Chords for Film trailer for the Terry Kath Experience
Tempo:
136.5 bpm
Chords used:
G
A
E
Bm
Gm
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Hi, my name is [G] Michelle Sinclair.
I'm doing a documentary [C] about my father, Terry Kaff, who is [A] the lead guitarist of the pop band [Eb] Chicago.
[Bb]
[Eb]
[Bb] He passed away when [Gm] I was only two years [D] old, and [E] I never really got a chance to know him.
[Em] So I decided to take this journey on discovering my father and
also giving him the recognition he deserves as a guitarist, which I felt he never really got.
Jimi Hendrix is even quoted as saying that this guitarist is better than me and ended up taking him on the road with him.
I'm making this documentary about my father, not only to
[B] give him the [D] recognition he deserves as a musician [F] and a [B] singer, but also
to [Em] discover who [Eb] he is as a person because I never [F] got to know him.
[E]
[G]
[D]
[Dm] [E] [A]
[G]
[Gb] [Dm]
[E] With the success [Am] of our first Kickstarter campaign,
I was finally able to begin production of this film and take this incredible journey of getting to [C] know my father.
[Cm]
Over the past two years,
I've traveled to Chicago to visit the neighborhood he grew up in, along with the schools
he went to as a boy, and visit the streets where he honed his craft, and
also spend time with my uncle, his brother.
I sat down with the original members of the band Chicago and [Gm] listened to great stories [Fm] about the road, [Cm] amongst other things.
It gave me the opportunity to sit down with the people that knew him intimately and
spent more time with him than I ever had the chance [F] to.
Their stories, along with my [Cm] experiences in making this film, came together to paint a grand portrait of this man.
So now for the first [E] time we have a little sneak peek of the film,
which I'm really excited to show you some of the [Bm] stuff we worked on over the past two years.
[A]
[Bm] Terry was this big,
[Em]
[Bm] bigger than life [A] Norwegian.
[Bm] He was actually one of the more amusing guys [A] I've ever met.
[Bm]
He was, I think, [Gbm] the heart and [Bm] soul of the band.
In your face type of a personality.
[Em]
[B] He was a kind, [A] loving man,
[Bm] and his friendship was just something that you [A] treasured.
[Bm] Terry [Em] was a big [B] teddy bear.
[A]
[Bm]
[Gbm] [Gb] It was a very experimental [G] time in [F] music.
Hendrix was completely dumbfounded [G] by Terry.
Well, when we first [F] heard Jimi Hendrix play, we thought he was sounding like Terry.
[Fm] He was sitting on the stage, and he was just playing.
All right, I said, you just want to go out?
We're going to goof [Ab] around for a while.
I [Db] said, no, I'll [D] catch up or something.
[Am] Came back about six hours [Bb] later, he was still playing.
[A]
[Eb] [E] [B]
[E] [Db]
[Gb] [G]
[Eb] [Am] He approached the guitar [C] upside down.
Terry was a really good [E] musician.
There just didn't seem to be anything he [Am] couldn't do.
[E] It's a sound that no guitar player could get.
We'd never heard anything like it.
[A] How in the world [C] did he get a guitar sound like that? He's good.
Oh, shut up, man.
[Abm]
[Ebm]
[Gm]
The years leading up to your dad's demise were [Cm] affecting all of us.
[Dm] I
[G] remember Excuse me.
Do you want to go there with this?
[Gm]
And there are very few people that I would feel comfortable enough talking [Cm] in [G] these terms in any way,
other than with you.
But do you want to [Gm] know the [G] real truth?
Yeah.
He says, yeah, and [Gm] Terry was playing with the gun.
[Eb] Just that little stupid [G] little automatic he had.
Once we realized that there [Gm] was, it was [Cm] becoming a problem.
We [G] put heads because I used to get angry with him about doing too much drugs.
[F] [A]
[Bb]
[Bbm]
[F]
I'm doing a documentary [C] about my father, Terry Kaff, who is [A] the lead guitarist of the pop band [Eb] Chicago.
[Bb]
[Eb]
[Bb] He passed away when [Gm] I was only two years [D] old, and [E] I never really got a chance to know him.
[Em] So I decided to take this journey on discovering my father and
also giving him the recognition he deserves as a guitarist, which I felt he never really got.
Jimi Hendrix is even quoted as saying that this guitarist is better than me and ended up taking him on the road with him.
I'm making this documentary about my father, not only to
[B] give him the [D] recognition he deserves as a musician [F] and a [B] singer, but also
to [Em] discover who [Eb] he is as a person because I never [F] got to know him.
[E]
[G]
[D]
[Dm] [E] [A]
[G]
[Gb] [Dm]
[E] With the success [Am] of our first Kickstarter campaign,
I was finally able to begin production of this film and take this incredible journey of getting to [C] know my father.
[Cm]
Over the past two years,
I've traveled to Chicago to visit the neighborhood he grew up in, along with the schools
he went to as a boy, and visit the streets where he honed his craft, and
also spend time with my uncle, his brother.
I sat down with the original members of the band Chicago and [Gm] listened to great stories [Fm] about the road, [Cm] amongst other things.
It gave me the opportunity to sit down with the people that knew him intimately and
spent more time with him than I ever had the chance [F] to.
Their stories, along with my [Cm] experiences in making this film, came together to paint a grand portrait of this man.
So now for the first [E] time we have a little sneak peek of the film,
which I'm really excited to show you some of the [Bm] stuff we worked on over the past two years.
[A]
[Bm] Terry was this big,
[Em]
[Bm] bigger than life [A] Norwegian.
[Bm] He was actually one of the more amusing guys [A] I've ever met.
[Bm]
He was, I think, [Gbm] the heart and [Bm] soul of the band.
In your face type of a personality.
[Em]
[B] He was a kind, [A] loving man,
[Bm] and his friendship was just something that you [A] treasured.
[Bm] Terry [Em] was a big [B] teddy bear.
[A]
[Bm]
[Gbm] [Gb] It was a very experimental [G] time in [F] music.
Hendrix was completely dumbfounded [G] by Terry.
Well, when we first [F] heard Jimi Hendrix play, we thought he was sounding like Terry.
[Fm] He was sitting on the stage, and he was just playing.
All right, I said, you just want to go out?
We're going to goof [Ab] around for a while.
I [Db] said, no, I'll [D] catch up or something.
[Am] Came back about six hours [Bb] later, he was still playing.
[A]
[Eb] [E] [B]
[E] [Db]
[Gb] [G]
[Eb] [Am] He approached the guitar [C] upside down.
Terry was a really good [E] musician.
There just didn't seem to be anything he [Am] couldn't do.
[E] It's a sound that no guitar player could get.
We'd never heard anything like it.
[A] How in the world [C] did he get a guitar sound like that? He's good.
Oh, shut up, man.
[Abm]
[Ebm]
[Gm]
The years leading up to your dad's demise were [Cm] affecting all of us.
[Dm] I
[G] remember Excuse me.
Do you want to go there with this?
[Gm]
And there are very few people that I would feel comfortable enough talking [Cm] in [G] these terms in any way,
other than with you.
But do you want to [Gm] know the [G] real truth?
Yeah.
He says, yeah, and [Gm] Terry was playing with the gun.
[Eb] Just that little stupid [G] little automatic he had.
Once we realized that there [Gm] was, it was [Cm] becoming a problem.
We [G] put heads because I used to get angry with him about doing too much drugs.
[F] [A]
[Bb]
[Bbm]
[F]
Key:
G
A
E
Bm
Gm
G
A
E
Hi, my name is [G] Michelle Sinclair.
I'm doing a documentary [C] about my father, Terry Kaff, who is [A] the lead guitarist of the pop band [Eb] Chicago.
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _
_ _ [Eb] _ _ _ _
[Bb] He passed away when [Gm] I was only two years [D] old, and [E] I never really got a chance to know him.
[Em] So I decided to take this journey on discovering my father and
_ also giving him the recognition he deserves as a guitarist, which I felt he never really got.
Jimi Hendrix is even quoted as saying that this guitarist is better than me and ended up taking him on the road with him.
I'm making this documentary about my father, not only to
[B] give him the [D] recognition he deserves as a musician [F] and a [B] singer, but also
to [Em] discover who [Eb] he is as a person because I never [F] got to know him.
[E] _ _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _
_ _ [D] _ _ _ _
[Dm] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[Gb] _ _ _ [Dm] _ _ _
[E] With the success [Am] of our first Kickstarter campaign,
I was finally able to begin production of this film and take this incredible journey of getting to [C] know my father.
[Cm]
Over the past two years,
I've traveled to Chicago to visit the neighborhood he grew up in, along with the schools
he went to as a boy, and visit the streets where he honed his craft, and
also spend time with my uncle, his brother. _
I sat down with the original members of the band Chicago and [Gm] listened to great stories [Fm] about the road, [Cm] amongst other things.
It gave me the opportunity to sit down with the people that knew him intimately and
spent more time with him than I ever had the chance [F] to.
Their stories, along with my [Cm] experiences in making this film, came together to paint a grand portrait of this man. _ _
_ _ _ So now for the first [E] time we have a little sneak peek of the film,
which I'm really excited to show you some of the [Bm] stuff we worked on over the past two years.
[A] _
[Bm] Terry was this big,
[Em] _ _
[Bm] bigger than life [A] Norwegian. _
_ [Bm] _ _ _ He was actually one of the more amusing guys [A] I've ever met.
_ [Bm] _ _ _ _
He was, I think, [Gbm] the heart and [Bm] soul of the band. _ _
_ In your face type of a personality.
_ _ [Em] _ _
_ [B] He was a kind, [A] loving man,
_ [Bm] _ _ _ and his friendship was just something that you [A] treasured. _
_ [Bm] _ _ Terry [Em] was a big [B] teddy bear.
_ [A] _ _
_ [Bm] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Gbm] _ [Gb] It was a very experimental [G] time in [F] music.
Hendrix was completely _ dumbfounded [G] by Terry.
Well, when we first [F] heard Jimi Hendrix play, we thought he was sounding like Terry.
[Fm] He was sitting on the stage, and he was just playing. _
All right, I said, you just want to go out?
We're going to goof [Ab] around for a while.
I [Db] said, no, I'll [D] catch up or something.
[Am] Came back about six hours [Bb] later, he was still playing.
[A] _ _
_ [Eb] _ [E] _ _ [B] _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ [Db] _ _
_ [Gb] _ _ [G] _ _ _
[Eb] _ _ _ [Am] He approached the guitar [C] upside down.
Terry was a really good [E] musician.
There just didn't seem to be anything he [Am] couldn't do. _ _
[E] It's a sound that no guitar player could get.
We'd never heard anything like it.
[A] How in the world _ [C] did he get a guitar sound like that? He's good.
Oh, shut up, man.
_ _ [Abm] _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Ebm] _ _ _
_ [Gm] _ _ _ _ _
_ The years leading up to your dad's demise _ were [Cm] affecting all of us.
[Dm] I _
_ [G] _ remember_ Excuse me.
Do you want to go _ there with this?
[Gm]
And there are very few people that I would feel comfortable enough talking [Cm] _ in [G] these terms in any way,
other than with you.
But do you want to [Gm] know the _ [G] real truth?
Yeah.
He says, yeah, and [Gm] Terry was playing with the gun.
[Eb] Just that little stupid [G] little automatic he had.
Once we realized that there [Gm] was, it was [Cm] becoming a problem.
We [G] put heads because I used to get angry with him about doing too much drugs.
_ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bbm] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [F] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
I'm doing a documentary [C] about my father, Terry Kaff, who is [A] the lead guitarist of the pop band [Eb] Chicago.
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _
_ _ [Eb] _ _ _ _
[Bb] He passed away when [Gm] I was only two years [D] old, and [E] I never really got a chance to know him.
[Em] So I decided to take this journey on discovering my father and
_ also giving him the recognition he deserves as a guitarist, which I felt he never really got.
Jimi Hendrix is even quoted as saying that this guitarist is better than me and ended up taking him on the road with him.
I'm making this documentary about my father, not only to
[B] give him the [D] recognition he deserves as a musician [F] and a [B] singer, but also
to [Em] discover who [Eb] he is as a person because I never [F] got to know him.
[E] _ _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _
_ _ [D] _ _ _ _
[Dm] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[Gb] _ _ _ [Dm] _ _ _
[E] With the success [Am] of our first Kickstarter campaign,
I was finally able to begin production of this film and take this incredible journey of getting to [C] know my father.
[Cm]
Over the past two years,
I've traveled to Chicago to visit the neighborhood he grew up in, along with the schools
he went to as a boy, and visit the streets where he honed his craft, and
also spend time with my uncle, his brother. _
I sat down with the original members of the band Chicago and [Gm] listened to great stories [Fm] about the road, [Cm] amongst other things.
It gave me the opportunity to sit down with the people that knew him intimately and
spent more time with him than I ever had the chance [F] to.
Their stories, along with my [Cm] experiences in making this film, came together to paint a grand portrait of this man. _ _
_ _ _ So now for the first [E] time we have a little sneak peek of the film,
which I'm really excited to show you some of the [Bm] stuff we worked on over the past two years.
[A] _
[Bm] Terry was this big,
[Em] _ _
[Bm] bigger than life [A] Norwegian. _
_ [Bm] _ _ _ He was actually one of the more amusing guys [A] I've ever met.
_ [Bm] _ _ _ _
He was, I think, [Gbm] the heart and [Bm] soul of the band. _ _
_ In your face type of a personality.
_ _ [Em] _ _
_ [B] He was a kind, [A] loving man,
_ [Bm] _ _ _ and his friendship was just something that you [A] treasured. _
_ [Bm] _ _ Terry [Em] was a big [B] teddy bear.
_ [A] _ _
_ [Bm] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Gbm] _ [Gb] It was a very experimental [G] time in [F] music.
Hendrix was completely _ dumbfounded [G] by Terry.
Well, when we first [F] heard Jimi Hendrix play, we thought he was sounding like Terry.
[Fm] He was sitting on the stage, and he was just playing. _
All right, I said, you just want to go out?
We're going to goof [Ab] around for a while.
I [Db] said, no, I'll [D] catch up or something.
[Am] Came back about six hours [Bb] later, he was still playing.
[A] _ _
_ [Eb] _ [E] _ _ [B] _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ [Db] _ _
_ [Gb] _ _ [G] _ _ _
[Eb] _ _ _ [Am] He approached the guitar [C] upside down.
Terry was a really good [E] musician.
There just didn't seem to be anything he [Am] couldn't do. _ _
[E] It's a sound that no guitar player could get.
We'd never heard anything like it.
[A] How in the world _ [C] did he get a guitar sound like that? He's good.
Oh, shut up, man.
_ _ [Abm] _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Ebm] _ _ _
_ [Gm] _ _ _ _ _
_ The years leading up to your dad's demise _ were [Cm] affecting all of us.
[Dm] I _
_ [G] _ remember_ Excuse me.
Do you want to go _ there with this?
[Gm]
And there are very few people that I would feel comfortable enough talking [Cm] _ in [G] these terms in any way,
other than with you.
But do you want to [Gm] know the _ [G] real truth?
Yeah.
He says, yeah, and [Gm] Terry was playing with the gun.
[Eb] Just that little stupid [G] little automatic he had.
Once we realized that there [Gm] was, it was [Cm] becoming a problem.
We [G] put heads because I used to get angry with him about doing too much drugs.
_ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [A] _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bbm] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [F] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _