Gregory Porter (born November 4, 1971)[1] is an American singer, songwriter, and actor. He won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Album in 2014 for Liquid Spirit and in 2017 for Take Me to the Alley.[2]
Gregory Porter was born in Sacramento and was raised in Bakersfield, California, where his mother was a minister. A 1989 graduate of Highland High School, he received a "full-ride" (tuition, books, medical coverage, and living expenses) athletic scholarship as a football lineman to San Diego State University (SDSU Aztecs)
Four years of hard work!This month of May we celebrated four years on the air. We continue working on the dissemination of this wonderful instrument, thank you for participating in our story!
I really loved this song from the first time I heard it. At first, it may sound difficult with chord voicing and movement, but you'll get the hang of it. Hope it works out for you. Keep jazz alive. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Be Good (Lion's Song)-Gregory Porter ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tabbed by:Andrew Welch E-mail:[email protected]
Key:Bb Capo 3rd Fret IMPORTANT: I usually play this song with a the Capo on the 3rd. If you choose to do that, you must play the chords in G formation, which are in parenthesis. i.e., the "Bb" becoming a "G". There is a legend at the bottom of the page for those transpositions. thanks!
Verse: Bb(G) F/A (D/F#) Be good is her name Gm (Em) F (D) Bb (G) And I sing my lion's song and brush my mane BbF/A She would and she could GmFEb (C) Dm7 (Bm7) GsusG (Esus, E) So she pulled my lion's tail and caused me pain
Chorus: Gm7 (Em7) F#dim (Ebdim) She said lion's are made for cages F (D) Edim (Dbdim) Just to look at in delight Gm7F#dim You dare not let 'em walk around FEb (C) 'cause they might just bite
BbF/A Does she know what she does when GmFBb she dances 'round my cage and says her name? BbF/AGmFBb Be good.. Be good
You'll notice the upright carrying the rhythm and walking up continuously from the F back to the Bb. Here's a quick tab for that: (relative to capo 3)
The rest of the song quite simply repeats what's tabbed above. The solo under the sax may deviate slightly, but it shouldn't be too difficult to figure out.