"A Country Song" From Golden Age of Radio Words and music by Josh Ritter Interpretation by Emily Whittredge *Em Transition: e----------- b----------- g----------- d----------- a-2-2-2-2- E-3-2-3-2- Inro: [Em] repeated [Em]Picture they took [Em]of you in your [C]cowboy [C]hat Makes you [G]look like you are [G]one of the [D]boys Out on a [D]Saturday [Em]night, mean[Em]while on the [C]outskirts of the [C]dance hall I'm a [G]joke that you'd [G]probably enjoy[D,D] On the [Em]outside of [Em]Memphis all the [C]building look [C]big And the [G]white picket [G]fences all [D]dare to charge [D]around the lawn And [Em]hold their heads up [Em]high when my [C]headlights find them [C]out They'll be the [G]first to put their [G]hands in the [D]air with my [D]radio on[Em, Em, D, D] Singing a [G]country [Em]song soft and low[Em trans*] [Em?]Oh when I've [D]got a worried [G]mind [C]I [G]know [Am]I hear the [Am]ghost of [D]Patsy [D]Cline [Am]On the [Am]Grand Old [D]Opry [D]Show [Em, Em, C, G] [Em, Em, C, G] Plucked bridge: [Em, Em, C, G] basically Return to Em repeated Living on the edge of the city limit line This is where the boundary finally ends And I swear that we're the last living souls in a populated ghost town All the billboards are our best friends Which way did our last chance go and can we Get out if we go right now? It seems that with the malls and the mega-church stadiums We would get out if we knew just how with the radio on Standing in line to get my self-help book signed off On by the reverend who shouts to the converted Have mercy on this boy he did it all by the book But still kind of has his doubts Oh you look pretty good in that jonquil dress But your smile is a wooden nickel's pride and I know that it ain't worth much but I feels good to touch And I think that I could dance if I tried with your radio on Oh when I've got a worried mind I know I hear the ghost of Patsy Cline On the Grand Old Opry Show