Here we are
in a (B)room full of stran gers and an (Cmaj9)o
pen door.
(G)Here
we are,
a (B)way from all dan gers.
But that (Cmaj9)o
pen door
is (Bm7)call ing out a gain,
(Bm7)act ing like a friend
who (Bm7)wants to know if you might (C#7)come a way.
I (B7)won der what you’ll (Gm)say.
You (A7sus4)wan der out a (F7)gain.
On (Bb)wings of the night,
once a (Dm7)gain
you’ll take flight,
and (Gm7)I don’t (Gm7)hear your (C)voice an y (Fsus4)more.
To (G)night’s dream will end, but I’ll stay (Dm7)long
af ter then.
And (Gm7)you can (Gm7)have me (C)an y (Eb)time.
Here we are,
in a (B)lone in the shad ows of our (Cmaj9)lone
ly rooms.
(G)Here
we are;
a (B)way we all have those ver y (Cmaj9)lone
ly rooms.
is (Bm7)Like a faith less child
(Bm7)fright ened of the wild,
he (Bm7)runs and hides to keep from (C#7)be ing still.
We (B7)run a round un (Gm)til
we (A7sus4)lose our selves a (F7)gain.
On (Bb)wings of the night,
once a (Dm7)gain
you’ll take flight,
and (Gm7)I don’t (Gm7)hear your (C)voice an y (Fsus4)more.
To (G)night’s dream will end, but I’ll stay (Dm7)long
af ter then.
And (Gm7)you can (Gm7)have me (C)an y (Eb)time.
This page shows “You Can Have Me Anytime” by Boz Scaggs 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 60 BPM, a comfortable easy-level arrangement perfect for first-time learners.