Chords for Becca Macintyre, Marmozets - #7of30
Tempo:
93.3 bpm
Chords used:
Fm
Eb
Bb
D
Ab
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
So I'm Becca Mack and this is my 7th history test.
I'm gonna go with 13, let's go with 10, let's go with [D] 25, [G] 24, 23, [Fm] 5, 20.
[Bb] [D]
[Fm] Oh my last meal would be Chinese, it's [Bb] really bad.
We get this [D] beautiful vegan Chinese dish, me and Jack that is, and Will.
[Fm]
[Bb] It's in Bingley, it's Cham's [D] Kitchen and it's fried black [Fm] bean with like vegetables [Eb] and peppers.
[Ab] And then we get soft [Eb] noodles which is like with bamboo shoots and then we get these salt [Cm] and chilli chips.
And it's like almost like salad and [Fm] onions with chilli [G] and like the best yummiest chips ever.
So yeah, [Cm] that's like my favourite meal.
[Fm]
[C] Yesterday I had [Ab] the biggest migraine.
[G] I've never had a migraine before.
[Fm] And Will, our [Eb] bassist, actually gets [Ab] them, not rarely but he gets [Gm] them and I've seen the state that he's been in.
[Fm] He just has to go sit in [Gm] like a dark room and just like for a couple [Fm] of hours just like stay still in the dark.
And then it comes, you come around from it and that's what [Eb] happened to me yesterday.
So [Ab] that was my first [Eb] migraine situation and it did scare me a bit because I've [Fm] never had that much pain in my head [Bb] before.
I was trying to work out exactly [D] what it was but [G] I'm all better now.
[Fm]
Well, my mum's always said that I've got a big heart.
[Cm] So I guess, [Fm] is that a short sweet sentence I [Eb] guess?
I've got a big heart.
[Fm] [Bb]
I kind of have this aspect of me where I'm like, [Eb] I kind of want to live in the middle of [Fm] nowhere and have my own vegetables.
[C] And have kids [Eb] and have the beach nearby.
But then I never [Fm] know where my life's going to go and what it's going to be [Bb] like.
So I guess [Fm] I just want to carry on being happy and just have a happy retirement.
[C] But still working hard and [Eb] doing cool fun things.
[Fm] I nearly [Bb] yelled at a guy this morning [D] actually because we got, [G]
me and Jack got a [Fm] ticket for littering.
[Gm] But we shouldn't have really [D] got it and I didn't think it was [Fm] fair because there was no bins in the train station [G] or outside.
So I put our empty coffee cups on a plant pot which was [D] filled with cigarette butts.
[F] And as soon as I went back into the train [D] station he said he was going to fine us about £60.
[Fm] So we've now been fined [Gm] £60 and I am not a litterer and [Ab] I'm so against all that kind of stuff.
[Gm]
But [Fm] life happens.
[Eb] [D] I nearly shouted so I didn't shout.
I'm getting angry now talking [Eb] about it.
[Fm]
[F] [Bb] [Eb] I kind of do.
[Fm] Very [C] easily.
[Eb] Obviously sometimes I do panic a little bit when I'm in [Fm] places and my phone's [F] not working and I don't know how to get [Bb] places.
A lot of people do it back in [Ab] the day.
You know phones weren't [Fm] always around when I was [C] growing up.
[Eb] I think [Fm] I'd be fine though.
I always find a way.
[Bb] [Eb] I guess [Ab] my biggest phobia would be [Fm] spiders.
But I'm slowly [Eb] kind of coming out of that.
[Ab]
Because [Eb] if you have people in your family that are terrified [Ab] you pick up [Bbm] things.
So my [Bb] nana, bless her, [Eb] she had a heart condition.
But honestly if there was a spider in the room I've [Ab] never seen my nan jump so high in her [Fm] life onto sofas.
[Ab] And she'd [Gm] literally get a hoover and hoover the [F] spider up and leave it on half of the night [Bb] while she was sleeping.
Because she was scared that the spider [Eb] was going to come out.
[Bb] And she'd tell us all these stories about her phobia [Gm] so it kind of made me a bit scared.
But then my dad on the other hand would chuck [Fm] spiders at me.
Maybe it's a bit of trauma there.
[Eb] [Ab] Because we lived in an old house near [Gm] woods and we used to have these huge spiders come in.
[Bb] No one else is really scared.
But for some reason I [Fm] guess the eldest is seeing everything.
[G]
And I [Cm] watched arachnophobia at [Fm] a really young age.
And I [Eb] used to have nightmares about thousands of [D] spiders just coming and crawling on me.
[G]
So yeah [Fm] I need to get that phobia [Eb] sorted.
[Ab] I remember seeing a, I think it's [Gm] like the life of a five year old or a four [Fm] year old.
And it's this one kid that's just [Eb] like pretty much scared of [D] everything.
But you see his friend who's a lot more, [G] he's like fearless he'd just do [D] anything.
This was like a documentary on [G] TV.
And then this [Gm] guy brought in a tarantula.
And [Fm] the guy that had no fear you know [D] was like [G] all over him.
But eventually the little [Cm] kid, you just don't expect him [Fm] to like have a go.
Because in the whole programme you see he's quite scared [Gm] but very intelligent and very bright.
And he ends up putting his [Bb] hand out and [Fm] lets a spider crawl [Gm] over his hand.
And it was like for me [F] watching a five year old get over [Fm] his fear that quickly.
I was like there's hope.
So spiders.
[Bb] [D] [G] [Fm]
[Bb] [F] [N]
I'm gonna go with 13, let's go with 10, let's go with [D] 25, [G] 24, 23, [Fm] 5, 20.
[Bb] [D]
[Fm] Oh my last meal would be Chinese, it's [Bb] really bad.
We get this [D] beautiful vegan Chinese dish, me and Jack that is, and Will.
[Fm]
[Bb] It's in Bingley, it's Cham's [D] Kitchen and it's fried black [Fm] bean with like vegetables [Eb] and peppers.
[Ab] And then we get soft [Eb] noodles which is like with bamboo shoots and then we get these salt [Cm] and chilli chips.
And it's like almost like salad and [Fm] onions with chilli [G] and like the best yummiest chips ever.
So yeah, [Cm] that's like my favourite meal.
[Fm]
[C] Yesterday I had [Ab] the biggest migraine.
[G] I've never had a migraine before.
[Fm] And Will, our [Eb] bassist, actually gets [Ab] them, not rarely but he gets [Gm] them and I've seen the state that he's been in.
[Fm] He just has to go sit in [Gm] like a dark room and just like for a couple [Fm] of hours just like stay still in the dark.
And then it comes, you come around from it and that's what [Eb] happened to me yesterday.
So [Ab] that was my first [Eb] migraine situation and it did scare me a bit because I've [Fm] never had that much pain in my head [Bb] before.
I was trying to work out exactly [D] what it was but [G] I'm all better now.
[Fm]
Well, my mum's always said that I've got a big heart.
[Cm] So I guess, [Fm] is that a short sweet sentence I [Eb] guess?
I've got a big heart.
[Fm] [Bb]
I kind of have this aspect of me where I'm like, [Eb] I kind of want to live in the middle of [Fm] nowhere and have my own vegetables.
[C] And have kids [Eb] and have the beach nearby.
But then I never [Fm] know where my life's going to go and what it's going to be [Bb] like.
So I guess [Fm] I just want to carry on being happy and just have a happy retirement.
[C] But still working hard and [Eb] doing cool fun things.
[Fm] I nearly [Bb] yelled at a guy this morning [D] actually because we got, [G]
me and Jack got a [Fm] ticket for littering.
[Gm] But we shouldn't have really [D] got it and I didn't think it was [Fm] fair because there was no bins in the train station [G] or outside.
So I put our empty coffee cups on a plant pot which was [D] filled with cigarette butts.
[F] And as soon as I went back into the train [D] station he said he was going to fine us about £60.
[Fm] So we've now been fined [Gm] £60 and I am not a litterer and [Ab] I'm so against all that kind of stuff.
[Gm]
But [Fm] life happens.
[Eb] [D] I nearly shouted so I didn't shout.
I'm getting angry now talking [Eb] about it.
[Fm]
[F] [Bb] [Eb] I kind of do.
[Fm] Very [C] easily.
[Eb] Obviously sometimes I do panic a little bit when I'm in [Fm] places and my phone's [F] not working and I don't know how to get [Bb] places.
A lot of people do it back in [Ab] the day.
You know phones weren't [Fm] always around when I was [C] growing up.
[Eb] I think [Fm] I'd be fine though.
I always find a way.
[Bb] [Eb] I guess [Ab] my biggest phobia would be [Fm] spiders.
But I'm slowly [Eb] kind of coming out of that.
[Ab]
Because [Eb] if you have people in your family that are terrified [Ab] you pick up [Bbm] things.
So my [Bb] nana, bless her, [Eb] she had a heart condition.
But honestly if there was a spider in the room I've [Ab] never seen my nan jump so high in her [Fm] life onto sofas.
[Ab] And she'd [Gm] literally get a hoover and hoover the [F] spider up and leave it on half of the night [Bb] while she was sleeping.
Because she was scared that the spider [Eb] was going to come out.
[Bb] And she'd tell us all these stories about her phobia [Gm] so it kind of made me a bit scared.
But then my dad on the other hand would chuck [Fm] spiders at me.
Maybe it's a bit of trauma there.
[Eb] [Ab] Because we lived in an old house near [Gm] woods and we used to have these huge spiders come in.
[Bb] No one else is really scared.
But for some reason I [Fm] guess the eldest is seeing everything.
[G]
And I [Cm] watched arachnophobia at [Fm] a really young age.
And I [Eb] used to have nightmares about thousands of [D] spiders just coming and crawling on me.
[G]
So yeah [Fm] I need to get that phobia [Eb] sorted.
[Ab] I remember seeing a, I think it's [Gm] like the life of a five year old or a four [Fm] year old.
And it's this one kid that's just [Eb] like pretty much scared of [D] everything.
But you see his friend who's a lot more, [G] he's like fearless he'd just do [D] anything.
This was like a documentary on [G] TV.
And then this [Gm] guy brought in a tarantula.
And [Fm] the guy that had no fear you know [D] was like [G] all over him.
But eventually the little [Cm] kid, you just don't expect him [Fm] to like have a go.
Because in the whole programme you see he's quite scared [Gm] but very intelligent and very bright.
And he ends up putting his [Bb] hand out and [Fm] lets a spider crawl [Gm] over his hand.
And it was like for me [F] watching a five year old get over [Fm] his fear that quickly.
I was like there's hope.
So spiders.
[Bb] [D] [G] [Fm]
[Bb] [F] [N]
Key:
Fm
Eb
Bb
D
Ab
Fm
Eb
Bb
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ So I'm Becca Mack and this is my 7th history test.
_ I'm gonna go with 13, let's go with 10, let's go with [D] 25, [G] 24, 23, [Fm] 5, 20.
[Bb] _ _ [D] _ _
[Fm] Oh my last meal would be Chinese, it's [Bb] really bad.
We get this [D] beautiful vegan Chinese dish, me and Jack that is, and Will.
[Fm] _
[Bb] It's in Bingley, it's Cham's [D] Kitchen and it's fried black [Fm] bean with like vegetables [Eb] and peppers.
[Ab] And then we get soft [Eb] noodles which is like with bamboo shoots and then we get these salt [Cm] and chilli chips.
And it's like almost like salad and [Fm] onions with chilli [G] and like the best yummiest chips ever.
So yeah, [Cm] that's like my favourite meal.
[Fm] _ _
_ [C] Yesterday I had [Ab] the biggest migraine.
[G] I've never had a migraine before.
_ [Fm] And Will, our [Eb] bassist, actually gets [Ab] them, not rarely but he gets [Gm] them and I've seen the state that he's been in.
[Fm] He just has to go sit in [Gm] like a dark room and just like for a couple [Fm] of hours just like stay still in the dark.
And then it comes, you come around from it and that's what [Eb] happened to me yesterday.
So [Ab] that was my first [Eb] migraine situation and it did scare me a bit because I've [Fm] never had that much pain in my head [Bb] before.
I was trying to work out exactly [D] what it was but [G] I'm all better now.
_ [Fm] _ _ _ _
_ Well, my mum's always said that I've got a big heart.
_ [Cm] So I guess, [Fm] is that a short sweet sentence I [Eb] guess?
I've got a big heart.
_ [Fm] _ _ [Bb] _
I kind of have this aspect of me where I'm like, [Eb] I kind of want to live in the middle of [Fm] nowhere and have my own vegetables.
[C] And have kids [Eb] and have the beach nearby.
But then I never [Fm] know where my life's going to go and what it's going to be [Bb] like.
So I guess [Fm] I just want to carry on being happy and just have a happy retirement.
[C] But still working hard and [Eb] doing cool fun things.
_ [Fm] _ _ I nearly [Bb] yelled at a guy this morning [D] actually because we got, _ [G]
me and Jack got a [Fm] ticket for littering.
[Gm] But we shouldn't have really [D] got it and I didn't think it was [Fm] fair because there was no bins in the train station [G] or outside.
So I put our empty coffee cups on a plant pot which was [D] filled with cigarette butts.
[F] And as soon as I went back into the train [D] station he said he was going to fine us about £60.
[Fm] So we've now been fined [Gm] £60 and I am not a litterer and [Ab] I'm so against all that kind of stuff.
[Gm]
But [Fm] life happens.
_ [Eb] _ [D] I nearly shouted so I didn't shout.
I'm getting angry now talking [Eb] about it.
_ [Fm] _ _
_ [F] _ _ _ [Bb] _ [Eb] I kind of do.
[Fm] _ Very [C] easily.
[Eb] Obviously sometimes I do panic a little bit when I'm in [Fm] places and my phone's [F] not working and I don't know how to get [Bb] places.
A lot of people do it back in [Ab] the day.
You know phones weren't [Fm] always around when I was [C] growing up.
_ _ [Eb] I think [Fm] I'd be fine though.
I always find a way.
[Bb] _ _ _ [Eb] I guess [Ab] my biggest phobia would be [Fm] spiders.
But I'm slowly [Eb] kind of coming out of that.
[Ab] _
Because [Eb] if you have people in your family that are terrified [Ab] you pick up [Bbm] things.
So my [Bb] nana, bless her, [Eb] she had a heart condition.
But honestly if there was a spider in the room I've [Ab] never seen my nan jump so high in her [Fm] life onto sofas.
[Ab] And she'd [Gm] literally get a hoover and hoover the [F] spider up and leave it on half of the night [Bb] while she was sleeping.
Because she was scared that the spider [Eb] was going to come out.
[Bb] And she'd tell us all these stories about her phobia [Gm] so it kind of made me a bit scared.
But then my dad on the other hand would chuck [Fm] spiders at me.
_ Maybe it's a bit of trauma there.
[Eb] _ [Ab] Because we lived in an old house near [Gm] woods and we used to have these huge spiders come in.
[Bb] No one else is really scared.
But for some reason I [Fm] guess the eldest is seeing everything.
[G] _
And I _ [Cm] watched arachnophobia at [Fm] a really young age.
And I [Eb] used to have nightmares about thousands of [D] spiders just coming and crawling on me.
_ [G]
So yeah [Fm] I need to get that phobia [Eb] sorted.
[Ab] I remember seeing a, I think it's [Gm] like the life of a five year old or a four [Fm] year old.
And it's this one kid that's just [Eb] like pretty much scared of [D] everything.
But you see his friend who's a lot more, [G] he's like fearless he'd just do [D] anything.
This was like a documentary on [G] TV.
And then this [Gm] guy brought in a tarantula.
And [Fm] the guy that had no fear you know [D] was like [G] all over him.
But eventually the little [Cm] kid, you just don't expect him [Fm] to like have a go.
Because in the whole programme you see he's quite scared [Gm] but very intelligent and very bright.
And he ends up putting his [Bb] hand out and [Fm] lets a spider crawl [Gm] over his hand.
And it was like for me [F] watching a five year old get over [Fm] his fear that quickly.
I was like there's hope.
So spiders.
_ _ [Bb] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [G] _ _ [Fm] _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ [F] _ [N] _
_ _ _ _ So I'm Becca Mack and this is my 7th history test.
_ I'm gonna go with 13, let's go with 10, let's go with [D] 25, [G] 24, 23, [Fm] 5, 20.
[Bb] _ _ [D] _ _
[Fm] Oh my last meal would be Chinese, it's [Bb] really bad.
We get this [D] beautiful vegan Chinese dish, me and Jack that is, and Will.
[Fm] _
[Bb] It's in Bingley, it's Cham's [D] Kitchen and it's fried black [Fm] bean with like vegetables [Eb] and peppers.
[Ab] And then we get soft [Eb] noodles which is like with bamboo shoots and then we get these salt [Cm] and chilli chips.
And it's like almost like salad and [Fm] onions with chilli [G] and like the best yummiest chips ever.
So yeah, [Cm] that's like my favourite meal.
[Fm] _ _
_ [C] Yesterday I had [Ab] the biggest migraine.
[G] I've never had a migraine before.
_ [Fm] And Will, our [Eb] bassist, actually gets [Ab] them, not rarely but he gets [Gm] them and I've seen the state that he's been in.
[Fm] He just has to go sit in [Gm] like a dark room and just like for a couple [Fm] of hours just like stay still in the dark.
And then it comes, you come around from it and that's what [Eb] happened to me yesterday.
So [Ab] that was my first [Eb] migraine situation and it did scare me a bit because I've [Fm] never had that much pain in my head [Bb] before.
I was trying to work out exactly [D] what it was but [G] I'm all better now.
_ [Fm] _ _ _ _
_ Well, my mum's always said that I've got a big heart.
_ [Cm] So I guess, [Fm] is that a short sweet sentence I [Eb] guess?
I've got a big heart.
_ [Fm] _ _ [Bb] _
I kind of have this aspect of me where I'm like, [Eb] I kind of want to live in the middle of [Fm] nowhere and have my own vegetables.
[C] And have kids [Eb] and have the beach nearby.
But then I never [Fm] know where my life's going to go and what it's going to be [Bb] like.
So I guess [Fm] I just want to carry on being happy and just have a happy retirement.
[C] But still working hard and [Eb] doing cool fun things.
_ [Fm] _ _ I nearly [Bb] yelled at a guy this morning [D] actually because we got, _ [G]
me and Jack got a [Fm] ticket for littering.
[Gm] But we shouldn't have really [D] got it and I didn't think it was [Fm] fair because there was no bins in the train station [G] or outside.
So I put our empty coffee cups on a plant pot which was [D] filled with cigarette butts.
[F] And as soon as I went back into the train [D] station he said he was going to fine us about £60.
[Fm] So we've now been fined [Gm] £60 and I am not a litterer and [Ab] I'm so against all that kind of stuff.
[Gm]
But [Fm] life happens.
_ [Eb] _ [D] I nearly shouted so I didn't shout.
I'm getting angry now talking [Eb] about it.
_ [Fm] _ _
_ [F] _ _ _ [Bb] _ [Eb] I kind of do.
[Fm] _ Very [C] easily.
[Eb] Obviously sometimes I do panic a little bit when I'm in [Fm] places and my phone's [F] not working and I don't know how to get [Bb] places.
A lot of people do it back in [Ab] the day.
You know phones weren't [Fm] always around when I was [C] growing up.
_ _ [Eb] I think [Fm] I'd be fine though.
I always find a way.
[Bb] _ _ _ [Eb] I guess [Ab] my biggest phobia would be [Fm] spiders.
But I'm slowly [Eb] kind of coming out of that.
[Ab] _
Because [Eb] if you have people in your family that are terrified [Ab] you pick up [Bbm] things.
So my [Bb] nana, bless her, [Eb] she had a heart condition.
But honestly if there was a spider in the room I've [Ab] never seen my nan jump so high in her [Fm] life onto sofas.
[Ab] And she'd [Gm] literally get a hoover and hoover the [F] spider up and leave it on half of the night [Bb] while she was sleeping.
Because she was scared that the spider [Eb] was going to come out.
[Bb] And she'd tell us all these stories about her phobia [Gm] so it kind of made me a bit scared.
But then my dad on the other hand would chuck [Fm] spiders at me.
_ Maybe it's a bit of trauma there.
[Eb] _ [Ab] Because we lived in an old house near [Gm] woods and we used to have these huge spiders come in.
[Bb] No one else is really scared.
But for some reason I [Fm] guess the eldest is seeing everything.
[G] _
And I _ [Cm] watched arachnophobia at [Fm] a really young age.
And I [Eb] used to have nightmares about thousands of [D] spiders just coming and crawling on me.
_ [G]
So yeah [Fm] I need to get that phobia [Eb] sorted.
[Ab] I remember seeing a, I think it's [Gm] like the life of a five year old or a four [Fm] year old.
And it's this one kid that's just [Eb] like pretty much scared of [D] everything.
But you see his friend who's a lot more, [G] he's like fearless he'd just do [D] anything.
This was like a documentary on [G] TV.
And then this [Gm] guy brought in a tarantula.
And [Fm] the guy that had no fear you know [D] was like [G] all over him.
But eventually the little [Cm] kid, you just don't expect him [Fm] to like have a go.
Because in the whole programme you see he's quite scared [Gm] but very intelligent and very bright.
And he ends up putting his [Bb] hand out and [Fm] lets a spider crawl [Gm] over his hand.
And it was like for me [F] watching a five year old get over [Fm] his fear that quickly.
I was like there's hope.
So spiders.
_ _ [Bb] _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ [G] _ _ [Fm] _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ [F] _ [N] _