Chords for James Taylor & Carole King - Something In The Way She Moves
Tempo:
145.9 bpm
Chords used:
C
F
Bb
Gm
Eb
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[C] They are both quite simply [F] legends.
Between them, they've earned 10 [Ab] Grammys, sold 65 [Fm] million albums in one induction into both the [Gm] Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Now, Carole King and James Taylor are getting ready to hit the road together for the first time [C] in 40 years [G] in the [Fm] Troubadour Reunion Tour.
[E] Folks, good morning.
Nice to see you.
Good morning.
[D] So, this kind of [Ab] came out of a performance you did a while back for the 50th anniversary of the Troubadour, which for [N] people who don't know, is a club out in L.A.
And you said, this is fun, this is nice, let's go on the road.
Right.
We, you know, Carole and I have been, every time we run into each other, which is often, we would say, well, when are we going to get it back together?
When are we going to get the band, the original band back together and do some work?
One of whom we have today, Lee Sklar.
Hi, Lee.
Nice to see you.
Pleasure to [Bb] meet you.
What is it about your musical styles [Ab] and your personalities that work so well together?
[D] Carole?
It's, I think it's in our DNA.
There's something, the first time we met, the first time we sat down and played together, we had the same sensibility.
I was thinking what I would want him to play next and he'd play it and vice versa.
It was just a [Ab] real musical connection.
I was [Bb] thinking I would love to be a fly on the [D] wall when you guys get together and start telling stories from the early days in the business.
And I was thinking, which one of you has the most outrageous stories?
Yes, but I'm writing a book.
Are you really?
I don't know if James Stoker will, but I am.
So they will come out.
What are you going to sing for us today?
We're going to sing Something in the Way She Moves, which is a song of James's.
And I'm going to back him up [Ab] and later we may sing one of mine.
We would love that, [G] ladies and gentlemen.
And I have a job to do here.
I've got to get rid of some of these [Ab] stools.
James Taylor and Carole King.
There you go.
I got that.
There you go.
[C]
[F] [C]
[F] [C]
[F] [Bb] [C]
[F] [C] Well, something in [Dm] the way she [C] moves, [Gm] looks [F] my way or [Bb] calls my [C] name.
[Gm] That seems to leave this [Bb] troubled [Eb] world [F] behind.
[Bb]
[F] [C] And if I'm feeling down and [Gm] blue, troubled [Bb]
by some [C] foolish game,
[Gm] she always seems to make me [Eb] change [C] my mind.
I feel fine [Gm] anytime [F] [C] she's around me now.
[B] [A] She's [C] around me now [Dm] almost all the time.
If [C] I'm well, you can [Gm] tell [C] she's been with me now.
She's [G] [Gbm] been [Am] with me now [Dm] quite a long, long time.
And I [G] feel [C] fine
[Bb] [F] [C]
[F] every [Eb] now and then.
The things [Bb] that I lean [Cm] on and [F] lose their meaning.
[Bb] And I find [Eb] myself [F] careening [Eb] in places where I [Bb] should never [Gm] let me go.
[C] [F]
She has [Eb] the power to [Bb] go where no [Cm] one else can [F] find me.
And [Bb] to [Eb] silently [F] remind me [Gm] of the [Eb] happiness, [F] the times that I [Dm] know.
[C]
[Dm] Well, I guess I just got [C] to know then.
It isn't what [Gm] she's got [C] to say.
[Gm] How [F] she thinks [Bb] or where [C] she's been.
To [Gm] me, the words [Bb] are nice [Eb] the way they [F] sound.
[Bb]
[F] [C] Well, I like to hear them [Gm] best [C] that [Gm] way.
Doesn't [Bb] much matter what [C] they mean.
She [Gm] says them mostly [Bb] just [Eb] to calm me [C] down.
I feel fine [Gm] anytime [F] she's [C] around me now.
[Am] She's around me [Dm] now I [G] guess just about [Dm] all the time.
If [C] I'm well, you [Gm] can tell [F] she's [C] been with me now.
[A] She's been with [Am] me [Dm] now quite [A] a long, [Dm] long time.
Yes, and I [C] feel fine.
[Bb]
[F] [C]
James Keller and Carole King on the road again together [G] after [N] 40 years.
Between them, they've earned 10 [Ab] Grammys, sold 65 [Fm] million albums in one induction into both the [Gm] Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Now, Carole King and James Taylor are getting ready to hit the road together for the first time [C] in 40 years [G] in the [Fm] Troubadour Reunion Tour.
[E] Folks, good morning.
Nice to see you.
Good morning.
[D] So, this kind of [Ab] came out of a performance you did a while back for the 50th anniversary of the Troubadour, which for [N] people who don't know, is a club out in L.A.
And you said, this is fun, this is nice, let's go on the road.
Right.
We, you know, Carole and I have been, every time we run into each other, which is often, we would say, well, when are we going to get it back together?
When are we going to get the band, the original band back together and do some work?
One of whom we have today, Lee Sklar.
Hi, Lee.
Nice to see you.
Pleasure to [Bb] meet you.
What is it about your musical styles [Ab] and your personalities that work so well together?
[D] Carole?
It's, I think it's in our DNA.
There's something, the first time we met, the first time we sat down and played together, we had the same sensibility.
I was thinking what I would want him to play next and he'd play it and vice versa.
It was just a [Ab] real musical connection.
I was [Bb] thinking I would love to be a fly on the [D] wall when you guys get together and start telling stories from the early days in the business.
And I was thinking, which one of you has the most outrageous stories?
Yes, but I'm writing a book.
Are you really?
I don't know if James Stoker will, but I am.
So they will come out.
What are you going to sing for us today?
We're going to sing Something in the Way She Moves, which is a song of James's.
And I'm going to back him up [Ab] and later we may sing one of mine.
We would love that, [G] ladies and gentlemen.
And I have a job to do here.
I've got to get rid of some of these [Ab] stools.
James Taylor and Carole King.
There you go.
I got that.
There you go.
[C]
[F] [C]
[F] [C]
[F] [Bb] [C]
[F] [C] Well, something in [Dm] the way she [C] moves, [Gm] looks [F] my way or [Bb] calls my [C] name.
[Gm] That seems to leave this [Bb] troubled [Eb] world [F] behind.
[Bb]
[F] [C] And if I'm feeling down and [Gm] blue, troubled [Bb]
by some [C] foolish game,
[Gm] she always seems to make me [Eb] change [C] my mind.
I feel fine [Gm] anytime [F] [C] she's around me now.
[B] [A] She's [C] around me now [Dm] almost all the time.
If [C] I'm well, you can [Gm] tell [C] she's been with me now.
She's [G] [Gbm] been [Am] with me now [Dm] quite a long, long time.
And I [G] feel [C] fine
[Bb] [F] [C]
[F] every [Eb] now and then.
The things [Bb] that I lean [Cm] on and [F] lose their meaning.
[Bb] And I find [Eb] myself [F] careening [Eb] in places where I [Bb] should never [Gm] let me go.
[C] [F]
She has [Eb] the power to [Bb] go where no [Cm] one else can [F] find me.
And [Bb] to [Eb] silently [F] remind me [Gm] of the [Eb] happiness, [F] the times that I [Dm] know.
[C]
[Dm] Well, I guess I just got [C] to know then.
It isn't what [Gm] she's got [C] to say.
[Gm] How [F] she thinks [Bb] or where [C] she's been.
To [Gm] me, the words [Bb] are nice [Eb] the way they [F] sound.
[Bb]
[F] [C] Well, I like to hear them [Gm] best [C] that [Gm] way.
Doesn't [Bb] much matter what [C] they mean.
She [Gm] says them mostly [Bb] just [Eb] to calm me [C] down.
I feel fine [Gm] anytime [F] she's [C] around me now.
[Am] She's around me [Dm] now I [G] guess just about [Dm] all the time.
If [C] I'm well, you [Gm] can tell [F] she's [C] been with me now.
[A] She's been with [Am] me [Dm] now quite [A] a long, [Dm] long time.
Yes, and I [C] feel fine.
[Bb]
[F] [C]
James Keller and Carole King on the road again together [G] after [N] 40 years.
Key:
C
F
Bb
Gm
Eb
C
F
Bb
[C] _ _ _ They are both quite simply [F] legends.
Between them, they've earned 10 [Ab] Grammys, sold 65 [Fm] million albums in one induction into both the [Gm] Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Now, Carole King and James Taylor are getting ready to hit the road together for the first time [C] in 40 years [G] in the [Fm] Troubadour Reunion Tour.
[E] Folks, good morning.
Nice to see you.
Good morning.
[D] So, this kind of [Ab] came out of a performance you did a while back for the 50th anniversary of the Troubadour, which for [N] people who don't know, is a club out in L.A.
And you said, this is fun, this is nice, let's go on the road.
Right.
We, _ you know, Carole and I have been, every time we run into each other, which is often, we would say, well, when are we going to get it back together?
When are we going to get the band, the original band back together and do some work?
One of whom we have today, Lee Sklar.
Hi, Lee.
Nice to see you.
Pleasure to [Bb] meet you.
What is it about your musical styles [Ab] and your personalities that work so well together?
[D] Carole?
_ It's, I think it's in our DNA.
There's something, the first time we met, the first time we sat down and played together, we had the same sensibility.
I was thinking what I would want him to play next and he'd play it and vice versa.
It was just a [Ab] real musical connection.
I was [Bb] thinking I would love to be a fly on the [D] wall when you guys get together and start telling stories from the early days in the business.
And I was thinking, which one of you has the most outrageous stories?
_ _ _ Yes, but I'm writing a book.
Are you really?
I don't know if James Stoker will, but I am.
So they will come out.
What are you going to sing for us today?
_ We're going to sing Something in the Way She Moves, which is a song of James's.
And I'm going to back him up [Ab] and later we may sing one of mine.
We would love that, [G] ladies and gentlemen.
And I have a job to do here.
I've got to get rid of some of these [Ab] stools.
James Taylor and Carole King.
There you go.
I got that.
There you go.
_ _ _ [C] _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ [F] _ [Bb] _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ [F] _ [C] _ Well, something in [Dm] the way she [C] moves, [Gm] _ _ looks [F] my way or [Bb] calls my [C] name. _ _
_ _ _ [Gm] That seems to leave this [Bb] troubled [Eb] world [F] behind.
_ _ [Bb] _
_ _ [F] _ [C] And if I'm feeling down and [Gm] blue, _ _ troubled [Bb]
by some [C] foolish game, _ _
_ _ [Gm] she always seems to make me [Eb] change [C] my mind.
_ I _ _ _ feel fine [Gm] anytime _ [F] _ [C] she's around me now. _
_ _ [B] [A] She's [C] around me now [Dm] _ _ almost all the time.
_ _ If [C] I'm well, you can [Gm] tell [C] _ she's been with me now.
_ _ She's [G] [Gbm] been [Am] with me now [Dm] _ quite a long, long time.
And I [G] feel [C] fine _ _
[Bb] _ _ _ [F] _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [F] _ every [Eb] now and then.
The things [Bb] that I lean [Cm] on and [F] lose their meaning.
[Bb] And I find [Eb] myself [F] _ careening _ [Eb] in places where I [Bb] should never [Gm] let me go.
[C] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
She has [Eb] the power to [Bb] go where no [Cm] one else can [F] find me.
And [Bb] to [Eb] silently _ [F] _ remind me [Gm] of the [Eb] happiness, [F] the times that I [Dm] know.
_ _ _ [C] _ _
[Dm] Well, I guess I just got [C] to know then. _
It isn't what [Gm] she's got [C] to say.
[Gm] _ _ How [F] she thinks [Bb] or where [C] she's been. _ _ _ _ _
To [Gm] me, the words [Bb] are nice [Eb] the way they [F] sound.
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ [F] [C] Well, I like to hear them [Gm] best [C] that [Gm] way.
_ _ Doesn't [Bb] much matter what [C] they mean. _ _
_ _ She [Gm] says them mostly [Bb] just [Eb] to calm me [C] down. _ _
_ _ I feel fine _ [Gm] anytime _ [F] _ she's [C] around me now.
_ _ _ [Am] She's around me [Dm] now _ I [G] guess just about [Dm] all the time.
If [C] I'm well, you [Gm] can tell [F] _ she's [C] been with me now. _ _ _
[A] She's been with [Am] me [Dm] now _ quite [A] a long, _ [Dm] long _ _ _ time.
_ _ Yes, and I [C] feel fine.
_ _ [Bb] _ _ _
[F] _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ James Keller and Carole King on the road again together [G] after [N] 40 years. _
Between them, they've earned 10 [Ab] Grammys, sold 65 [Fm] million albums in one induction into both the [Gm] Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Now, Carole King and James Taylor are getting ready to hit the road together for the first time [C] in 40 years [G] in the [Fm] Troubadour Reunion Tour.
[E] Folks, good morning.
Nice to see you.
Good morning.
[D] So, this kind of [Ab] came out of a performance you did a while back for the 50th anniversary of the Troubadour, which for [N] people who don't know, is a club out in L.A.
And you said, this is fun, this is nice, let's go on the road.
Right.
We, _ you know, Carole and I have been, every time we run into each other, which is often, we would say, well, when are we going to get it back together?
When are we going to get the band, the original band back together and do some work?
One of whom we have today, Lee Sklar.
Hi, Lee.
Nice to see you.
Pleasure to [Bb] meet you.
What is it about your musical styles [Ab] and your personalities that work so well together?
[D] Carole?
_ It's, I think it's in our DNA.
There's something, the first time we met, the first time we sat down and played together, we had the same sensibility.
I was thinking what I would want him to play next and he'd play it and vice versa.
It was just a [Ab] real musical connection.
I was [Bb] thinking I would love to be a fly on the [D] wall when you guys get together and start telling stories from the early days in the business.
And I was thinking, which one of you has the most outrageous stories?
_ _ _ Yes, but I'm writing a book.
Are you really?
I don't know if James Stoker will, but I am.
So they will come out.
What are you going to sing for us today?
_ We're going to sing Something in the Way She Moves, which is a song of James's.
And I'm going to back him up [Ab] and later we may sing one of mine.
We would love that, [G] ladies and gentlemen.
And I have a job to do here.
I've got to get rid of some of these [Ab] stools.
James Taylor and Carole King.
There you go.
I got that.
There you go.
_ _ _ [C] _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ [F] _ [Bb] _ _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ [F] _ [C] _ Well, something in [Dm] the way she [C] moves, [Gm] _ _ looks [F] my way or [Bb] calls my [C] name. _ _
_ _ _ [Gm] That seems to leave this [Bb] troubled [Eb] world [F] behind.
_ _ [Bb] _
_ _ [F] _ [C] And if I'm feeling down and [Gm] blue, _ _ troubled [Bb]
by some [C] foolish game, _ _
_ _ [Gm] she always seems to make me [Eb] change [C] my mind.
_ I _ _ _ feel fine [Gm] anytime _ [F] _ [C] she's around me now. _
_ _ [B] [A] She's [C] around me now [Dm] _ _ almost all the time.
_ _ If [C] I'm well, you can [Gm] tell [C] _ she's been with me now.
_ _ She's [G] [Gbm] been [Am] with me now [Dm] _ quite a long, long time.
And I [G] feel [C] fine _ _
[Bb] _ _ _ [F] _ _ [C] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [F] _ every [Eb] now and then.
The things [Bb] that I lean [Cm] on and [F] lose their meaning.
[Bb] And I find [Eb] myself [F] _ careening _ [Eb] in places where I [Bb] should never [Gm] let me go.
[C] _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
She has [Eb] the power to [Bb] go where no [Cm] one else can [F] find me.
And [Bb] to [Eb] silently _ [F] _ remind me [Gm] of the [Eb] happiness, [F] the times that I [Dm] know.
_ _ _ [C] _ _
[Dm] Well, I guess I just got [C] to know then. _
It isn't what [Gm] she's got [C] to say.
[Gm] _ _ How [F] she thinks [Bb] or where [C] she's been. _ _ _ _ _
To [Gm] me, the words [Bb] are nice [Eb] the way they [F] sound.
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ [F] [C] Well, I like to hear them [Gm] best [C] that [Gm] way.
_ _ Doesn't [Bb] much matter what [C] they mean. _ _
_ _ She [Gm] says them mostly [Bb] just [Eb] to calm me [C] down. _ _
_ _ I feel fine _ [Gm] anytime _ [F] _ she's [C] around me now.
_ _ _ [Am] She's around me [Dm] now _ I [G] guess just about [Dm] all the time.
If [C] I'm well, you [Gm] can tell [F] _ she's [C] been with me now. _ _ _
[A] She's been with [Am] me [Dm] now _ quite [A] a long, _ [Dm] long _ _ _ time.
_ _ Yes, and I [C] feel fine.
_ _ [Bb] _ _ _
[F] _ _ [C] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ James Keller and Carole King on the road again together [G] after [N] 40 years. _