Intro: Ab x4 Ab Turn out the lights Eb Close your eyes Ab Turn up the silence Db The heartache of your life Ab Dance forever Eb Under the lights Ab This brutal love Ab Oh how you want it Eb You're begging for it Ab But you can't have it Db Even if you try Ab It's in the clutches Eb In the hands of Ab This brutal love Ab Old toys Eb This plastic card Ab Loners and fools Db Are tearing me apart Ab Here comes trouble Eb The uninvited Ab This brutal love Ab Danger Eb Not quite at home Ab The eyes of temptation Db The flesh of my bones Ab Hello stranger Eb I'm a disaster Ab This brutal love Db Bad luck Ab Bitters and soda Eb Anguish and shame Ab The modern fool Db Bad sex Ab Fm Buy me a train-wreck Db Just something for my troubled Eb Mind Instrumental: Ab Cm Db E Ab Cm Db Eb A Ab Cm Db E Ab Cm Db Eb Db Bad luck Ab Bitters and soda Eb Anguish and shame Ab The modern fool Db Bad love Ab Fm Kiss me I'm loaded Db Something for my troubled Eb E Mind A C#m Drop out D F Drop-dead hideous A C#m How low D E Bb Is this brutal love A C#m Drop out D F Drop-dead hideous A C#m How low D E Bb Is this brutal love A C#m Drop out D F Drop-dead hideous A C#m How low D E Bb Is this brutal love A C#m Drop out D F Drop-dead hideous A C#m How low D E Is this brutal love A This brutal love
About the artist behind Brutal Love Chords:
Green Day was originally part of the punk rock scene at 924 Gilman Street in Berkeley, California. Its early releases for independent record label Lookout! Records earned them a grassroots fanbase, some of whom felt alienated when the band signed to a major label.[2] Nevertheless, its major label debut Dookie (1994) became a breakout success and eventually sold over 10 million copies in the U.S. alone, and 15 million copies sold worldwide.[3] As a result, Green Day was widely credited, alongside fellow California punk bands The Offspring and Rancid, with reviving mainstream interest in and popularizing punk rock in the United States.[4][5] Green Day's three follow-up albums, Insomniac, Nimrod and Warning did not achieve the massive success of Dookie, but they were still successful, reaching double platinum and gold status respectively.[6] Green Day's 2004 rock opera American Idiot reignited the band's popularity with a younger generation, selling five million copies in the U.S.[7]
The band has sold over 65 million records worldwide,[8] including 22 million in the United States alone.[9] They also have three Grammy Awards, Best Alternative Album for Dookie, Best Rock Album for American Idiot, and Record of the Year for "Boulevard of Broken Dreams".
Indexed at Wikipedia.