Sun rise,
sun rise,
looks like (Bb)morn ing in your eyes,
but the (Eb)clock’s held it’s writ nine ten fif (Ab)teen o ver for my hours.
face.
Sun rise,
sun rise
could n’t (Bb)tempt us if it tried,
’cause the (Cm7)af ter noon’s (Eb)made al (Ab)read y come oth and gone.
And I said, (Cm)“Ooo,
(Cm)ooo,
(Cm)ooo”
to you.
Sur prise,
sur prise.
Could n’t (Bb)find it in your eyes,
but I’m (Eb)sure held it’s writ nine ten all (Ab)teen o ver for my hours.
face.
Sur prise,
sur prise:
nev er (Bb)some thing I could hide
when I (Cm7)see we’ve noon’s (Eb)made it (Ab)through y an oth er day.
Then I say, (Cm)“Ooo,
(Cm)ooo,
(Cm)ooo”
to you.
Sur prise,
And now
the night
will throw its cov er down,
mm,
on (Ab)me a gain.
Ooh, and if I’m right,
it’s the (F)on ly way
to (Ab)bring me back.
(Cm)Ooo,
(Cm)ooo,
(Cm)ooo,
to you.
(Cm)Ooo,
(Cm)ooo,
(Cm)ooo,
to you.
to you.
This page shows “Sunrise” by Norah Jones 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 F at 90 BPM, a medium-difficulty arrangement — try slowing the tempo down using the BPM control.