I could be the twist, the one to make you stop, the ic ing on your (Em7b5)cake, the cher ry on the top.
It’s heav en in my heart, and we could find you some space,
mm.
I could be the world to you, the miss ing piece, that ex tra sen ti (Em7b5)men tal kind of chem is try.
Some peo ple make it hard.
With me, that is n’t the case,
’cause (C7)I make it so eas
y to (Ab)fall
in love.
So (C7)come give me a call,
and we’ll (Ab)fall
in to us.
I’m the (C7)per fect mix of Sat ur day night and (Ab)the rest of your life.
An y one with a heart would a (Adim7)gree.
(Fm11)It’s so eas y
to (Gm)fall in love with the way I do my hair, the way I make you laugh, the way we like to (Em7b5)share a walk in Cen tral Park.
I could be fresh air, might be the girl of your dreams.
There’s (Ab)no need to hide if you’re in to me, ’cause (Ebmaj7)I’m in to you quite (Em7b5)in ti mate ly.
And (Ab)may be one night could turn in to three.
Well, I’m down to see, ’cause (C7)I make it so eas
y to (Ab)fall
in love.
So (C7)come give me a call,
and we’ll (Ab)fall
in to us.
I’m the (C7)per fect mix of Sat ur day night and (Ab)the rest of your life.
An y one with a heart would a (Adim7)gree.
(Fm11)It’s so eas y
to (Gm7)fall in love with me.
Eas
y to fall
in love.
So come give me a call,
and we'll fall
in to us.
I’m the per fect mix of Sat ur day night and (Ab)the rest of your life.
An y one with a heart would a (Adim7)gree.
(Fm11)It’s so eas y
to (Gm7)fall in love with (CN.C.)me.
This page shows “So Easy (To Fall In Love)” by Olivia Dean 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 Ab at 140 BPM, a medium-difficulty arrangement — try slowing the tempo down using the BPM control.
This arrangement sits in Ab major, so get comfortable with those four flats — your hands will naturally gravitate toward the black keys, and once you settle into that feel, the chord shapes actually fall under your fingers quite nicely. At 140 BPM the groove moves briskly, so start at around 80–90 BPM and build up gradually; rushing the tempo before your transitions are clean is the fastest way to develop bad habits here. Pay close attention to the syncopated rhythms in the right hand — this tune has a laid-back pop swing where notes land just off the beat, and if you play them too squarely it loses all its charm. Left hand keeps a steady pulse with root-fifth patterns, so practice hands separately until each feels automatic. The trickiest spots tend to be chord changes that move by step — Db to Eb transitions especially — so loop those bars until they're smooth. Pedal lightly on each chord change to keep things warm without muddying the sound. This is a fantastic song for training your ear to feel syncopation naturally, a skill that'll unlock dozens of other pop tunes for you.