Thursday, 29 October 2009
Tour Scotland Sauchiehall Video
Tour Scotland Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, Scotland, video. The extremely talented Rufus Huk busking in Sauchiehall Street. He sang Black Horse and The Cherry Tree, written by KT Tunstall.
Two three four,
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
Well my heart knows me better than I know myself
so I'm gonna let it do all the talking.
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
I came across a place in the middle of nowhere
with a big black horse and a cherry tree.
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
I fell in fear, upon my back
I said don't look back, just keep on walking.
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
when the big black horse said looked this way, he said hey lady, will you marry me?
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
But I said no, no, no,no-no-no
I said no, no, you're not the one for me
no, no, no,no-no-no
I said no, no, you're not the one for me
(ooooo,woo-hoo)
and my heart had a problem, in the early hours,
so it stopped it dead for a beat or two.
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
but I cut some cord, and I shouldn't have done that,
and it won't forgive me after all these years.
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
So I sent her to a place in the middle of nowhere with a big black horse and a cherry tree.
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
Now it won't come back, cause it's oh so happy and now I've got a hole for the world to see
(woo-hoo ooo,woo-hoo)
and it said no, no, no,no-no-no
I said no, no, you're not the one for me
no, no, no,no-no-no
said no, no, you're not the one for me
(ooooo,woo-hoo) (not the one for me, yeah)
(ooooo,woo-hoo)
said no,no,no,no,no,no,no,no
you're not the one for me (woo hoo)
no,no,no,no,(woo hoo) no,no,no,no
you're not the one for me.
Big black horse and a cherry tree
I can't quite get there cause my hearts forsaken me yeah yeah yeah
big black horse and a cherry tree
I can't quite get there cause my hearts forsaken me.
Small group tours of Scotland. Ancestry tours of Scotland. Tour Scotland. Tour Aberdeen, Tour Dundee, Tour Edinburgh, Tour Glasgow, Tour Isle of Skye. Tour Glencoe, Tour Loch Lomond. Tour Loch Ness.
The whole of Scotland's music, from the third millennium BC to the present day. Describing both classical and traditional music, Scotland's Music pursues the fascinating relationship between them through the centuries and shows how they illuminate Scottish history and culture. This book is generously illustrated and, with over 200 music examples, provides a unique resource. Early Celtic plainchant, ballads in Scots and Gaelic, Renaissance masterpieces by Carver and others, rare music for lutes and virginals, and many under appreciated and beautiful works by composers such as John Clerk of Penicuik, James Oswald, the Earl of Kellie and John Thomson are all discussed. Scotland's Music's range is wide, and it concludes with a survey of the diverse contemporary music of today, from operatic and symphonic to Gaelic, folk and pop. Scotland's Music is a tremendously entertaining and stimulating book. Scotland's Music: A History of the Traditional and Classical Music of Scotland from Early Times to the Present Day.
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