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Exodus - Congo Natty



     
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Exodus Lyrics


She said so, so many times in my life
Once I thought things were fine, it would rain
This is how it is each and everyday I live
Things I thought would be my joy, turn to pain
So when it pours and you're in deep water
And you can't tell the difference from the rain and your tears
I will be the one who's there, who'll always be there
To drink the river flowin' from your eyes
Exodus is yours, love
Let the midnight sun disappear
Heaven would be yours, love
Let me be the one to take you there
So don't worry or sweat the small things
Everythin' in your life's bound to change
All the things you're goin' through
I will bare the weight with you
There's no shame, know what I'm sayin'
There's a way to pull through

Oh, and when it pours girl and you're in deep water
And you can tell the difference from the rain and your tears
I will be the one who's there, who'll always be there
To drink the river flowin' from your eyes
Exodus is yours, love
Let the midnight sun disappear
And Heaven could be yours, love
Let me be the one to take you there, oh
I'll help you carry it all
(I'll help you carry all)
You don't have to worry at all
(No, you don't have to worry)
And if you stumble and fall
(If you stumble and fall)
I'll be there for you
I'll help you, oh
(I'll help you carry it all)
You don't have to, oh
(You don't have to worry at all)
Girl and if you fall, I'll be there
Through it all, through it all
Exodus is yours, love
Let the midnight sun disappear
And Heaven could be yours, love
Please let me be the one to take you there, there
Exodus is yours, love
Let the midnight sun disappear
And Heaven could be yours, love
Let me be the one to take you there
Exodus is yours, love
Let the midnight sun disappear
And Heaven could be yours, love

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

The '80s popster turned proto-jungle revolutionary was born Michael West in 1965 in London. He formed "Double Trouble" in the early '80s with Michael Menson and Leigh Guest, releasing the ska-pop hits like "Street Tuff" and "Just Keep Rocking". By 1991 he had released "Black Meaning Good", an album that presented the "hardcore" breakbeat style fashionable at the time married to dub basslines with reggae luminaries such as Barrington Levy, Dennis Brown, Supercat & Tenor Fly as well as himself chanting over the top.

Read more about Congo Natty on Last.fm.


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Congo Natty