Chords for Andy Rourke (Ex-bajista de The Smiths) para Insight

Tempo:
85.3 bpm
Chords used:

Eb

Db

C

A

F

Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Show Tuner
Andy Rourke (Ex-bajista de The Smiths) para Insight chords
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[A]
[F]
Ever since I was a kid every Christmas time every birthday.
I would always ask for a musical [Db] instrument
And the first thing I got was like a plastic trumpet and then a saxophone
And I got a keyboard on the seventh Christmas of my life
I asked my parents for a guitar and they bought me a plastic one
And I was really angry because he bought me this plastic one
And I wanted a real guitar and luckily my birthday was in January so
By John come January they bought me, you know a wooden guitar initially my dad tuned every string to the same notes I think
[Eb] So I had trouble I saw me and Johnny Marmot at school we went to school together since we were 11
[Db] He was just starting off playing guitar
I was a little bit more advanced at that time
And so we used to spend our dinner times or dinner hour and just just jamming and playing guitar
We started a band together
I'll be a very bad man
[Eb] And the bass player who's in the band he could only play one song and this guy could kind of play guitar as well.
So
Johnny suggested that I maybe try the bass as soon as I picked it up.
I just fell in love with it and
And just kept on playing it and been playing it ever since probably 10 12 years old
It was all the glam rock kind of thing with Slade and Suzy Quatro and the sweet
T-rex
So there's a good thing a good few things came out of it.
I discovered Neil Young and I became a hippie and started growing my hair
Got in trouble at school for that.
I was about 14 the punk scene arrived
I mean Johnny, but we liked it, but we weren't really old enough to go to the gigs or
Or
Get away with the look because we were a strict school
So the the Manchester scene started to grow, you [Db] know, I think the Sex Pistols did a gig at a place called the lesser free trade hall
Which I believe Morris who was that amongst other people Peter was there
So Joy Division formed as a result of that
and
I think the Buzzcocks had already formed like a few months before that
Myself and Johnny were in the same [C] rehearsal space as Joy Division in the Buzzcocks and we were a lot younger
So we used to be in all when we used to see
[B] the Buzzcocks flight cases
[Eb] We just had plastic bags and stuff to [C] carry on it was an [Eb] exciting time from then on it kind of picked up
and we never looked back, but we could never find a singer and
I think Johnny became a little bit frustrated.
So he left the band
briefly, I didn't speak to him for
maybe six weeks and then
I got a call saying that he'd started this band called the Smiths with this guy called Morris and blah blah blah
And they had one bass player for one gig, but he was a disaster
So yeah, I got the call to go down to a studio and
record three tracks
We took a demo down to Rough Trade in London
They signed us up straight away.
I think a five-album deal.
But you know, I'm still a bass player, but the DJing thing was just kind of
[E]
To get me out of the house and keep me out of trouble really
Because I get stir crazy after a couple of weeks of being at home.
Something I started about five years ago
My manager's father and sister both got diagnosed with cancer within the same month
And so I just thought I'll try and do a gig to raise some money for the local hospital, the cancer hospital
[Eb]
Initially I was thinking, you know, a small club or something like that
But then it just blew up and I got a really good response from all the bands that I knew
The first year was easy because I could phone up New Order, Ian Brown
All the Manchester people in my phone book
And we ended up selling out the arena in Manchester
Yeah, we've done that every year so far.
I'm also excited about the legacy that we left
You can hear the Smiths influences in [D] lots of bands today
The worst part, I don't know, probably that being in that kind of [Eb] gang mentality
And being on the road and that solidarity kind of thing
I've been on tour with bands since, like Badger John Boy and Ian Brown and a few other bands
But for now, for instance, when [Abm] I'm going around DJing, I tend to go around alone
So sometimes it can get a bit lonely
But I think Skype saved my life
Key:  
Eb
12341116
Db
12341114
C
3211
A
1231
F
134211111
Eb
12341116
Db
12341114
C
3211
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_ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Ever since I was a kid every Christmas time every birthday.
I would always ask for a musical [Db] instrument
And the first thing I got was like a plastic trumpet and then a saxophone
And I got a keyboard on the seventh Christmas of my life
I asked my parents for a guitar and they bought me a plastic one
And I was really angry because he bought me this plastic one
And I wanted a real guitar and luckily my birthday was in January so
_ By John come January they bought me, you know a wooden guitar initially my dad tuned every string to the same notes I think _
_ [Eb] So I had trouble I saw me and Johnny Marmot at school we went to school together since we were 11
_ [Db] He was just starting off playing guitar
I was a little bit more advanced at that time
And so we used to spend our dinner times or dinner hour and just just jamming and playing guitar
We started a band together
I'll be a very bad man
[Eb] _ And the bass player who's in the band he could only play one song and this guy could kind of play guitar as well.
So
Johnny suggested that I maybe try the bass as soon as I picked it up.
I just fell in love with it and
And just kept on playing it and been playing it ever since probably 10 12 years old
It was all the glam rock kind of thing with Slade and Suzy Quatro and the sweet
_ T-rex
So there's a good thing a good few things came out of it.
I discovered Neil Young and I became a hippie and started growing my hair
_ Got in trouble at school for that.
I was about 14 the punk scene arrived
I mean Johnny, but we liked it, but we weren't really old enough to go to the gigs or
Or
Get away with the look because we were a strict school
So the the Manchester scene started to grow, you [Db] know, I think the Sex Pistols did a gig at a place called the lesser free trade hall
Which I believe Morris who was that amongst other people Peter was there
_ So Joy Division formed as a result of that
_ _ and
I think the Buzzcocks had already formed like a few months before that
Myself and Johnny were in the same [C] rehearsal space as Joy Division in the Buzzcocks and we were a lot younger _
So we used to be in all when we used to see
[B] the Buzzcocks flight cases
[Eb] We just had plastic bags and stuff to [C] carry on it was an [Eb] exciting time from then on it kind of picked up
and we never looked back, but we could never find a singer and _
I think Johnny became a little bit frustrated.
So he left the band
briefly, I didn't speak to him for
maybe six weeks and then
I got a call saying that he'd started this band called the Smiths with this guy called Morris and blah blah blah
And they had one bass player for one gig, but he was a disaster _
So yeah, I got the call to go down to a studio and
_ record three tracks
We took a demo down to Rough Trade in London
They signed us up straight away.
I think a five-album deal.
But you know, I'm still a bass player, but the DJing thing was just kind of
[E] _
To get me out of the house and keep me out of trouble really
Because I get stir crazy after a couple of weeks of being at home.
Something I started about five years ago
My manager's father and sister both got diagnosed with cancer within the same month
And so I just thought I'll try and do a gig to raise some money for the local hospital, the cancer hospital
_ _ [Eb] _
Initially I was thinking, you know, a small club or something like that
But then it just blew up and I got a really good response from all the bands that I knew
The first year was easy because I could phone up New Order, Ian Brown
_ All the Manchester people in my phone book
And we ended up selling out the arena in Manchester
_ Yeah, we've done that every year so far.
I'm also excited about the legacy that we left
You can hear the Smiths influences in [D] _ _ _ lots of bands today
The worst part, I don't know, probably that being in that kind of [Eb] gang mentality
And being on the road and that solidarity kind of thing
_ _ I've been on tour with bands since, like Badger John Boy and Ian Brown and a few other bands
But _ for now, for instance, when [Abm] I'm going around DJing, I tend to go around alone
So sometimes it can get a bit lonely
But I think Skype saved my life _ _ _ _ _ _ _