Chords for Pepperkakebake-sangen - Thorbjørn Egner - ny forbedret utgave!
Tempo:
85.8 bpm
Chords used:
D
G
A
F#m
Gm
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
When a gingerbread man [A] bakes gingerbread, he first takes a frying pan [D] and a kilo of margarine.
In the pan [E] melts butter, and the next thing he has to do [F#m] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Flour is the same as sugar.
Yes, I know.
And with butter and sugar, he takes [A] egg whites, which he stirs in the [D] pan with a kilo of white flour.
[G] And finally, in the pan, he lets go of a small piece of pepper, and then he stirs [D] the mixture and empties it into a fjord.
That's how it is.
That's not true!
Afterwards, you roll the dough as flat as a pancake.
As flat as a pancake.
Then you take man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
Man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
[G#m] And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan.
And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan. That's excellent!
Go ahead!
[G] It's on!
I'm going to go ahead!
No problem baking gingerbread, [Gm] when you just have a [D] good gingerbread baking song!
So
[D] When a gingerbread baker, [A] bakes gingerbread cake, he first takes a frying pan [D] and a kilo of margarine.
In the pan melts [G] butter, and the next thing he has to do [D] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Wasn't it a kilo?
Yes, it was!
And with butter and sugar, you take [A] eight egg whites, and stir them in the pan with [D] a kilo of flour.
[G] And in the end, in the pan, you let go of a kilo of pepper.
And [A] then you stir around.
And empties the dough into a [G] fjord.
That was great! Phew!
Then I empty the dough as flat as a gingerbread.
Then I make the butter and margarine cake,
and put it on the cake board,
and fry it in the frying pan.
And then the cakes fry all by themselves,
and I can sit down and do nothing!
[D]
[G] Hey, Baker Gurt!
How's gingerbread going?
Yes, Master, they're just done.
Two and a half nice gingerbread cakes!
That's good.
Let me taste them.
But in all the days, what have you done?
[G] With the things you taught me, Master.
No, you haven't.
Yes, with the things that are in the song.
Then take a bite.
Oh, that was a strange taste.
Yes, it will be.
Let me hear how you did it.
[Gm] When a
[D] Hatsa!
Go on!
Yes, then.
When a gingerbread baker,
[A] bakes gingerbread cake,
he takes the first slice of [D] the cake,
and a kilo of margarine,
and the cake is filled with butter,
and the next thing he has to do,
is stir together butter and a teaspoon of flour.
[G] I said a kilo, I.
Yes, I was wondering about that.
Go on!
And with butter and sugar,
he takes [A] eight eggs,
and stirs them in the pot,
[D] with a kilo of wheat [G] flour,
and in the end, the pot releases water,
and in the end, a kilo of pepper.
What [F] are you saying?
In the end, a kilo of pepper.
Help [G] me.
A whole kilo of pepper.
That's the worst I've heard.
But isn't it gingerbread?
It should be a teaspoon of pepper.
Oh, I see.
It should just be a teaspoon of pepper.
And you took a whole kilo.
Maybe that's why I'm a nut.
[F#m] [A] [D] [G] [D]
In the pan [E] melts butter, and the next thing he has to do [F#m] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Flour is the same as sugar.
Yes, I know.
And with butter and sugar, he takes [A] egg whites, which he stirs in the [D] pan with a kilo of white flour.
[G] And finally, in the pan, he lets go of a small piece of pepper, and then he stirs [D] the mixture and empties it into a fjord.
That's how it is.
That's not true!
Afterwards, you roll the dough as flat as a pancake.
As flat as a pancake.
Then you take man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
Man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
[G#m] And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan.
And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan. That's excellent!
Go ahead!
[G] It's on!
I'm going to go ahead!
No problem baking gingerbread, [Gm] when you just have a [D] good gingerbread baking song!
So
[D] When a gingerbread baker, [A] bakes gingerbread cake, he first takes a frying pan [D] and a kilo of margarine.
In the pan melts [G] butter, and the next thing he has to do [D] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Wasn't it a kilo?
Yes, it was!
And with butter and sugar, you take [A] eight egg whites, and stir them in the pan with [D] a kilo of flour.
[G] And in the end, in the pan, you let go of a kilo of pepper.
And [A] then you stir around.
And empties the dough into a [G] fjord.
That was great! Phew!
Then I empty the dough as flat as a gingerbread.
Then I make the butter and margarine cake,
and put it on the cake board,
and fry it in the frying pan.
And then the cakes fry all by themselves,
and I can sit down and do nothing!
[D]
[G] Hey, Baker Gurt!
How's gingerbread going?
Yes, Master, they're just done.
Two and a half nice gingerbread cakes!
That's good.
Let me taste them.
But in all the days, what have you done?
[G] With the things you taught me, Master.
No, you haven't.
Yes, with the things that are in the song.
Then take a bite.
Oh, that was a strange taste.
Yes, it will be.
Let me hear how you did it.
[Gm] When a
[D] Hatsa!
Go on!
Yes, then.
When a gingerbread baker,
[A] bakes gingerbread cake,
he takes the first slice of [D] the cake,
and a kilo of margarine,
and the cake is filled with butter,
and the next thing he has to do,
is stir together butter and a teaspoon of flour.
[G] I said a kilo, I.
Yes, I was wondering about that.
Go on!
And with butter and sugar,
he takes [A] eight eggs,
and stirs them in the pot,
[D] with a kilo of wheat [G] flour,
and in the end, the pot releases water,
and in the end, a kilo of pepper.
What [F] are you saying?
In the end, a kilo of pepper.
Help [G] me.
A whole kilo of pepper.
That's the worst I've heard.
But isn't it gingerbread?
It should be a teaspoon of pepper.
Oh, I see.
It should just be a teaspoon of pepper.
And you took a whole kilo.
Maybe that's why I'm a nut.
[F#m] [A] [D] [G] [D]
Key:
D
G
A
F#m
Gm
D
G
A
When a gingerbread man [A] bakes gingerbread, he first takes a frying pan [D] and a kilo of margarine.
In the pan [E] melts butter, and the next thing he has to do [F#m] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Flour is the same as sugar.
Yes, I know.
And with butter and sugar, he takes [A] egg whites, which he stirs in the [D] pan with a kilo of white flour.
[G] And finally, in the pan, he lets go of a small piece of pepper, and then he stirs [D] the mixture and empties it into a fjord.
That's how it is.
That's not true!
Afterwards, you roll the dough as flat as a pancake.
As flat as a pancake.
Then you take man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
Man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
[G#m] And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan.
And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan. That's excellent!
Go ahead!
[G] It's on!
I'm going to go ahead!
_ No problem baking gingerbread, [Gm] when you just have a [D] good gingerbread baking song!
So_
[D] When a gingerbread baker, [A] bakes gingerbread cake, he first takes a frying pan [D] and a kilo of margarine.
In the pan melts [G] butter, and the next thing he has to do [D] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Wasn't it a kilo?
Yes, it was!
And with butter and sugar, you take [A] eight egg whites, and stir them in the pan with [D] a kilo of flour.
[G] And in the end, in the pan, you let go of a kilo of pepper.
And [A] then you stir around. _
And empties the dough into a [G] fjord.
That was great! Phew!
_ Then I empty the dough as flat as a gingerbread.
Then I make the butter and margarine cake,
and put it on the cake board,
and fry it in the frying pan.
_ And then the cakes fry all by themselves,
and I can sit down and do nothing! _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ [G] Hey, Baker Gurt!
How's gingerbread going?
Yes, Master, they're just done.
Two and a half nice gingerbread cakes!
That's good.
Let me taste them. _ _ _ _ _
But in all the days, what have you done?
[G] With the things you taught me, Master.
No, you haven't.
Yes, with the things that are in the song.
Then take a bite. _
Oh, _ that was a strange taste.
Yes, it will be.
Let me hear how you did it.
_ [Gm] When a_
[D] Hatsa!
Go on!
Yes, then.
_ When a gingerbread baker,
[A] bakes gingerbread cake,
he takes the first slice of [D] the cake,
and a kilo of margarine,
and the cake is filled with butter,
and the next thing he has to do,
is stir together butter and a teaspoon of flour.
[G] I said a kilo, I.
Yes, I was wondering about that.
Go on!
And with butter and sugar,
he takes [A] eight eggs,
and stirs them in the pot,
[D] with a kilo of wheat [G] flour,
and in the end, the pot releases water,
and in the end, a kilo of pepper.
What [F] are you saying?
In the end, a kilo of pepper.
Help [G] me.
A whole kilo of pepper.
That's the worst I've heard.
But isn't it gingerbread?
It should be a teaspoon of pepper.
Oh, I see.
It should just be a teaspoon of pepper.
And you took a whole kilo.
Maybe that's why I'm a nut.
[F#m] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ [D] _
In the pan [E] melts butter, and the next thing he has to do [F#m] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Flour is the same as sugar.
Yes, I know.
And with butter and sugar, he takes [A] egg whites, which he stirs in the [D] pan with a kilo of white flour.
[G] And finally, in the pan, he lets go of a small piece of pepper, and then he stirs [D] the mixture and empties it into a fjord.
That's how it is.
That's not true!
Afterwards, you roll the dough as flat as a pancake.
As flat as a pancake.
Then you take man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
Man and wife shapes and make man and wife cakes.
[G#m] And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan.
And put them on the cake board and fry them in the frying pan. That's excellent!
Go ahead!
[G] It's on!
I'm going to go ahead!
_ No problem baking gingerbread, [Gm] when you just have a [D] good gingerbread baking song!
So_
[D] When a gingerbread baker, [A] bakes gingerbread cake, he first takes a frying pan [D] and a kilo of margarine.
In the pan melts [G] butter, and the next thing he has to do [D] is stir together butter and a kilo of [G] flour.
Wasn't it a kilo?
Yes, it was!
And with butter and sugar, you take [A] eight egg whites, and stir them in the pan with [D] a kilo of flour.
[G] And in the end, in the pan, you let go of a kilo of pepper.
And [A] then you stir around. _
And empties the dough into a [G] fjord.
That was great! Phew!
_ Then I empty the dough as flat as a gingerbread.
Then I make the butter and margarine cake,
and put it on the cake board,
and fry it in the frying pan.
_ And then the cakes fry all by themselves,
and I can sit down and do nothing! _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ [G] Hey, Baker Gurt!
How's gingerbread going?
Yes, Master, they're just done.
Two and a half nice gingerbread cakes!
That's good.
Let me taste them. _ _ _ _ _
But in all the days, what have you done?
[G] With the things you taught me, Master.
No, you haven't.
Yes, with the things that are in the song.
Then take a bite. _
Oh, _ that was a strange taste.
Yes, it will be.
Let me hear how you did it.
_ [Gm] When a_
[D] Hatsa!
Go on!
Yes, then.
_ When a gingerbread baker,
[A] bakes gingerbread cake,
he takes the first slice of [D] the cake,
and a kilo of margarine,
and the cake is filled with butter,
and the next thing he has to do,
is stir together butter and a teaspoon of flour.
[G] I said a kilo, I.
Yes, I was wondering about that.
Go on!
And with butter and sugar,
he takes [A] eight eggs,
and stirs them in the pot,
[D] with a kilo of wheat [G] flour,
and in the end, the pot releases water,
and in the end, a kilo of pepper.
What [F] are you saying?
In the end, a kilo of pepper.
Help [G] me.
A whole kilo of pepper.
That's the worst I've heard.
But isn't it gingerbread?
It should be a teaspoon of pepper.
Oh, I see.
It should just be a teaspoon of pepper.
And you took a whole kilo.
Maybe that's why I'm a nut.
[F#m] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ [D] _