Interpret: Chris LeDoux
Chris LeDoux - The Passenger (akordy)
Transpozícia ( -2 -1 0 +1 +2 )
G It was dark and I was driving down a EM lonely Texas road
the C night was hot and D sleep pulled at my EM eyes
I was G thinking bout the wild timEM es and the women that I'd had
The deC ceitful things I'd D done and those EM lies
When G standin' in the shadows at the D side of the road
Stood the C figure of a withered old EM man
He G wore a black bandana a D ropin' stetson hat
With a C two inch scarlet hat EM band
He G held his wrinkled hand up as a EM sign to shut 'er down
So I C pulled over and D stopped at his EM side
He G opened up the door slid EM in and sat down
and said C my D ain't it hot toEM night
I G studied this old man and it D seemed mighty strange
for C him to be out here all aEM lone
and G then he started talking and he D told me many things
of C times that both of us had EM known
He G told me of the wild life and the EM women that he'd known
How C none of them had D ever meant a EM thing
He G told me of a black night EM much the same as this
of the C strange and D awesome things he'd EM seen
G A man beside the road had raised hiD s hand
and flagged him down So he C stopped and let him EM in
That G stranger told him stories that D I am hearing now
Bout the C wild times and all the EM sin
And the G car got cold and clamy and this EM old man looked at me
He said C boy I've D come here for EM you
Your G days of wicked sinnin' have EM come to an end
As a C mortal on this D earth you are EM through
Then his G eyes got red and firey as he D took his stetson off
To reC veal his evil horns shiney and EM black
My G god the fear came o'er and my D senses were all lost
I C fought with him until we finally EM crashed
Next G day they found the car at the EM bottom of the draw
The young C cowboy was D found beside the EM wreck
The G car had been consumed by fire
but the cowboy had no EM marks
Except the C smokin' pitchfork D brand upon his EM neck
the C night was hot and D sleep pulled at my EM eyes
I was G thinking bout the wild timEM es and the women that I'd had
The deC ceitful things I'd D done and those EM lies
When G standin' in the shadows at the D side of the road
Stood the C figure of a withered old EM man
He G wore a black bandana a D ropin' stetson hat
With a C two inch scarlet hat EM band
He G held his wrinkled hand up as a EM sign to shut 'er down
So I C pulled over and D stopped at his EM side
He G opened up the door slid EM in and sat down
and said C my D ain't it hot toEM night
I G studied this old man and it D seemed mighty strange
for C him to be out here all aEM lone
and G then he started talking and he D told me many things
of C times that both of us had EM known
He G told me of the wild life and the EM women that he'd known
How C none of them had D ever meant a EM thing
He G told me of a black night EM much the same as this
of the C strange and D awesome things he'd EM seen
G A man beside the road had raised hiD s hand
and flagged him down So he C stopped and let him EM in
That G stranger told him stories that D I am hearing now
Bout the C wild times and all the EM sin
And the G car got cold and clamy and this EM old man looked at me
He said C boy I've D come here for EM you
Your G days of wicked sinnin' have EM come to an end
As a C mortal on this D earth you are EM through
Then his G eyes got red and firey as he D took his stetson off
To reC veal his evil horns shiney and EM black
My G god the fear came o'er and my D senses were all lost
I C fought with him until we finally EM crashed
Next G day they found the car at the EM bottom of the draw
The young C cowboy was D found beside the EM wreck
The G car had been consumed by fire
but the cowboy had no EM marks
Except the C smokin' pitchfork D brand upon his EM neck