#----------------------------------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: Harlan L Thompson BIG SKY- The Kinks D C G (riff 1) F C G (riff 2) D C G (riff 1) Big Sky looked down on all the people looking up at The Big Sky F C G (riff 2) Everybody's pushing one another around D C G (riff 1) Big Sky feels sad when he sees the children scream and cry F C G But Big Sky's too big to let it get him down (riff 2) D C G Big Sky's too big to cry (riff 2) D C G Big Sky's too high to see (riff 2) D C G F People like you and me Bb G Eb Bb One day we'll be free Eb Bb Eb Bb We won't care just you see Bb G Eb Bb Eb Till that day can be don't let it get you down Eb Bb And when I see that the world's too much for me Eb Bb I think of The Big Sky and nothing matters much to me D C G Big Sky looked down on all the people who think they've got problems They get depressed and they hold their heads in their hands and they cry The people life up their hands and they look up to The Big Sky But The Big Sky's too big to sympathize (riff 2) D C G Big Sky's too up to cry Though he would like to try When he feels glad inside Big Sky's too big to cry Bb G Eb Bb One day we'll be free We won't care just you wait and see Till that day can be don't let it get you down Bb RIFF 1: RIFF 2: E --3--1p0--1----- --------------- B ---------------- --------------- G --while--------- --------------- D ---strumming---- ------------0-- A ------G chord--- --------2-3---- E ---------------- --3-1-3-------- (from Village Green Preservation Society, 1968) (sent by Harlan at [email protected])
About the artist behind Big Sky 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.