Pull Up The Cork - Ini Kamoze



     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed:

Pull Up The Cork Lyrics


Pull up the cork and pour it on
'Tis the beginning of a new dawn
Bring in the wheat and bring in the corn
Inhibition is going, going, gone, all gone, goneSome people want to say it isn't good for me
Hear wha dem seh
"How can ya talk when ya don't have a talk degree?"
Hey, but I don't need no glasses to see, no
How to juggle, to come out of any meleeHey, pull up the cork and pour it on
'Tis the beginning of a new dawn
Bring in the wheat and bring in the corn
Inhibition is going, going, gone, all gone, goneAnother 'tician is giving another address
In my condition, oh, I can't deal with no distress
Seems to me you will agree we need another hero
Someone to front it, bigger than a GeronimoPull up the cork and pour it on
'Tis the beginning of a new dawn
First the wheat and then now the corn
Inhibition is going, going, goneSome people would say it isn't good for me
Hear wha dem seh

"How can ya talk when ya don't have a talk degree?"
But I don't need no glasses to see, no
How to juggle to come out of any meleeHey, pull up the cork and pour it on
'Tis the beginning of a new dawn
Bring in the wheat and bring in the corn
Prohibition is going, going, gone, all gone, gonePull up the cork and pour it on
'Tis the beginning of a new dawn
Bring in the wheat and bring in the corn
All the stoppers have, they're going, going, gonePull up the cork
'Tis a beginning
Bring in the wheat
ProhibitionPull up the cork
'Tis a beginning
Bring in the wheat
All the stoppers havePull up the cork
Bring in the wheat
'Tis a beginning
All the stoppers have, gone, gone, all gonePull up the cork
'Tis a beginning of

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

Ini Kamoze (born 9 October 1957 in Port Maria, St. Mary, Jamaica) is one of the few raggamuffin performers to have been successful both in roots reggae and the modern style. . By 1988, however, Ini Kamoze had effectively disappeared from the music scene following lukewarm reactions to his intermittent releases.
In 1994, Kamoze burst back onto the scene with a harder sound and the song which would become his signature - "Here Comes The Hotstepper". Adopting his nickname from the song title, Kamoze would become known as the "Hotstepper", from the Patois for a man on the run from the law.

Read more about Ini Kamoze on Last.fm.


User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.

View All

Ini Kamoze