Chords for Zane Williams- Jayton and Jill (OFFICIAL VIDEO)
Tempo:
65.975 bpm
Chords used:
E
A
B
C#m
F#m
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[E] [Em]
Jayden had a job for seven bucks an hour at the filling station by the water [F#] tower,
[B] just checking oil and fixing [Am] flats.
The kind of kid most folks just [E] looked past.
[Em] Jill was a local preacher's kid gone wild.
Most of the time her daddy couldn't stand [B] his own child.
He'd quote the scripture with an angry [A] shout,
list her all the reasons she would never [E] turn out.
[A] She was drunk one [E] night on the 4th [B] of July,
parked [C#m] in a pasture with an out of [A] town guy.
He got mad [E] when she [F#m] said no,
and he tore [A] her Sunday dress.
She was wandering alone [E] on the county [B] road
when the lights [C#m] came over the hill.
[A] That was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill.
He said, hey, do you need a ride home?
She said, go away, leave me alone.
[B] But he noticed the bruise and the frightened [A] tears,
said there ain't no way in hell [E] I'm leaving you out here.
It was raining a little and fixing the storm,
and his Mustang jacket looked dry [B] and warm.
She let him wrap it around her and she climbed [A] inside,
saying, OK, I [E] guess thanks for the ride.
[A] Had an all [E] night diner, they waited out the storm,
[B] ended [C#m] up talking right up [A] till dawn.
By the [E] time he dropped her off safe [F#m] at home,
neither one [A] felt so alone.
Two [E] lost souls found [B] a connection at the lesson,
[C#m] and both of them still,
[A] on that night [E] when Jake met Jill.
[A] [E]
[B] [C#m] [A]
[E] [F#m] [A]
What Jake [E] never told her about [B] that night
is how he'd taken [C#m] his dad's old 45.
[A]
He'd been driving around thinking [E] how no one would miss [F#m] him
if he [A] just ended it all.
He [E] couldn't see past his [B] own pain
till he saw [C#m] a pretty girl walking in the rain.
[A] Thank God he made it over that hill.
That [B] was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill.
[A] [B] [E]
Jayden had a job for seven bucks an hour at the filling station by the water [F#] tower,
[B] just checking oil and fixing [Am] flats.
The kind of kid most folks just [E] looked past.
[Em] Jill was a local preacher's kid gone wild.
Most of the time her daddy couldn't stand [B] his own child.
He'd quote the scripture with an angry [A] shout,
list her all the reasons she would never [E] turn out.
[A] She was drunk one [E] night on the 4th [B] of July,
parked [C#m] in a pasture with an out of [A] town guy.
He got mad [E] when she [F#m] said no,
and he tore [A] her Sunday dress.
She was wandering alone [E] on the county [B] road
when the lights [C#m] came over the hill.
[A] That was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill.
He said, hey, do you need a ride home?
She said, go away, leave me alone.
[B] But he noticed the bruise and the frightened [A] tears,
said there ain't no way in hell [E] I'm leaving you out here.
It was raining a little and fixing the storm,
and his Mustang jacket looked dry [B] and warm.
She let him wrap it around her and she climbed [A] inside,
saying, OK, I [E] guess thanks for the ride.
[A] Had an all [E] night diner, they waited out the storm,
[B] ended [C#m] up talking right up [A] till dawn.
By the [E] time he dropped her off safe [F#m] at home,
neither one [A] felt so alone.
Two [E] lost souls found [B] a connection at the lesson,
[C#m] and both of them still,
[A] on that night [E] when Jake met Jill.
[A] [E]
[B] [C#m] [A]
[E] [F#m] [A]
What Jake [E] never told her about [B] that night
is how he'd taken [C#m] his dad's old 45.
[A]
He'd been driving around thinking [E] how no one would miss [F#m] him
if he [A] just ended it all.
He [E] couldn't see past his [B] own pain
till he saw [C#m] a pretty girl walking in the rain.
[A] Thank God he made it over that hill.
That [B] was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill.
[A] [B] [E]
Key:
E
A
B
C#m
F#m
E
A
B
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [Em] _ _
Jayden had a job for seven bucks an hour at the filling station by the water [F#] tower,
[B] just checking oil and fixing [Am] flats.
The kind of kid most folks just [E] looked past.
[Em] _ Jill was a local preacher's kid gone wild.
Most of the time her daddy couldn't stand [B] his own child.
He'd quote the scripture with an angry [A] shout,
list her all the reasons she would never [E] turn out.
_ [A] She was drunk one [E] night on the 4th [B] of July,
parked [C#m] in a pasture with an out of [A] town guy.
He got mad [E] when she [F#m] said no,
and he tore [A] her Sunday dress. _
She was wandering alone [E] on the county [B] road
when the lights [C#m] came over the hill. _
_ [A] That was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill. _
_ _ _ _ He said, hey, do you need a ride home?
She said, go away, leave me alone.
[B] But he noticed the bruise and the frightened [A] tears,
said there ain't no way in hell [E] I'm leaving you out here. _ _
It was raining a little and fixing the storm,
and his Mustang jacket looked dry [B] and warm.
She let him wrap it around her and she climbed [A] inside,
saying, OK, I [E] guess thanks for the ride.
_ [A] Had an all [E] night diner, they waited out the storm,
[B] ended [C#m] up talking right up [A] till dawn.
By the [E] time he dropped her off safe [F#m] at home,
neither one [A] felt so alone.
_ _ Two [E] lost souls found [B] a connection at the lesson,
[C#m] and both of them still,
_ [A] on that night [E] when Jake met Jill.
_ [A] _ _ [E] _
_ _ [B] _ [C#m] _ _ [A] _ _ _
[E] _ [F#m] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
What Jake [E] never told her about [B] that night
is how he'd taken [C#m] his dad's old 45.
[A]
He'd been driving around thinking [E] how no one would miss [F#m] him
if he [A] just ended it all.
_ He [E] couldn't see past his [B] own pain
till he saw [C#m] a pretty girl walking in the rain.
[A] Thank God he made it over that hill.
_ _ That [B] was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill.
_ [A] _ _ _ [B] _ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Jayden had a job for seven bucks an hour at the filling station by the water [F#] tower,
[B] just checking oil and fixing [Am] flats.
The kind of kid most folks just [E] looked past.
[Em] _ Jill was a local preacher's kid gone wild.
Most of the time her daddy couldn't stand [B] his own child.
He'd quote the scripture with an angry [A] shout,
list her all the reasons she would never [E] turn out.
_ [A] She was drunk one [E] night on the 4th [B] of July,
parked [C#m] in a pasture with an out of [A] town guy.
He got mad [E] when she [F#m] said no,
and he tore [A] her Sunday dress. _
She was wandering alone [E] on the county [B] road
when the lights [C#m] came over the hill. _
_ [A] That was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill. _
_ _ _ _ He said, hey, do you need a ride home?
She said, go away, leave me alone.
[B] But he noticed the bruise and the frightened [A] tears,
said there ain't no way in hell [E] I'm leaving you out here. _ _
It was raining a little and fixing the storm,
and his Mustang jacket looked dry [B] and warm.
She let him wrap it around her and she climbed [A] inside,
saying, OK, I [E] guess thanks for the ride.
_ [A] Had an all [E] night diner, they waited out the storm,
[B] ended [C#m] up talking right up [A] till dawn.
By the [E] time he dropped her off safe [F#m] at home,
neither one [A] felt so alone.
_ _ Two [E] lost souls found [B] a connection at the lesson,
[C#m] and both of them still,
_ [A] on that night [E] when Jake met Jill.
_ [A] _ _ [E] _
_ _ [B] _ [C#m] _ _ [A] _ _ _
[E] _ [F#m] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
What Jake [E] never told her about [B] that night
is how he'd taken [C#m] his dad's old 45.
[A]
He'd been driving around thinking [E] how no one would miss [F#m] him
if he [A] just ended it all.
_ He [E] couldn't see past his [B] own pain
till he saw [C#m] a pretty girl walking in the rain.
[A] Thank God he made it over that hill.
_ _ That [B] was the moment [E] when Jake met Jill.
_ [A] _ _ _ [B] _ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _