Artist: Audio Adrenaline
Song: DC-10
Author: Mark Stuart, Will McGinnis, Bob Herdman, Barry Blair
1999 Up In The Mix Music (BMI)
Tabbed by: Robert Hammond (bobbyghandi@yahoo.com) 
This song is basically three scale-chord boogy.  If this gets on the tab page I just 
want to dedicate this song to my buddies Drew and Adam.  This song has a great message.  
I quoted this song to guy at work, and I had a great chance to witness to him thorugh 
the words, pray for him, his name is Nick.  This song is awesome.

E-scale bass riff

G ----------------
D --------0-------
A ----2-4---4-2---
E 0-4-----------4-


A-scale bass riff

G --------0-------
D ----2-4---4-2---
A 0-4-----------4-
E ----------------


B-A combo scale bass riff

G ----------------
D --1-4-1-----2---
A 2-------0-4---4-
E ----------------

DC-10 by Audio Adrenaline

            E
Do you know 
            E
Do you know 
   E7  
Do you know where you will go?


Intro 

A-scale; E-scale; B-A scale; E-scale lead into verse

Verse

E
If a DC-10 ever fell on your head 
E
Laying in the ground all messy and dead 
E    A 
Or a Mack truck run over you 
E
Or you suddenly die in your Sunday pew 
B-A                             E 
Do you know where you're gonna go 
E
It can happen any day, it can happen any way 
E
It can happen while you're nappin' in your easy chair 
A
Happen at home, happen at school 
E
Happen while you're scattin' like a scattin' fool 
B-A                             E
Do you know where you're gonna go

CHORUS 
E                              E
Do you know where you're gonna go 
A                               E  
Do you know where you're gonna go
B-A
Do you know where you're gonna go 
E
Straight to Heaven Or down the hole? 

BACK TO CHORUS 

E
747 fell out of Heaven 
E
Crashed through the roof of a 7-11 
A
You're working on a slurpee things get hazy 
E	
Reach for a twinkie now you're pushing up daisies? 
B-A                             E
Do you know where you're gonna go? 

Chorus

The last time the chorus ends on an EM7 (E-major 7th) 
barred chord in stead of a regular E chord.