Well, hel (F)lo there,
good old (Dm)friend of mine;
you’ve been (F)reach ing for your self for such a (Dm)long time.
There’s so (Bb)much to say,
no need (Eb9)to ex plain,
just an (F)o pen door for you to come in (Gm7)from the rain.
It’s a (F)long road
when you’re (Dm)on your own,
and a (F)man like you will al ways choose the (Dm)long way home.
There’s no (Bb)right or wrong;
I’m not (Eb9)here to blame.
I just (F)want to be the one to keep you (Gm7)from the rain, from in the the (F)rain.
And it (Bbmaj7)looks like
sun ny (Eb9)skies
(Bbmaj7)now that I know you’re all right.
(Am7)Time has
left us (Dsus)old er
and (Gm7)wis er.
I know (Gm7)I
am.
(F)long road
when you’re (Dm)on your own,
And it’s (F)good to know my best friend has come (Dm)home a gain,
and I (Bb)think of us
like an (Eb9)old cli ché,
but it (F)does n’t mat ter ’cause I love you (Gm7)an y way; come in from the (F)rain.
And it (Bbmaj7)looks like
sun ny (Eb9)skies
(Bbmaj7)now that I know you’re all right.
(Am7)Time has
left us (Dsus)old er
and (Gm7)wis er.
I know (Gm7)I
am.
(Gm7)I
am.
(Gm7)an y way; come in from the (F)rain.
Come in from the (F)rain.
Come in from the (F)rain.
This page shows “Come In From The Rain” by Captain & Tennille in our color-coded kid songbook view — every note is colored by pitch (red C, orange D, yellow E, green F, blue G, purple A, pink B) and the lyrics sit directly under each note, so children can sing along while they play. The song is in the key of Bb at 90 BPM, a medium-difficulty arrangement — try slowing the tempo down using the BPM control.