On a long and lone some high way
east of O ma ha you can (D)lis ten to the en gine moan in’ out its one note song,
you can (A)think a bout the wom an or the girl you knew the night
be (Em)fore.
But your thoughts will soon be wan der in’ the way they al ways do when you’re (D)rid in’ six teen hours and there’s noth in’ much to do
and you (A)don’t feel much like rid in’, you just wish the trip was through.
Say, here I (D)am
on the (Em)road a gain.
There I (D)am
up on the stage.
Here I (D)go
play in’ (Em)star a gain.
There I (D)go,
turn the (Em)page.
Well, you long and lone some high way
east of O ma ha you can (D)lis ten to the en gine moan in’ out its one note song,
you can (A)think a bout the wom an or the girl you knew the night
be (Em)fore.
But your thoughts will soon be wan der in’ the way they al ways do when you’re (D)rid in’ six teen hours and there’s noth in’ much to do
and you (A)don’t feel much like rid in’, you just wish the trip was through.
Say, here I (D)am
on the (Em)road a gain.
There I (D)am
up on the stage.
Here I (D)go
play in’ (Em)star a gain.
There I (D)go,
turn the (Em)page.
Well, you (Em)page.
Here I (C)go,
there I
(Em)go.
This page shows “Turn The Page” by Bob Seger 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 G at 72 BPM, a comfortable easy-level arrangement perfect for first-time learners.