Chords for One Direction-This Is Us-Harry Styles going home
Tempo:
59.5 bpm
Chords used:
Ab
Eb
Abm
Gb
Db
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[Ab] [B] [Gb]
When I [B] come home and if I like [Gb] walk and don't see anyone around I can feel like [Eb] I'm at six again
[Gb] which is pretty crazy.
[Db] I'm a bit tall for a six year [Ab] old.
[Gbm]
[Cm]
[Gm]
[G] [Gb] [Fm] You see when he's [Ab] home he's just Harry and things are normal.
[Abm] He can raise the fridge and makes a mess like [E] every other teenage person.
[D] What a team!
[Ab]
He has [F] quite a comedic streak.
Even just watching him in school plays, even if he didn't have a very big part, he would do something that was small
but people remembered that and generally laughed.
[Eb]
When I come home I don't think my mum really cares that I sleep [Abm] until like 2pm.
I think she just likes knowing that I'm upstairs.
It's comforting in a [Eb] strange sort of way just to see him asleep and comfortable.
[Ab] We're going to the bakery that I used to work in.
[D] Always kind of [Eb] pop in like, oh!
Hi!
[Ab] How you doing mate?
Good, nice to see you.
I worked at the [Abm] bakery for about two and a half years.
This is the [Eb] cheese counter.
This is where I used to sit on my break.
I used to go to the toilet.
I remember when they said that they [Ab] wanted me to work on Saturdays.
I felt like I'd won [Abm] the lottery.
It fits like a glove.
I was like, [Eb] weekend job, I'm going to be rich.
So you'd come in and get all the stuff off the shelf, put them in boxes
and then at night [Abm] you'd slice bread and get stuff ready for the shop
[Eb] and then I'd do the washing up.
I had nightmares about this.
The only bits I'd eat [Ab] would be bits that fell off the side.
Or if you dropped something [Abm] and it crumbled, you couldn't sell it.
You'd be like, oh [Eb] no bro, get in.
[Ebm] Just got this, it's not that I'm boasting because it's Harry or anything
but he has got this aura of charm [Ab] about him without a doubt.
Well you've got that enthusiasm, [Db] other people then [Ab] are happy to work alongside it.
Harry knows.
Harry [Db] knows.
I'm not [Ab] saying anything.
He knows.
When I get the chance to come back here, [Eb] it's just really nice
and I just love to [Ab] spend a bit of time going round here.
If I really wanted [Fm] to, I'd be quite comfortable just coming and living in the house in the [Eb] village.
I don't know, you never know what's going to happen.
When I [B] come home and if I like [Gb] walk and don't see anyone around I can feel like [Eb] I'm at six again
[Gb] which is pretty crazy.
[Db] I'm a bit tall for a six year [Ab] old.
[Gbm]
[Cm]
[Gm]
[G] [Gb] [Fm] You see when he's [Ab] home he's just Harry and things are normal.
[Abm] He can raise the fridge and makes a mess like [E] every other teenage person.
[D] What a team!
[Ab]
He has [F] quite a comedic streak.
Even just watching him in school plays, even if he didn't have a very big part, he would do something that was small
but people remembered that and generally laughed.
[Eb]
When I come home I don't think my mum really cares that I sleep [Abm] until like 2pm.
I think she just likes knowing that I'm upstairs.
It's comforting in a [Eb] strange sort of way just to see him asleep and comfortable.
[Ab] We're going to the bakery that I used to work in.
[D] Always kind of [Eb] pop in like, oh!
Hi!
[Ab] How you doing mate?
Good, nice to see you.
I worked at the [Abm] bakery for about two and a half years.
This is the [Eb] cheese counter.
This is where I used to sit on my break.
I used to go to the toilet.
I remember when they said that they [Ab] wanted me to work on Saturdays.
I felt like I'd won [Abm] the lottery.
It fits like a glove.
I was like, [Eb] weekend job, I'm going to be rich.
So you'd come in and get all the stuff off the shelf, put them in boxes
and then at night [Abm] you'd slice bread and get stuff ready for the shop
[Eb] and then I'd do the washing up.
I had nightmares about this.
The only bits I'd eat [Ab] would be bits that fell off the side.
Or if you dropped something [Abm] and it crumbled, you couldn't sell it.
You'd be like, oh [Eb] no bro, get in.
[Ebm] Just got this, it's not that I'm boasting because it's Harry or anything
but he has got this aura of charm [Ab] about him without a doubt.
Well you've got that enthusiasm, [Db] other people then [Ab] are happy to work alongside it.
Harry knows.
Harry [Db] knows.
I'm not [Ab] saying anything.
He knows.
When I get the chance to come back here, [Eb] it's just really nice
and I just love to [Ab] spend a bit of time going round here.
If I really wanted [Fm] to, I'd be quite comfortable just coming and living in the house in the [Eb] village.
I don't know, you never know what's going to happen.
Key:
Ab
Eb
Abm
Gb
Db
Ab
Eb
Abm
_ _ _ [Ab] _ _ [B] _ _ [Gb]
When I [B] come home and if I like [Gb] walk and don't see anyone around I can feel like [Eb] I'm at six again
[Gb] which is pretty crazy.
[Db] I'm a bit tall for a six year [Ab] old.
_ [Gbm] _ _
_ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [Gm] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [G] _ _ _ [Gb] [Fm] You see when he's [Ab] home he's just Harry and things are normal.
[Abm] He can raise the fridge and makes a mess like [E] every other teenage person.
_ [D] What a team!
[Ab] _
He has [F] quite a comedic streak.
Even just watching him in school plays, even if he didn't have a very big part, he would do something that was small
but people remembered that and generally laughed.
[Eb] _
When I come home I don't think my mum really cares that I sleep [Abm] until like 2pm.
I think she just likes knowing that I'm upstairs.
It's comforting in a [Eb] strange sort of way just to see him asleep and comfortable.
_ _ [Ab] _ We're going to the bakery that I used to work in.
_ [D] Always kind of [Eb] pop in like, oh!
Hi!
[Ab] How you doing mate?
Good, nice to see you.
I worked at the [Abm] bakery for about two and a half years.
This is the [Eb] cheese counter.
This is where I used to sit on my break.
I used to go to the toilet.
I remember when they said that they [Ab] wanted me to work on Saturdays.
I felt like I'd won [Abm] the lottery.
It fits like a glove.
I was like, [Eb] weekend job, I'm going to be rich.
So you'd come in and get all the stuff off the shelf, put them in boxes
and then at night [Abm] you'd slice bread and get stuff ready for the shop
[Eb] and then I'd do the washing up.
I had nightmares about this.
The only bits I'd eat [Ab] would be bits that fell off the side.
Or if you dropped something [Abm] and it crumbled, you couldn't sell it.
You'd be like, oh [Eb] no bro, get in.
[Ebm] Just got this, it's not that I'm boasting because it's Harry or anything
but he has got this aura of charm [Ab] about him without a doubt.
Well you've got that enthusiasm, [Db] other people then [Ab] are happy to work alongside it.
Harry knows.
Harry [Db] knows.
I'm not [Ab] saying anything.
He knows.
When I get the chance to come back here, [Eb] it's just really nice
and I just love to [Ab] spend a bit of time going round here.
If I really wanted [Fm] to, I'd be quite comfortable just coming and living in the house in the [Eb] village.
I don't know, you never know what's going to happen. _ _ _ _ _
When I [B] come home and if I like [Gb] walk and don't see anyone around I can feel like [Eb] I'm at six again
[Gb] which is pretty crazy.
[Db] I'm a bit tall for a six year [Ab] old.
_ [Gbm] _ _
_ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [Gm] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [G] _ _ _ [Gb] [Fm] You see when he's [Ab] home he's just Harry and things are normal.
[Abm] He can raise the fridge and makes a mess like [E] every other teenage person.
_ [D] What a team!
[Ab] _
He has [F] quite a comedic streak.
Even just watching him in school plays, even if he didn't have a very big part, he would do something that was small
but people remembered that and generally laughed.
[Eb] _
When I come home I don't think my mum really cares that I sleep [Abm] until like 2pm.
I think she just likes knowing that I'm upstairs.
It's comforting in a [Eb] strange sort of way just to see him asleep and comfortable.
_ _ [Ab] _ We're going to the bakery that I used to work in.
_ [D] Always kind of [Eb] pop in like, oh!
Hi!
[Ab] How you doing mate?
Good, nice to see you.
I worked at the [Abm] bakery for about two and a half years.
This is the [Eb] cheese counter.
This is where I used to sit on my break.
I used to go to the toilet.
I remember when they said that they [Ab] wanted me to work on Saturdays.
I felt like I'd won [Abm] the lottery.
It fits like a glove.
I was like, [Eb] weekend job, I'm going to be rich.
So you'd come in and get all the stuff off the shelf, put them in boxes
and then at night [Abm] you'd slice bread and get stuff ready for the shop
[Eb] and then I'd do the washing up.
I had nightmares about this.
The only bits I'd eat [Ab] would be bits that fell off the side.
Or if you dropped something [Abm] and it crumbled, you couldn't sell it.
You'd be like, oh [Eb] no bro, get in.
[Ebm] Just got this, it's not that I'm boasting because it's Harry or anything
but he has got this aura of charm [Ab] about him without a doubt.
Well you've got that enthusiasm, [Db] other people then [Ab] are happy to work alongside it.
Harry knows.
Harry [Db] knows.
I'm not [Ab] saying anything.
He knows.
When I get the chance to come back here, [Eb] it's just really nice
and I just love to [Ab] spend a bit of time going round here.
If I really wanted [Fm] to, I'd be quite comfortable just coming and living in the house in the [Eb] village.
I don't know, you never know what's going to happen. _ _ _ _ _