Dm C7 F C7 The tax man's taken all my dough, and left me in my stately home, A A7 Dm C7 F C7 Lazing on a sunny afternoon, and I can't sail my yacht, he's taken everything I got A A7 Dm D all I got this sunny afternoon. D7 D7 G7 G7 C7 C7 Save me, save me, save me from this squeeze, I've got a big fat momma trying to F A7 Dm G Dm G7 F break me, and I love to live so pleasantly, live this life of luxury, lazing on A Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 a sunny afternoon, Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 in the summertime, in the summertime, in the summertime Dm C7 F C7 My girlfriend's gone of with my car, and gone back to her ma and pa, A A7 Dm C7 telling tales of drunkenness and cruelty, now I am sitting here, F C7 A A7 Dm D sipping at my ice-cold beer, lazing on a sunny afternoon. D7 D7 G G7 C7 Help me, help me, help me sail away, you give me two good reasons, C7 F A7 Dm G Dm why I ought to stay, cause I love to live so pleasantly, live this life of G7 F A Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 luxury, lazing on a sunny afternoon, Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 Dm Dm7 Dm6 A7 in the summertime, in the summertime, in the summertime
About the artist behind Sunny Afternoon Chords:
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.