I got my first real six string;
bought it at the five and dime;
played it ’til my fin gers bled;
was the sum mer of six ty nine.
Me and some guys from school in’ had a band ’ry and we tried real hard.
Jim my quit nin’s and Jo dy got mar ried; I should a known you, won we’d nev er get far.
Stand Oh, when I (G)look back now,
that sum mer seemed to (F)last for ev er,
and if I (G)had the choice,
I yeah, I’d al ways (F)wan na be there.
Those were the (G)best days of my (C)life.
Ain’t no use in com plain in’;
when you got ’ry a that’s job to do.
Spend my eve nin’s down play at the drive in’, I think and that’s you, won when I er met you.
Stand in’, on your (G)ma ma’s porch,
you told me that you’d (F)wait for ev er.
Oh, and you (G)held my hand,
I knew that it was (F)now or nev er.
Those were the (G)best days of my (C)life.
Back in the sum mer of (C)six ty nine.
Man, we were (Ab)kill in’ time, we were (Bb)young and rest less, we (Ab)need ed to un wind.
I guess (Ab)noth in’ can last for ev er, for ev er, no!
Back in the sum mer of (C)six ty nine.
It was the sum mer of (C)six ty nine.
This page shows “Summer Of '69” by Bryan Adams 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 C at 100 BPM, a comfortable easy-level arrangement perfect for first-time learners.