Artist: Walt Disney Film: Snow White and the Seven warfsComposer: Larry Morey and Frank ChurchillCopyright: 1937GoChords.com
F: SOME DAY MY PRINCE WILL COME;
M; SOME DAY I'LL FIND MY LOVE;
F: SOME DAY I'LL FIND MY LOVE, AND HOW
M: SOME ONE TO CALL MY LOVE, AND I'LL
F: THRILLING THAT MO___MENT WILL BE..............................................WHEN THE
M: know her the moment we meet......................................for my
F: PRINCE OF MY DREAMS COMES TO ME____________________________
M: HEART WILL START SKIP_____PING A BEAT__________________________
F: HE'LL WHI_______SPER "I LOVE YOU"
M:SOME DAY WE'LL SAY AND DO";
F: AND STEAL A KISS OR TWO. THOUGH HE'S
M: THINGS WE'VE BEEN LONG_____ING TO. THOUGH SHE'S
F/M: SO FAR A___WAY, I'LL FIND MY LOVE SOME DAY __________
F/M SO FAR A_____WAY, I'LL FIND MY LOVE SOME DAY ___________
F; day when my dreams come true.......................................................
M ditto
F day when my dreams my won der ful schemes, those
M ditto
F beautiful dreams come true
M ditto
The song was composed in 1937 for the film "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which was the frst ever full length cartoon movie. The song was first performed as a Jazz piece during WW2 by the "Ghetto Swingers", a group of musician prisoners held in a concentration camp in what is now the Czech Republic. This camp saw the transportation and death of many thousands of Jews to Auschwitz in Poland. The song has become a favourite in the pantheon of Jazz because of its very satisfying progression of chords. It has been played by great Jazz musicians including Miles Davis, Chet Baker, and others and sung by Sinatra, Nat Cole, Ella etc. My arrangement is a quiet, slow rather melancholy version. But there is a quite happy up-tempo version available on YouTube.
Look it up on using this address. You'll catch the 1959 reading of the BIll Evans trio. You couldn't do better than that.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYpKNM1Yi5o
The song was composed in 1937 for the film "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which was the frst ever full length cartoon movie. The song was first performed as a Jazz piece during WW2 by the "Ghetto Swingers", a group of musician prisoners held in a concentration camp in what is now the Czech Republic. This camp saw the transportation and death of many thousands of Jews to Auschwitz in Poland. The song has become a favourite in the pantheon of Jazz because of its very satisfying progression of chords. It has been played by great Jazz musicians including Miles Davis, Chet Baker, and others and sung by Sinatra, Nat Cole, Ella etc. My arrangement is a quiet, slow rather melancholy version. But there is a quite happy up-tempo version available on YouTube.
Look it up on using this address. You'll catch the 1959 reading of the BIll Evans trio. You couldn't do better than that.