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Music in My Soul - Sizzla



     
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Music in My Soul Lyrics


I remember Sundays at the Harbour Bar
Drinking cider wishing on a cheap guitar
Playing songs from the sixties and the seventies
Fleetwood Mac the Eagles and the Bee Gees
And we would dazzle and dance under the moonlight
Love up the bar and drink until the moonlight
You were all rebels you were all stars
You put the music in everybody's hearts
It was such a long time ago
But I never want t let that go
When I close my eyes
I still remember
I still remember those times.
Send a message all over the world
I really want you to know
That people are falling in love
To the music on the radio
And I wouldn't be all that I am

So understand
I want the world to know that you put music in my soul.
I remember Sundays in the freezing barn
Huddled round heater trying to keep everybody
Warm
We were just rebels we were just stars
Trying to put the music in everybody's hearts
It was such a long time ago
But I never want t let that go
When I close my eyes
I still remember
I still remember those times.
Send a message all over the world
I really want you to know
That people are falling in love
To the music on the radio
And I wouldn't be all that I am
So understand
I want the world to know that you put music in my soul

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Sizzla Kalonji (real name Miguel Orlando Collins) is a Jamaican reggae musician. He was born on 17 April 1976, in St Mary, Jamaica, of devout Rastafari parents and raised in August Town. He is unusually prolific, even by Jamaican standards. Sizzla has worked with such artists as Mobb Deep.

Sizzla, along with reggae recording artists such as Capleton, Buju Banton, and Anthony B, are credited with leading a movement toward a re-embracement of Rastafarian values in contemporary reggae music by recording material which is concerned primarily with spirituality, social consciousness, explores common themes, such as Babylon's corrupting influence, the disenfranchisement of ghetto youth, oppression of the black nation and Sizzla's abiding faith in Jah and resistance against perceived agents of oppression. Sizzla has over 40 full completed albums sold in record stores to date, the most popular which have been "Black Woman & Child" and "Da Real Thing" on the Digital B label, "Praise Ye Jah" on Xterminator, and "Rise to the Occasion" on Greensleeves.

Recently, however, he has come under fire for the homophobic content of many of his lyrics, and the advocacy of violence against gays.


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Sizzla