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Unlisted Track Lyrics |
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Lyrics Language: English
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Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah Unlisted Track Lyrics: [Spoken:] [Male #1:] Let's do four verses. Let's do four, get everybody in. [Male #2:] Can't do four. [Male #1:] Aw, c'mon. [Male #3:] We could. [Male #4:] Let's do four. [Instrumental intro begins.] [Male #2:] I hope you're recording, Bill. [Bill (engineer):] Indeed. [Male #1:] Sweet, should we stay with all of them? [Male #2:] No just three. [Instrumental intro continues.] [Male #1:] This is a take too, hunh? [ Find more Lyrics on http://mp3lyrics.org/T28b ][Sung in three-part harmony:] Yes, and how many knees/moods 1 , Could a Negro 2 grow, If a Negro could grow knees? Yes, and how many locks, Could a Polack 3 lock, If a Polack could lock poles? Yes, and how many days, Could a Dago 4 go, If a Dago could go days? Days. The answer my dear is, Stick it in your ear. The answer is stick it in your ear. [Howling.] Ha! Ha! Lyrics: Unlisted Track, Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah [end] |
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Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah Unlisted Track Lyrics Information:
UNLISTED TRACK 5
Written by: Skip Haynes
Produced by: Mitch Aliotta, Skip Haynes, John Jeremiah, Bill Bradley,
Marty Feldman & Barry Mraz
Engineered by: Bill Bradley, Marty Feldman & Barry Mraz
Performed by: Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah 6
First released: 7
Single: None
Album: 1977
1 Someone sings the wrong word.
2 Negro is a term referring to people of Black ancestry. Prior to the shift
in the lexicon of American and worldwide classification of race and
ethnicity in the late 1960s, the appellation was accepted as a normal,
completely neutral, term both by those of African descent as well as those
of black, non-African descent. During the American Civil Rights movement of
the 1950s and 1960s, some black leaders objected to the term, preferring the
term Black and began to consider the word Negro to be an ethnic slur. The
term, Negro, is now considered archaic and is not commonly used except in
some contexts for historical reasons, such as in the name of the United
Negro College Fund or the Negro League in sports. In the 1980s and 1990s,
blacks of African descent began to prefer the term African American.
3 The noun Polack, used in the English language is a derogatory reference
to a Pole or person of Polish descent. It is an Anglicisation of the Polish
word Polak (spelled without the "c"), which, in the Polish language, means a
Polish male (feminine being Polka). The noun "Polack" spelled with the "c"
however, does not exist in the Polish language contrary to a popular
misconception and is unrecognizable to a native Polish speaker.
4 Dago is a US ethnic slur for Italians and a UK ethnic slur for Italians,
Spanish/Hispanics or Latin Americans.
5 It's hard for a fan of Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah to figure out why they
decided to include this song on an album. It belies their entire body of
work. And if it was for a joke, it's not a very good one.
6 Personnel performing on this recording:
* Mitch Aliotta (lead vocals, guitar)
* Skip Haynes (vocals, guitar)
* John Jeremiah (vocals, keyboard)
* Bob Parisio "The Acme Thunderer" (vocals)
7 Appears on: *
ALBUM(s):
(A) Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah: Slippin' Away
(1) Little Foot, 9-Track, Stereo LP, #LF-711, US-1977 8 .
* The album(s) and record(s) listed here may have different versions
of the song than the one that was transcribed. Also, this list is not
intended to be the complete discography on which this song appears.
8 Transcribed from the track on this album.
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