#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE---------------------------------# #This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the # #song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research. # #------------------------------------------------------------------------------# FROM: Lukas Lechner, Woergl, Austria E-MAIL: [email protected] DATE: 12 Aug 2001 ARTIST: The Kinks SONG: Sittin' On My Sofa ALBUM: The Kink Controversy, 1965 Sittin' On My Sofa ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ writtten by Davies/Davies blues scheme in E. The song is in another key but this will do it. E-riff: e-------------------------------| B-------------------------------| G-------------------------------| D-------------------------------| A-------7-5----5-----5----------| E-----0-----5h7---5h7---5--0----| A-riff: e-------------------------------| B-------------------------------| G-------------------------------| D-------7-5----5-----5----------| A-----0-----5h7---5h7---5--0----| E-------------------------------| B-riff: e-------------------------------| B-------------------------------| G-------------------------------| D--------9-7-----7------7-------| A------------7h9----7h9----7----| E-----7-------------------------| Corrections, questions, comments and suggestions are always welcome, just mail me. __________________________________________________________ |"Won't you tell me, where have all the good times gone?" | | -Ray Davies, 1965 | | | |You can hardly listen to today's music, if you can call | |it music at all. | |_________________________________________________________|
About the artist behind Sittin On My Sofa Tab:
The band's early hard-driving singles set a standard in the mid-1960s for rock and roll, while albums such as Face to Face,[2] Something Else, The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society, Arthur and Muswell Hillbillies are highly regarded by fans, critics, and peers, and are considered amongst the most influential recordings of the era.[3]
Indexed at Wikipedia.