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Emergency Call - Judy Mowatt



     
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Emergency Call Lyrics


Skin's turning green, eyes are turning yellow
The Doctor stays rich because I'm a sickly fellow
Got the hypochondriac blues
I need your medicine to soothe
Creams and pills they've got nothing on you
Well, call me the Doctor and give me the cure
Ease the obsess on an open sore
Well Doctor, Doctor, can't get no relief
This losing sleep is misery
Won't you come and rescue me?
Doctor, Doctor
Doctor, Doctor
I spent the last week in my bed, started feeling symptoms
My psychiatrist fills me up with a new prescription
Tell me, where I went wrong
It felt too good for too long
Honey, you got the remedy for me
Well, Doctor, Doctor can't get no relief

And this losing sleep is misery
Well, call me the Doctor and give me the cure
Ease the obsess on an open sore
I don't want to be sick no more
Doctor, Doctor
Doctor, Doctor
My heart's made of glass, mama, don't you break it
I knew that I made a mistake when I let you take it
Now this pain only for you
I need your medicine to soothe
Creams and pills they've got nothing on you
Well, call me the Doctor and give me the cure
Come back mama I'm feeling withdrawn
Please take my emergency call
How long must I wait held up in depression?
I tried to erase my past to make a good impression
But my broken horn's lost the tune
And only shattered mirrors fill my room
Fell for you and only got me down
Well, Doctor, Doctor come give me the cure
Ease the obsess on another open sore
Well, Doctor, Doctor can't get no relief
This losing sleep is misery
Won't you come and rescue me?
Doctor, Doctor
Doctor, Doctor
Doctor, Doctor
Doctor, Doctor

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

One-third of the I-Threes, reggae's most influential female vocal trio, Judy Mowatt helped to turn the last recordings of Bob Marley into enduring classics. Her sensuous harmonies strengthened albums by Peter Tosh, Jimmy Cliff, Big Youth, Pablo Moses, Freddie Mcgregor, U Roy, and the Wailing Souls. Her solo recordings, including Black Woman in 1980 and Only a Woman, two years later, marked her as a powerful spokesperson for Rastafarian and feminist causes.

Read more about Judy Mowatt on Last.fm.


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Judy Mowatt