Chords for "Gram Parsons: Fallen Angel" trailer
Tempo:
65.95 bpm
Chords used:
G
C
D
Em
Ab
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[G] [D] [A]
[G] A dream of [Ab] soul, country, of [C] cosmic, what I call cosmic American [Eb] music.
Very little is really known about him considering how much has been [Bb] written about him.
He's kind of a mysterious guy.
It adds up to kind of [Eb] a legend.
Any accolade [Gb] I've been paid and [F] any kind of acknowledgement of my success is an acknowledgement
of Graham Parsons.
[D]
[Gm] If he had lived today I think he would be a very big star.
[D]
[Gm] Graham was rock and country.
He [C] bridged those two worlds.
To [F] see him standing in the middle of these two [C] worlds, you know, bringing them together,
[Fm] uniting them, you know, [Ab] and that was his purpose.
He was very [Bb] alive, you know, a lovely guy.
[Ab] He just [Eb] had this dark side and really sort of a death wish.
[Bb]
Graham [Ab] considered himself [Eb] the fallen angel.
I said if [Bb] Graham was here today he'd still be dead.
[Bm] He was heading in [G] that direction.
He was really a victim [B] of the times.
[Em] He wasn't doing anything anybody else wasn't doing.
[E] He just didn't have the constitution that it took to be a rock and roller.
In that [G] respect he was definitely more of the country boy.
[A] [E] It's a story that is so extraordinary.
[G] I mean Graham's [Am] life and his death is something that might be in a movie but you don't think
of it actually happening in [D] real life that way.
[C]
[G] Our family background, even with [B] slight pieces [Em] of truth in it, is an [G] intense background.
[C] It's a [Am] series of [D] tragedies.
It's like a Kennedy curse.
[Em]
[G] We're talking about a very [Em] classic Tennessee [F] Williams play here.
[C] Southern money [G] and alcoholism and just a [D] tragedy.
[C] [G] [Em] [G] [C]
[G] A dream of [Ab] soul, country, of [C] cosmic, what I call cosmic American [Eb] music.
Very little is really known about him considering how much has been [Bb] written about him.
He's kind of a mysterious guy.
It adds up to kind of [Eb] a legend.
Any accolade [Gb] I've been paid and [F] any kind of acknowledgement of my success is an acknowledgement
of Graham Parsons.
[D]
[Gm] If he had lived today I think he would be a very big star.
[D]
[Gm] Graham was rock and country.
He [C] bridged those two worlds.
To [F] see him standing in the middle of these two [C] worlds, you know, bringing them together,
[Fm] uniting them, you know, [Ab] and that was his purpose.
He was very [Bb] alive, you know, a lovely guy.
[Ab] He just [Eb] had this dark side and really sort of a death wish.
[Bb]
Graham [Ab] considered himself [Eb] the fallen angel.
I said if [Bb] Graham was here today he'd still be dead.
[Bm] He was heading in [G] that direction.
He was really a victim [B] of the times.
[Em] He wasn't doing anything anybody else wasn't doing.
[E] He just didn't have the constitution that it took to be a rock and roller.
In that [G] respect he was definitely more of the country boy.
[A] [E] It's a story that is so extraordinary.
[G] I mean Graham's [Am] life and his death is something that might be in a movie but you don't think
of it actually happening in [D] real life that way.
[C]
[G] Our family background, even with [B] slight pieces [Em] of truth in it, is an [G] intense background.
[C] It's a [Am] series of [D] tragedies.
It's like a Kennedy curse.
[Em]
[G] We're talking about a very [Em] classic Tennessee [F] Williams play here.
[C] Southern money [G] and alcoholism and just a [D] tragedy.
[C] [G] [Em] [G] [C]
Key:
G
C
D
Em
Ab
G
C
D
[G] _ [D] _ _ _ _ _ [A] _ _
_ [G] A dream of [Ab] soul, country, of [C] cosmic, what I call cosmic American [Eb] music.
Very little is really known about him considering how much has been [Bb] written about him.
He's kind of a mysterious guy.
It adds up to kind of [Eb] a legend.
_ Any accolade [Gb] I've been paid and [F] any kind of acknowledgement of my success is an acknowledgement
of Graham Parsons.
_ [D] _
_ [Gm] If he had lived today I think he would be a very big star.
[D] _
[Gm] Graham was rock and country.
He [C] bridged those two worlds.
To [F] see him standing in the middle of these two [C] worlds, you know, bringing them together,
[Fm] uniting them, you know, [Ab] and that was his purpose.
He was very [Bb] alive, you know, a lovely guy.
[Ab] He just [Eb] had this dark side and really sort of a death wish.
_ [Bb]
Graham [Ab] considered himself [Eb] the fallen angel.
I said if [Bb] Graham was here today he'd still be dead.
[Bm] He was heading in [G] that direction.
He was really a victim [B] of the times.
[Em] He wasn't doing anything anybody else wasn't doing.
[E] He just didn't have the constitution that it took to be a rock and roller.
In that [G] respect he was definitely more of the country boy.
_ [A] _ [E] It's a story that is so extraordinary.
[G] I mean Graham's [Am] life and his death is something that might be in a movie but you don't think
of it actually happening in [D] real life that way.
[C]
[G] Our family background, even with [B] slight pieces [Em] of truth in it, is an [G] intense background.
[C] It's a [Am] series of [D] tragedies.
It's like a Kennedy curse.
[Em]
[G] We're talking about a very [Em] classic Tennessee [F] Williams play here.
[C] Southern money [G] and alcoholism and just a [D] tragedy.
_ _ _ [C] _ [G] _ _ _ [Em] _ _ _ [G] _ [C] _
_ [G] A dream of [Ab] soul, country, of [C] cosmic, what I call cosmic American [Eb] music.
Very little is really known about him considering how much has been [Bb] written about him.
He's kind of a mysterious guy.
It adds up to kind of [Eb] a legend.
_ Any accolade [Gb] I've been paid and [F] any kind of acknowledgement of my success is an acknowledgement
of Graham Parsons.
_ [D] _
_ [Gm] If he had lived today I think he would be a very big star.
[D] _
[Gm] Graham was rock and country.
He [C] bridged those two worlds.
To [F] see him standing in the middle of these two [C] worlds, you know, bringing them together,
[Fm] uniting them, you know, [Ab] and that was his purpose.
He was very [Bb] alive, you know, a lovely guy.
[Ab] He just [Eb] had this dark side and really sort of a death wish.
_ [Bb]
Graham [Ab] considered himself [Eb] the fallen angel.
I said if [Bb] Graham was here today he'd still be dead.
[Bm] He was heading in [G] that direction.
He was really a victim [B] of the times.
[Em] He wasn't doing anything anybody else wasn't doing.
[E] He just didn't have the constitution that it took to be a rock and roller.
In that [G] respect he was definitely more of the country boy.
_ [A] _ [E] It's a story that is so extraordinary.
[G] I mean Graham's [Am] life and his death is something that might be in a movie but you don't think
of it actually happening in [D] real life that way.
[C]
[G] Our family background, even with [B] slight pieces [Em] of truth in it, is an [G] intense background.
[C] It's a [Am] series of [D] tragedies.
It's like a Kennedy curse.
[Em]
[G] We're talking about a very [Em] classic Tennessee [F] Williams play here.
[C] Southern money [G] and alcoholism and just a [D] tragedy.
_ _ _ [C] _ [G] _ _ _ [Em] _ _ _ [G] _ [C] _