Chords for Randy Bachman You Aint Seen Nothing Yet Jan 25 2019 Chicago nunupics
Tempo:
120.05 bpm
Chords used:
A
D
E
G
B
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[E] [B] The brother who played accordion stuttered.
Okay, now [E] that's done.
[N] I was the oldest of four boys.
So any of you are the oldest in your family who had the same job?
You.
Designated babysitter.
With no pay, right?
Mom and dad would go out and say, just play in the yard with your brothers.
We're going to visit Granny and Grandpa, we're going grocery shopping.
When the street lights come on, go in the house, go to bed.
We play street [D] hockey or baseball or [Abm] something.
At least in Winnipeg, with a lot like here.
[B]
So I took that opportunity to tutor my brothers in the [N] art of slingshot, bow and arrows, lighting fires.
This is all in our living room.
[B]
[N] And we teased each other without mercy.
I mean, really bad, serious pranks and jokes.
And we got to be really [A] famous.
My brother started the [Am] accordion playing brother.
[N] And we were doing our second album, our third album, VCO album.
And we had a track left over.
I always have a track because I was producing VCO.
We'd get a track that we jammed on.
I'd have a light jangly guitar and then a big heavy [E] guitar.
And we'd put it in different parts of the [A] song and the bass and drums.
So I'd use that to get the sounds, [Bb] move mics.
And then we would play that song through [A] a few times, listen to it back, throw it [Ab] away.
So instead of throwing the song away, I thought I would tease [F] my brother [B] and sputter like
he did through this whole song.
Mix one copy, put it on a cassette, send it to [E] him and go, na na na na.
It's going to be in our album.
It was not [A] supposed to be on the album.
[E] The head of our label from Chicago, Charlie Fatch, flies in and he wants [Am] to hear the album.
So we play, this is the Not Fragile album.
[N] We play him Not Fragile.
He says, great song.
It's the beginning [Ab] of something.
We're going to call it heavy rock or heavy [D] metal or something like that.
[Bb] And I like rolling down the highway, but I don't hear a [A] magical song.
[Eb] I go, that's it.
[A] There's eight songs.
Four and a side, four [Bb] and a half minutes each, 22 minutes [Am] a side.
Can't get [Dm] anything else on there.
And we have no other songs.
[Ab] And the engineer says, play him the throwaway track.
[E] So Charlie says, what?
There's another track?
I go, no, it's just like a weird demo with weird sound.
The guitar's not in tune.
I'm starting to tease my brother and do bad Van [Dm] Morrison impressions in the ending.
And he says, [N] let me hear it.
So I play it for him.
He jumps out of his chair and he says, that's magical.
It's a hit.
Nobody could create that.
I go, you're [A] not kidding.
[B] So [Eb] he plays it a couple of times.
He says, I want [E] you to put this on the album.
I go, you're kidding.
He says, just put it on the way it is.
And [Abm] that's the first beat to the album with a nine [B] song.
They all had four a side.
We had to rearrange the album, put the four longest ones on one side and then the five
[Ab] shorter ones on the [G] other side.
[Am] So that album came out with that song on there.
He released it as a single, starting to get airplay.
When I heard it on the radio, I was so embarrassed I would turn [N] it down.
It sold two or three million copies, went to number one in 22 countries,
and was voted the best [E] stuttering song of all time
[B] by the Stuttering Association, which I didn't know existed, of America.
I got a big thing to put on my [Am] wall.
So I beat up a Benny and the Jets and Watch A [E] Generation and all that stuff.
And [A] it proved to me I knew nothing about the music [E] business.
[A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [D]
[A] [D]
[A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [F]
[G] [A] [Dbm] [Gbm]
[Bm] [E]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] I'm a baby, [D]
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this
[E] [D]
[Db] [B] [E] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] I've been walking up here, just like [G] Stan.
[D] I'm a little bit of a bad kid, I'm a good fuck.
[F]
[G] [A] I'm a good boy, [Dbm] I'm a good kid.
[Gbm] I'm a good boy, I'm a good kid.
[Bm] I'm a good kid, I'm [E] a good boy, I'm a good kid.
[A] [Bm] I'm a good [Em] kid.
[D]
I'm a [A] baby in this
I'm [E] a bad [D] kid.
[Bm] It's something [A] that you never know when you're a [E] baby.
[D]
[B] I'm a [E] baby.
[A] [E] [D]
[Db] [Eb] [E] [A] I'm [G]
[D] [Am] [D]
[A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] a [A] baby.
[G]
[D] [A] [D]
[F] I'm a good boy.
[G] [A] I'm [Dbm] a bad kid.
It's [Gbm] something that you never [Bm] know [E]
when [A] [E] you're a baby.
I'm a good kid.
[D]
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D]
It's [A] something that you never [E] know [D] when you're a baby.
[E] You know [A] when you're a baby.
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D]
[Em] [A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] I'm a [D]
[Em] [A] [D]
[A] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [D]
[A] good kid.
[D] [E] [G]
[D]
[Am]
[A]
[N]
Okay, now [E] that's done.
[N] I was the oldest of four boys.
So any of you are the oldest in your family who had the same job?
You.
Designated babysitter.
With no pay, right?
Mom and dad would go out and say, just play in the yard with your brothers.
We're going to visit Granny and Grandpa, we're going grocery shopping.
When the street lights come on, go in the house, go to bed.
We play street [D] hockey or baseball or [Abm] something.
At least in Winnipeg, with a lot like here.
[B]
So I took that opportunity to tutor my brothers in the [N] art of slingshot, bow and arrows, lighting fires.
This is all in our living room.
[B]
[N] And we teased each other without mercy.
I mean, really bad, serious pranks and jokes.
And we got to be really [A] famous.
My brother started the [Am] accordion playing brother.
[N] And we were doing our second album, our third album, VCO album.
And we had a track left over.
I always have a track because I was producing VCO.
We'd get a track that we jammed on.
I'd have a light jangly guitar and then a big heavy [E] guitar.
And we'd put it in different parts of the [A] song and the bass and drums.
So I'd use that to get the sounds, [Bb] move mics.
And then we would play that song through [A] a few times, listen to it back, throw it [Ab] away.
So instead of throwing the song away, I thought I would tease [F] my brother [B] and sputter like
he did through this whole song.
Mix one copy, put it on a cassette, send it to [E] him and go, na na na na.
It's going to be in our album.
It was not [A] supposed to be on the album.
[E] The head of our label from Chicago, Charlie Fatch, flies in and he wants [Am] to hear the album.
So we play, this is the Not Fragile album.
[N] We play him Not Fragile.
He says, great song.
It's the beginning [Ab] of something.
We're going to call it heavy rock or heavy [D] metal or something like that.
[Bb] And I like rolling down the highway, but I don't hear a [A] magical song.
[Eb] I go, that's it.
[A] There's eight songs.
Four and a side, four [Bb] and a half minutes each, 22 minutes [Am] a side.
Can't get [Dm] anything else on there.
And we have no other songs.
[Ab] And the engineer says, play him the throwaway track.
[E] So Charlie says, what?
There's another track?
I go, no, it's just like a weird demo with weird sound.
The guitar's not in tune.
I'm starting to tease my brother and do bad Van [Dm] Morrison impressions in the ending.
And he says, [N] let me hear it.
So I play it for him.
He jumps out of his chair and he says, that's magical.
It's a hit.
Nobody could create that.
I go, you're [A] not kidding.
[B] So [Eb] he plays it a couple of times.
He says, I want [E] you to put this on the album.
I go, you're kidding.
He says, just put it on the way it is.
And [Abm] that's the first beat to the album with a nine [B] song.
They all had four a side.
We had to rearrange the album, put the four longest ones on one side and then the five
[Ab] shorter ones on the [G] other side.
[Am] So that album came out with that song on there.
He released it as a single, starting to get airplay.
When I heard it on the radio, I was so embarrassed I would turn [N] it down.
It sold two or three million copies, went to number one in 22 countries,
and was voted the best [E] stuttering song of all time
[B] by the Stuttering Association, which I didn't know existed, of America.
I got a big thing to put on my [Am] wall.
So I beat up a Benny and the Jets and Watch A [E] Generation and all that stuff.
And [A] it proved to me I knew nothing about the music [E] business.
[A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [D]
[A] [D]
[A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [F]
[G] [A] [Dbm] [Gbm]
[Bm] [E]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] I'm a baby, [D]
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this
[E] [D]
[Db] [B] [E] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] I've been walking up here, just like [G] Stan.
[D] I'm a little bit of a bad kid, I'm a good fuck.
[F]
[G] [A] I'm a good boy, [Dbm] I'm a good kid.
[Gbm] I'm a good boy, I'm a good kid.
[Bm] I'm a good kid, I'm [E] a good boy, I'm a good kid.
[A] [Bm] I'm a good [Em] kid.
[D]
I'm a [A] baby in this
I'm [E] a bad [D] kid.
[Bm] It's something [A] that you never know when you're a [E] baby.
[D]
[B] I'm a [E] baby.
[A] [E] [D]
[Db] [Eb] [E] [A] I'm [G]
[D] [Am] [D]
[A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] [A] [G]
[D] a [A] baby.
[G]
[D] [A] [D]
[F] I'm a good boy.
[G] [A] I'm [Dbm] a bad kid.
It's [Gbm] something that you never [Bm] know [E]
when [A] [E] you're a baby.
I'm a good kid.
[D]
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D]
It's [A] something that you never [E] know [D] when you're a baby.
[E] You know [A] when you're a baby.
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D]
[Em] [A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] I'm a [D]
[Em] [A] [D]
[A] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [E] [D]
[A] [D]
[A] good kid.
[D] [E] [G]
[D]
[Am]
[A]
[N]
Key:
A
D
E
G
B
A
D
E
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [B] The brother who played accordion stuttered.
Okay, now [E] that's done. _ _ _
[N] I was the oldest of four boys.
So any of you are the oldest in your family who had the same job?
You.
Designated babysitter.
With no pay, right?
Mom and dad would go out and say, just play in the yard with your brothers.
We're going to visit Granny and Grandpa, we're going grocery shopping.
When the street lights come on, go in the house, go to bed.
We play street [D] hockey or baseball or [Abm] something.
At least in Winnipeg, with a lot like here.
[B] _ _
So I took that opportunity to tutor my brothers in the [N] art of slingshot, _ bow and arrows, lighting fires.
This is all in our living room.
[B] _
_ [N] _ _ _ And we teased each other without mercy.
I mean, really bad, serious pranks and jokes.
And we got to be really [A] famous.
My brother started the [Am] accordion playing brother.
[N] And we were doing our second album, our third album, VCO album.
And we had a track left over.
I always have a track because I was producing VCO.
We'd get a track that we jammed on.
I'd have a light jangly guitar and then a big heavy [E] guitar.
And we'd put it in different parts of the [A] song and the bass and drums.
So I'd use that to get the sounds, [Bb] move mics.
And then we would play that song through [A] a few times, listen to it back, throw it [Ab] away.
So instead of throwing the song away, I thought I would tease [F] my brother [B] and sputter like
he did through this whole song.
Mix one copy, put it on a cassette, send it to [E] him and go, na na na na.
It's going to be in our album.
It was not [A] supposed to be on the album.
_ [E] The head of our label from Chicago, Charlie Fatch, flies in and he wants [Am] to hear the album.
So we play, this is the Not Fragile album.
[N] We play him Not Fragile.
He says, great song.
It's the beginning [Ab] of something.
We're going to call it heavy rock or heavy [D] metal or something like that.
[Bb] And I like rolling down the highway, but I don't hear a [A] magical song.
[Eb] I go, that's it.
[A] There's eight songs.
Four and a side, four [Bb] and a half minutes each, 22 minutes [Am] a side.
Can't get [Dm] anything else on there.
And we have no other songs.
[Ab] And the engineer says, play him the throwaway track.
[E] So Charlie says, what?
There's another track?
I go, no, it's just like a weird demo with weird sound.
The guitar's not in tune.
I'm starting to tease my brother and do bad Van [Dm] Morrison impressions in the ending.
And he says, [N] let me hear it.
So I play it for him.
He jumps out of his chair and he says, that's magical.
It's a hit.
Nobody could create that.
I go, you're [A] not kidding. _
_ [B] So [Eb] he plays it a couple of times.
He says, I want [E] you to put this on the album.
I go, you're kidding.
He says, just put it on the way it is.
And [Abm] _ that's the first beat to the album with a nine [B] song.
They all had four a side.
We had to rearrange the album, put the four longest ones on one side and then the five
[Ab] shorter ones on the [G] other side.
[Am] So that album came out with that song on there.
He released it as a single, starting to get airplay.
When I heard it on the radio, I was so embarrassed I would turn [N] it down.
_ _ _ It sold two or three million copies, went to number one in 22 countries,
_ and was voted the best [E] stuttering song of all time _ _
[B] by the Stuttering Association, which I didn't know existed, of America.
I got a big thing to put on my [Am] wall.
So I beat up a Benny and the Jets and Watch A [E] Generation and all that stuff.
And [A] it proved to me I knew nothing about the music [E] business. _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
[G] _ _ _ [A] _ _ [Dbm] _ _ [Gbm] _
_ _ _ [Bm] _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] I'm a baby, [D] _
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this_
[E] _ _ [D] _
[Db] _ [B] _ [E] _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ [A] I've been walking up here, just like [G] Stan.
_ [D] I'm a little bit of a bad kid, I'm a good fuck.
[F] _
[G] _ _ [A] I'm a good boy, [Dbm] I'm a good kid.
[Gbm] I'm a good boy, I'm a good kid.
_ [Bm] _ I'm a good kid, I'm [E] a good boy, I'm a good kid.
_ [A] _ [Bm] I'm a good [Em] kid.
[D] _
I'm a [A] baby in this_
I'm [E] a bad [D] kid.
[Bm] It's something [A] that you never know when you're a [E] baby.
[D] _
[B] I'm a [E] baby.
[A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _
[Db] _ [Eb] _ [E] [A] I'm _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [Am] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] a [A] baby.
_ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [F] I'm a good boy.
[G] _ _ [A] I'm [Dbm] a bad kid.
It's [Gbm] something that you never [Bm] know _ _ [E]
when _ _ [A] _ [E] you're a baby.
I'm a good kid.
[D] _
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this_
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D] _
It's [A] something that you never [E] know [D] when you're a baby.
[E] You know [A] when you're a baby.
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D] _
_ [Em] _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] I'm a [D] _
_ _ _ [Em] _ [A] _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] good kid.
_ _ [D] _ _ [E] _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Am] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [N] _ _
Okay, now [E] that's done. _ _ _
[N] I was the oldest of four boys.
So any of you are the oldest in your family who had the same job?
You.
Designated babysitter.
With no pay, right?
Mom and dad would go out and say, just play in the yard with your brothers.
We're going to visit Granny and Grandpa, we're going grocery shopping.
When the street lights come on, go in the house, go to bed.
We play street [D] hockey or baseball or [Abm] something.
At least in Winnipeg, with a lot like here.
[B] _ _
So I took that opportunity to tutor my brothers in the [N] art of slingshot, _ bow and arrows, lighting fires.
This is all in our living room.
[B] _
_ [N] _ _ _ And we teased each other without mercy.
I mean, really bad, serious pranks and jokes.
And we got to be really [A] famous.
My brother started the [Am] accordion playing brother.
[N] And we were doing our second album, our third album, VCO album.
And we had a track left over.
I always have a track because I was producing VCO.
We'd get a track that we jammed on.
I'd have a light jangly guitar and then a big heavy [E] guitar.
And we'd put it in different parts of the [A] song and the bass and drums.
So I'd use that to get the sounds, [Bb] move mics.
And then we would play that song through [A] a few times, listen to it back, throw it [Ab] away.
So instead of throwing the song away, I thought I would tease [F] my brother [B] and sputter like
he did through this whole song.
Mix one copy, put it on a cassette, send it to [E] him and go, na na na na.
It's going to be in our album.
It was not [A] supposed to be on the album.
_ [E] The head of our label from Chicago, Charlie Fatch, flies in and he wants [Am] to hear the album.
So we play, this is the Not Fragile album.
[N] We play him Not Fragile.
He says, great song.
It's the beginning [Ab] of something.
We're going to call it heavy rock or heavy [D] metal or something like that.
[Bb] And I like rolling down the highway, but I don't hear a [A] magical song.
[Eb] I go, that's it.
[A] There's eight songs.
Four and a side, four [Bb] and a half minutes each, 22 minutes [Am] a side.
Can't get [Dm] anything else on there.
And we have no other songs.
[Ab] And the engineer says, play him the throwaway track.
[E] So Charlie says, what?
There's another track?
I go, no, it's just like a weird demo with weird sound.
The guitar's not in tune.
I'm starting to tease my brother and do bad Van [Dm] Morrison impressions in the ending.
And he says, [N] let me hear it.
So I play it for him.
He jumps out of his chair and he says, that's magical.
It's a hit.
Nobody could create that.
I go, you're [A] not kidding. _
_ [B] So [Eb] he plays it a couple of times.
He says, I want [E] you to put this on the album.
I go, you're kidding.
He says, just put it on the way it is.
And [Abm] _ that's the first beat to the album with a nine [B] song.
They all had four a side.
We had to rearrange the album, put the four longest ones on one side and then the five
[Ab] shorter ones on the [G] other side.
[Am] So that album came out with that song on there.
He released it as a single, starting to get airplay.
When I heard it on the radio, I was so embarrassed I would turn [N] it down.
_ _ _ It sold two or three million copies, went to number one in 22 countries,
_ and was voted the best [E] stuttering song of all time _ _
[B] by the Stuttering Association, which I didn't know existed, of America.
I got a big thing to put on my [Am] wall.
So I beat up a Benny and the Jets and Watch A [E] Generation and all that stuff.
And [A] it proved to me I knew nothing about the music [E] business. _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
[G] _ _ _ [A] _ _ [Dbm] _ _ [Gbm] _
_ _ _ [Bm] _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] I'm a baby, [D] _
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this_
[E] _ _ [D] _
[Db] _ [B] _ [E] _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ [A] I've been walking up here, just like [G] Stan.
_ [D] I'm a little bit of a bad kid, I'm a good fuck.
[F] _
[G] _ _ [A] I'm a good boy, [Dbm] I'm a good kid.
[Gbm] I'm a good boy, I'm a good kid.
_ [Bm] _ I'm a good kid, I'm [E] a good boy, I'm a good kid.
_ [A] _ [Bm] I'm a good [Em] kid.
[D] _
I'm a [A] baby in this_
I'm [E] a bad [D] kid.
[Bm] It's something [A] that you never know when you're a [E] baby.
[D] _
[B] I'm a [E] baby.
[A] _ _ [E] _ _ [D] _
[Db] _ [Eb] _ [E] [A] I'm _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [Am] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ [D] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] a [A] baby.
_ _ _ _ [G] _
[D] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [F] I'm a good boy.
[G] _ _ [A] I'm [Dbm] a bad kid.
It's [Gbm] something that you never [Bm] know _ _ [E]
when _ _ [A] _ [E] you're a baby.
I'm a good kid.
[D] _
[E] I'm a baby [A] in this_
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D] _
It's [A] something that you never [E] know [D] when you're a baby.
[E] You know [A] when you're a baby.
[E] I'm a bad kid.
[D] _
_ [Em] _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] I'm a [D] _
_ _ _ [Em] _ [A] _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ [A] good kid.
_ _ [D] _ _ [E] _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [D] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Am] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [N] _ _