Dsus/D Dsus/D This is our last goodbye Bm A Em I hate to feel the love between us die G But it's over D Just hear this and then I'll go : A you gave me more to live for, G Dsus/D more than you'll ever know. Dsus/D etc. This is our last embrace, Bm A G must I dream and always see your face Em D Why can't we overcome this wall A G Baby, maybe it is just because I didn't know you at all. (Weird chords -- kind of Dm then Gm7, repeated) A7 G Kiss me, please, kiss me A G But kiss me out of desire, babe, and not consolation A G You know, it makes me so angry 'cause I know that in time A7 G Dsus/D I'll only make you cry, this is our last goodbye. Bm/A/G/A/Bm/A/Em/A/Bm/A/G D Bm A G Did you say "no, this can't happen to me," D Bm A G and did you rush to the phone to call? D Bm A G Was there a voice unkind in the back of your mind saying, Em/Am C G "maybe... you didn't know him at all." D Dmaj7 Well, the bells out in the church tower chime D7 Dmaj7/D Burning clues into this heart of mine C D C Thinking so hard on her soft eyes and the memory D Of her sighs that, "it's over... it's over..." Dm/Gm7 twice, then A7-G-C (last chord left hanging). *Note: The Dsus means D suspended, and it's easy (and nice). It's just a standard D major with an added 4th note, as follows. E |---|-2-|(4)| The 2/3/1 chord is the D major. Adding the (4) B |---|---|-3-| turns it into a Dsus. G |---|-1-|---| D |---|---|---| A |---|---|---| E |---|---|---| JEFF LIVES
About the artist behind Last Goodbye Chords:
Over the following two years, the band toured widely to promote the album, including concerts in the U.S., Europe, Japan and Australia. In 1997, he stopped touring and moved to Memphis, Tennessee, to experiment with new material for a second album. During his time there, he recorded many four-track demos and completed his third recording session for his new album with his band, with Tom Verlaine as producer. While awaiting the arrival of his band from New York, he drowned during an evening swim in the Wolf River. His body was found on June 4, 1997.[2]
Since his death, there have been many posthumous releases of his material, including a collection of four-track demos and studio recordings for his unfinished second album My Sweetheart the Drunk and expansions of debut album Grace and his Live at Sin-é EP. Buckley's first #1 came posthumously in March 2008 when "Hallelujah" topped Billboard's Hot Digital Songs following a performance of the song on American Idol. Buckley and his work continue to remain popular and regularly featured in 'greatest' lists in the music press.[3][4]
Indexed at Wikipedia.