Tonart: F major
Intro 1
A
D
Verse 1
D
G
The year was 1944.
A
World War II was raging on
D
the sea and on the land.
G
The Japanese were losing,
D
but they would not give up the fight.
A
They railed against the Allies
D
with their collective might.
G
There was a Japanese warrant officer
named Shoichi Ota
D
A
stationed in the Naval Air Corps.
G
he went to his superior
D
Because he had a plan, he thought for sure
A
D
Would end the war, restore glory to Japan
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O -Tah thought up a flying weapon
D
that any pilot could steer straight
A
into the heart of the enemy.
Em
Though the pilot would die
A
D
that much was clear.
G
The OTA superior turned him down flat
D
and was appalled to think
D
no matter how many ships there were to
But the war continued,
G
D
and Japan lost so many men.
D
won't you tell us about your plan again?
G
So 18 large bombers took off,
with 18 manned Okas
D
strapped beneath their wings.
A
But the American Hellcats
shot him down
before they could harm anything.
D
came up with a flying bomb.
A
Recruited just the young and the single,
D
lots of boys signed on.
G
They called them kamikazes,
A
Most were under 20 years old
D
and had no thoughts of fear.
G
But there was a pilot named Hajime Fujii
D
who had a wife and three young girls.
A
But he wanted to be a kamikaze
D
more than anything in this old world.
G
So his wife drowned their daughters,
D
then she drowned herself too.
A
And three months later he
joined his family
D
G
When he flew into the wild blue
G
I used to think the word kamikaze
A
But in the 13th century,
D
a time when more Japanese fought and died
G
A gale force they called the kamikaze,
D
which meant the divine wind
A
Drove the Mongols from Japan,
D
it was a war they were destined to win
G
But now these new kamikazes,
D
for keeping dreams of victory alive.
G
And in their brief reign of terror,
A
368 more were badly damaged
D
for our side a terrible cost, as 5 ,000
G
D
Allied sailors died in the blood -red sea.
A
4 ,800 more were injured
G
but still Japan was losing,
D
and still these suicide missions flew.
A
Morale was sinking lower
as they took off for the
D
G
The wild blue, the wild blue
D
A
D
This was war, this is what men do
G
D
The wild blue, the wild blue
A
D
This was war, this is what men do
G
On a U .S. aircraft carrier,
D
in the damaged part of the ship,
a young sailor finds
G
He strips the meat right off it
D
and makes jewelry from the bone.
But today he shakes his
D
were our hearts made of stone?
G
What if his parents knew
D
that we made sport with his remains?
A
Would they think we were barbarians?
D
Would they think we were insane?
He was trying to kill us.
D
We were trying to kill him, too.
A
When you're in this situation,
D
for every mission that was sent,
A
but he was never chosen.
D
Well, that's how the story went.
G
And in September of 45,
D
when the peace treaty ended the war,
A
Otah climbed into the cockpit,
D
left his comrades on the shore.
G
Legend was he flew over the ocean
D
and then he crashed his plane.
A
He couldn't live with his anger.
D
He could not deal with his pain.
More than 1 ,900
G
D
Kamikazes, just boys and young men,
A
would never get to see their homes
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or their loved ones ever again.
And it's said that at the Yasukuni Shrine
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kamikaze spirits reside
A
the families come and visit them
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not with sorrow but with pride
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and some know the name of Otar
they bow their heads
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and they say their prayers
A
because like their brave ancestors
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an old man lay dying on his bed
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his children gathered round
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can't believe what he's just said I am
D
I hid and then I changed my name
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I could not let anybody know
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he cried in hell his children what have I done
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Oh God what have I done
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all those young people died
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I volunteered for every mission
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but they never called my name.
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I've lived my life in agony.
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D
Now his son sits quietly in the cemetery.
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It's been just three years
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since his father's been buried
we could have helped him but we never
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A
The reporter nods, the camera zooms into the wild blue,
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G
D
the wild blue, the wild blue.
A
D
This was war, this is what men do,
G
D
the wild blue, the wild blue.
The
A
D
This was war, this is what men do.
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