A C#m F#m I wish you would have smiled in the bakery Bm or sat on a tatty settee Dm at some mutual friend's gathering A C#m and the more you keep on looking F#m the more it's hard to take Bm love, we're in stale mate Dm C#m to never meet is surely where we're bound Bm there's one in every town just there to grind you down E|-1-5-10-1-| B|-3-6-10-3-| G|-2-7-10-2-| D|----------| A|----------| E|----------| A C#m F#m I wish I would have seen you in the post office Bm well maybe I did and I missed it Dm too busy with a mind on clever rhymes A C#m F#m why not the rounders pitch or the canteen Bm you're slacking love, where have you been? Dm C#m Just had to go and wait until tonight Bm so give me the invite don't worry it's alright E|-1-5-10-1-| B|-3-6-10-3-| G|-2-7-10-2-| D|----------| A|----------| E|----------| A C#m F#m I wish I would have seen you down in the arcade Bm Dm A sipping on a lemonade in the paper cup and chewing on the straw C#m F#m and I wish I would have seen you in the bakery Bm Dm but if I'd seen you in the bakery you probably wouldn't have seen me A F#m Dm F AArctic Monkeys - Bakery Chords :: indexed at Ultimate Guitar.
About artist:
Arctic Monkeys achieved chart success with their first single, "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor", which reached number one in the UK Singles Chart.[1] Their debut album Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not, released on 23 January 2006, was at the time the fastest-selling debut album in British music history, beating Oasis' Definitely Maybe. It remains the fastest-selling debut album for a group. It received critical acclaim, winning both the 2006 Mercury Prize[2] and the 2007 Brit Award for Best British Album. The band's second album, Favourite Worst Nightmare, was released on 23 April 2007, sold over 225,000 copies in its debut week, and was nominated for the 2007 Mercury Prize.[3] The group also picked up the award for Best British Album and Best British Group at the Brit awards in 2008.
Arctic Monkeys achieved their success through fan-made demo tapes and online file sharing.[4] They were heralded as one of the first acts to come to the public attention via the Internet, with commentators suggesting they represented the possibility of a change in the way in which new bands are promoted and marketed.[5] The band eventually signed to the independent record label Domino Records.
Indexed at Wikipedia.