These
country classic song lyrics are the property of the respective
artist, authors and labels, they are intended solely for educational
purposes and private study only. The chords provided are my
interpretation and their accuracy is not guaranteed.
Midnight
In Montgomery lyrics and chords are intended for your personal
use only, it's a very good country song co-written and recorded by Alan
Jackson.
Easy
to download Classic CountryMP3sand
Country GospelMP3smost only $.99 or less.
Midnight In Montgomery Recorded by Alan Jackson Written by Don Sampson and Alan Jackson
Dm C Midnight in Montgomery silver eagle lonely road A#7 Dm I was on my way to Mobile for a big New Year's Eve show C I stopped for just a minute to see a friend outside of town A#7 A7 Put my collar up I found his name and felt the wind die down
Dm C And a drunk man in a cowboy hat took me by surprise A#7 Dm Wearing shiny boots a Nudie suit and haunting haunted eyes C He said friend it's good to see you it's nice to know you care A#7 A7 Then the wind picked up and he was gone was he ever really there
C Dm C Dm Cause its midnight in Montgomery just hear that whippoorwill C Dm A7 See the stars light up the purple sky feel that lonesome chill C Dm When the wind is right you'll hear his songs smell whiskey in the air C A#7 A7 Dm Midnight in Montgomery he's always singing there
C I climbed back on that eagle took one last look around A#7 Dm Through red tail lights the shadow moved slow across the ground C And off somewhere a midnight train is slowly passin' by A#7 A7 I could hear that whistle moaning I'm so lonesome I could cry
Repeat #3
C Dm C Dm He's always singing there Hank's always singing there
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If you want
to change the
"Key" on any song, click
here
for the easiest way possible. Copy and paste lyrics and chords to the
key changer, select the key you want, then click the button "Click
Here". If the lyrics are in a long line, first paste to Microsoft Word
or a similar word processor, then recopy and paste to key changer.
This software was developed by John Logue.