歌曲 | A Bottle of Buckie |
歌手 | Ted Leo and the Pharmacists |
专辑 | Living with the Living |
下载 | Image LRC TXT |
作曲 : Leo | |
Nine years down the road and I remember it still | |
Standing on the corner back in Govanhill | |
Nine days out from home, feeling no pain | |
That northern city sun breaking through the rain, that warmthless sun barely shining on | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Nine years come and gone since I left you at home | |
And this restless soul of mine had me starting to roam | |
But the first time I stood by the banks of the Clyde | |
I was so glad to have you standing back by my side, so proud of what we were doing | |
Oh, me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Well, I knew by the dew in your starry eyes it was a day we both had studied for all of our lives | |
Whether bold missionaries or a children's crusade | |
No fear pioneers, we were on our way | |
And there never were nothing that could get in our way | |
Then the neds with their knuckles and their Burberry scarves | |
They said how'd you Jersey boys ever make it this far? | |
But you jumped in between and said, listen my son | |
You don't know nothing about where we're from, you don't know nothing about why it's now | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Three times I went back in my wandering ways | |
Last time it was July during Marching Days | |
When someone said to run from that bitter parade | |
Well, I knew what you would do and I decided to stay, and I knew no one ever got the better of me and you |
zuo qu : Leo | |
Nine years down the road and I remember it still | |
Standing on the corner back in Govanhill | |
Nine days out from home, feeling no pain | |
That northern city sun breaking through the rain, that warmthless sun barely shining on | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Nine years come and gone since I left you at home | |
And this restless soul of mine had me starting to roam | |
But the first time I stood by the banks of the Clyde | |
I was so glad to have you standing back by my side, so proud of what we were doing | |
Oh, me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Well, I knew by the dew in your starry eyes it was a day we both had studied for all of our lives | |
Whether bold missionaries or a children' s crusade | |
No fear pioneers, we were on our way | |
And there never were nothing that could get in our way | |
Then the neds with their knuckles and their Burberry scarves | |
They said how' d you Jersey boys ever make it this far? | |
But you jumped in between and said, listen my son | |
You don' t know nothing about where we' re from, you don' t know nothing about why it' s now | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Three times I went back in my wandering ways | |
Last time it was July during Marching Days | |
When someone said to run from that bitter parade | |
Well, I knew what you would do and I decided to stay, and I knew no one ever got the better of me and you |
zuò qǔ : Leo | |
Nine years down the road and I remember it still | |
Standing on the corner back in Govanhill | |
Nine days out from home, feeling no pain | |
That northern city sun breaking through the rain, that warmthless sun barely shining on | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Nine years come and gone since I left you at home | |
And this restless soul of mine had me starting to roam | |
But the first time I stood by the banks of the Clyde | |
I was so glad to have you standing back by my side, so proud of what we were doing | |
Oh, me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Well, I knew by the dew in your starry eyes it was a day we both had studied for all of our lives | |
Whether bold missionaries or a children' s crusade | |
No fear pioneers, we were on our way | |
And there never were nothing that could get in our way | |
Then the neds with their knuckles and their Burberry scarves | |
They said how' d you Jersey boys ever make it this far? | |
But you jumped in between and said, listen my son | |
You don' t know nothing about where we' re from, you don' t know nothing about why it' s now | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Me and you and a bottle of Buckie | |
Three times I went back in my wandering ways | |
Last time it was July during Marching Days | |
When someone said to run from that bitter parade | |
Well, I knew what you would do and I decided to stay, and I knew no one ever got the better of me and you |