Max Boyce Backing Tracks

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Max Boyce Backing Tracks

Max Boyce Backing Tracks –  Asso Asso Yogoshi  …   Hymns And Arias  …  

Max Boyce is a Welsh comedian, singer and entertainer. He rose to fame during the mid-1970’s with a musical comedy act. He has sold more than two million albums in a career spanning five decades.

 

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Boyce first learned to play the guitar as a young man but it wasn’t until  the early 1970’s that he started performing in local sports clubs and folk clubs with his original set of humour, interspersed by anecdotes of Welsh community life.

His first and second albums were recorded live at rugby clubs in the South Wales valleys and the second went to Number 1 on the UK charts (the first comedy album to ever top the UK Albums Chart).

Highlights of Max Boyce’s career include being awarded an MBE in 1999, selling out the Sydney Opera House in  2003 and singing on the pitch before the Wales v  England game at Wembley in 1999. As of 2017 Max Boyce was still performing to sell-out audiences across the UK.

Official Website

Max Boyce Backing Tracks

Asso Asso Yogoshi  …   Hymns And Arias  …  

Lyrics

We paid our weekly shilling for that January trip:
A long weekend in London, aye, without a bit of kip.
There’s a seat reserved for beer by the boys from Abercarn:
There’s beer, pontoon, crisps and fags and a croakin ‘Calon Lan’.

And we were singing hymns and arias,
‘Land of my Fathers’, ‘Ar hyd y nos’.

Into Paddington we did roll with an empty crate of ale.
Will had lost at cards and now his Western Mail’s for sale.
But Will is very happy though his money all has gone:
He swapped five photos of his wife for one of Barry John.

And we were…

We got to Twickers early and were jostled in the crowd;
Planted leeks and dragons, looked for toilets all around.
So many there we couldn’t budge -twisted legs and pale:
I’m ashamed we used a bottle that once held bitter ale.

And we were singing hymns and arias,
‘Land of my Fathers’, ‘Ar hyd y nos’.

Wales defeated England in a fast and open game.
We sang ‘Cwm Rhondda’ and ‘Delilah’,
Damn, they sounded both the same.
We sympathised with an Englishman
Whose team was doomed to fail
So we gave him that old bottle, that once held bitter ale!

He started singing hymns and arias,
‘Land of my Fathers’, ‘Ar hyd y nos’.

So it’s down to Soho for the night,
To the girls with the shiny beads;
To the funny men with lipstick on,
With evil minds and deeds.
One said to Will from a doorway dark,
Damn, she didn’t have much on.
But Will knew what she wanted,
Aye… his photo of Barry John!

‘Cos she was singing hymns and arias,
‘Land of my Fathers’, ‘Ar hyd y nos’.