. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Well, we're at Austin High. _
And we jumped in pickup trucks about 1 o'clock this afternoon from our hotel.
It's our first day of exercise, having been stuck on that train for four days.
We've all just been playing nonstop.
We've been singing and dancing and drinking.
Water.
Copious amounts of water.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not enough, unfortunately.
And, um, I think everyone on the train would agree that just the personnel, [A#] like, all these new people, these new faces, are just [Em] the perfect [N] combination.
Like, how can you get 130 people to interact and [G] do that?
[A#] With Old Crow, we've [F#] toured with them before.
We [N] toured Europe with them.
As for the Edward Sharp guys, we met them once very briefly at Telluride, like, a while ago.
I think on this tour they've become my favourite live band to watch.
Yeah. _
_ I just want [F#m] to talk [E] to that bride [D] of mine.
_ [E]
[D] When I was like a teenager, I started getting into sort of a [A] rambling [E] lifestyle, you know,
and started listening to [D] Woody Guthrie and folk music [F] and stuff, you know,
traveling [C] out and leaving home and running [G] away from all that.
It was, you know, very romantic to a guy like me that [F] loves that old kind of [G] music.
_ [N] It's _
_ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [F#m] _ _
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ [F#m] a satisfying train.
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ [A] _ [D] _ _
_ [A] Headed down south [E] to the land of the pine.
[F#m] I'm coming my way to [D] North [A] Carolina.
Staring up the road, [E] I pray to God [C#m] I see [D] a headlight. _
[A] I made it down the coast in [E] the 17 [F#m]-i's.
I'm taking me a [D] bouquet of dollar [A] vines.
And I'm hoping for a rally I [E] can see my [A] baby [D] tonight. _
[A] So ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
[F#m] Ride with your mama [D] any way [A] you please.
Hey, _ [E] _ [A] [D] like me. _
_ [A] Ride with your mama [E] like a wagon wheel.
Ride with your mama [F#m] _ like [D] a [A] southbound train.
Hey, _ [E] mama, [D] like me.
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [F#m] _ _ [D] _
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _ _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ [A] _ [F#m] _ _ [D] _
_ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _ _ _
_ [A] Walking due [E] south, had a rollin' oak.
I [F#m] caught a trucker out of Philly.
Had a nice long toad.
But he's a-headin' west [E] from the Cumberland [D] Gap to Johnson City.
[A] Tennessee and I gotta get a move [E] on.
[A] For the first time, I hit my baby [F#m] callin' [D] money.
I know that she's the [A] only one.
If I die in a [E] rally, least [C#m] I will [D] die free.
_ [A] _ _ _ [E] And [F#m] we are rockin'.
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ [N] _ _ _ [A#m]
Um, _ John, you guys need to go inside, [N] please.
Everybody.
Someone tried to jump on the train.
That's why this all happened.
Oh, this, that's [A#] why.
Yeah.
Just some, some, some fan tried to hop on the train.
Out here?
Probably a mile back or something.
Oh, my God. _
Bunch of damn hippies on that thing is what [N] it looked like to me, Fred.
_ Give him a big ol' Texas whip. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Well, we're at Austin High. _
And we jumped in pickup trucks about 1 o'clock this afternoon from our hotel.
It's our first day of exercise, having been stuck on that train for four days.
We've all just been playing nonstop.
We've been singing and dancing and drinking.
Water.
Copious amounts of water.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not enough, unfortunately.
And, um, I think everyone on the train would agree that just the personnel, [A#] like, all these new people, these new faces, are just [Em] the perfect [N] combination.
Like, how can you get 130 people to interact and [G] do that?
[A#] With Old Crow, we've [F#] toured with them before.
We [N] toured Europe with them.
As for the Edward Sharp guys, we met them once very briefly at Telluride, like, a while ago.
I think on this tour they've become my favourite live band to watch.
Yeah. _