London transport song..
On Feb 26, 10:08*am, "max" wrote:
"max" ha scritto nel t...
"Offramp" ha scritto nel messaggio
....
On Feb 24, 5:02 pm, "max" wrote:
Stopped in the underground
you're just getting down
feel the dust upside down
cover and don't let me down
It is not hard to rhyme when you simply repeat the word; we know that
down rhymes with down.
hurry and haste to the narrow brakes up
rolling sandwiches and the fast car on my way up
I cannot nderstand these two lines.
Quite good overall though!
thanks lol..
down is only in the first part because there was no word more suitable
than that to express the concept that somethin' is happening down or while
just gettin' down actually..
well hurry and haste of people happens when exactly the train brakes up at
the stop of the narrow tunnel .. just to show the continuity among the
people while running to catch a tube and the moment they are caught to get
on the vehicle.
rolling sandwiches is about the french rolls on my hands while the fast
car (the waggon) is gettin thr my way on to get me where I gotta go.
I like also this one:
juices of a dream
sunshine in my teeth
exploring destinations thru my mind
where no dangers got me blind
three song are just for you
white snow is bright..the truth
comes down from the mountain high
as drops reminds me high hills upon the sky
fogs weather is not for you
my promises are granted to you- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
The Rolling Stones have a song called "Here Comes My Nineteenth
Nervous Breakdown". This could be quite an appropriate song for
passengers caught up in endless signal failures etc.
Of course if you got rid of the word "nervous" then the song could
apply to the new trains on the Victoria Line.
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