[Instrumental Intro]
[Verse 1]
She's got a smile that it seems to me
Reminds me of childhood memories
Where everything was as fresh
As the bright blue sky
Now and then when I see her face
She takes me away to that special place
And if I'd stare too long
I'd probably break down and cry
[Chorus]
Oh-oh-oh! Sweet child of mine
Oh, oh, oh-oh! Sweet love of mine
[Verse 2]
She's got eyes of the bluest skies
As if they thought of rain
I hate to look into those eyes
And see an ounce of pain
Her hair reminds me of a warm, safe place
Where as a child I'd hide
And pray for the thunder and the rain
To quietly pass me by
[Chorus]
Oh-oh-oh! Sweet child of mine
Uh-oh, oh, oh! Sweet love of mine
[Instrumental Break]
[Chorus]
Oh yeah! oh, oh! Sweet child of mine
Uh-oh, oh, oh! Sweet love of mine
Uh-oh, oh, oh! Sweet child of mine
Uh-oh, oh, oh! Sweet love of mine
[Guitar Solo]
[Outro]
Where do we go?
Where do we go now?
Where do we go?
Uh, where do we go?
Where do we go now?
Where do we go now?
Where do we go?
Sweet child...
Where do we go now?
Ay, ay, ay ay, ay...
Where do we go now?
Where do we go?
Where do we go now?
Where do we go?
Where do we go now?
Where do we go?
Where do we go now?
Sweet child
Sweet child o' mine
“Sweet Child O' Mine” is the 9th track of Guns N' Roses‘ debut album Appetite For Destruction. “Sweet Child O’ Mine” became GNR’s most successful single, topping the Billboard Hot 100.
The guitar solo was ranked as the 37th greatest solo of all-time by Guitar World. Amazingly, it was recorded in one take.
The lyrics were written by frontman Axl Rose as a dedication to his then-girlfriend Erin Everly. Once he heard guitarist Slash noodling downstairs, Axl found the musical backing he needed.
In 2015, the Australian website MAX TV revealed the song’s striking similarity to “Unpublished Critics”, a song released in 1981 by the band Australian Crawl. Duff McKagan, bass player for Guns N' Roses during the recording of “Sweet Child O' Mine”, said the similarities were startling. Speaking to Radio.com in 2015:
It is pretty stunning. But we didn’t steal it from them! I swear [puts his hand on his heart], I never heard that song until a couple of days ago."
Slash has stated multiple times that he is not particularly fond of this song, despite it being the band’s biggest hit single. In an interview he explained why he wasn’t too keen on it:
I didn’t hate it, but I wasn’t fond of “Sweet Child O’ Mine.” And that gives you a good idea of how credible my opinion is… The actual riff itself I love, but the song itself… But at the same time, it’s a great song—I’m not knocking it—but at the same time, it just did not fit in with the rest of our, sort of, schtick.